oh Brian :-) It's been a while I've witnessed somebody getting Ripley'd with a drier-than-the-desert quote from the R manual. Even more funny when it happens on R-devel (and it isn't me getting the burn...).
That would actually be a good suggestion. That help file explains a lot about parallel and how the tempdir value is created, so it could contain a little warning on this as well. Are you going to risk your life answering Brian, or do I sacrifice my soul?
@JorisMeys you might not know you are using /tmp. I think R's help system uses /tmp, and I've had things fail with help() cos /tmp has been purged... But maybe that's just ess...
@Spacedman They always have to be special, don't they?
@Frank The benchmark on load("someFileWithdata.table.rda") is absolute bullshit. If you store a data.table in a .rda file, it gets stored as a data.frame with a nil pointer as attribute. So apart from that little attribute, it's even the exact same R structure as the data.frame file. I ran his code 20 times, and only the 1st time I got different timings between both files. The next 19 times there was no difference to be seen.
@JorisMeys re "use fread" in your comment, yeah, while it may actually be faster (as Dirk saw), i'll still save rda so i don't have to fiddle with dates / times / indices / keys / whatever on loading
@Frank My guess is that fread is faster than readRDS because the file being read by readRDS is compressed. I would expect the times to be much closer if the binary file is not compressed.
@Frank Right. And I now prefer rds as fiddling with environment for RData is uncool. Direct assignment from readRDS() is nice and easy. And it is faithful serialization / deserialization of an R object. And the fact the hyper-optimized parallelfread() beats it does not concern me too much.
My view is that csv is still a stupid format, whether or not is has a hipster conference dedicated to it or not.
@DirkEddelbuettel My view is that csv is a gift from the Gods of Dataformats for every data scientists who needs to work with people who live in the illusion that Excel is a suitable tool for data management. It's definitely a stupid format, but it helps me dealing with stupid people, so I'm happy it exists :-)
@DirkEddelbuettel What is a not-stupid format? CSV is human readable, portable, and in most cases relatively straightforward. Yeah, surely there are better formats for specific use cases, but if you have tabular data you want to distribute broadly seems like you'll do okay with CSV in large majority of cases. I mean, I get angry when people insist on shoving straightforward tabular data into XML.