WARNING: This method is very much in an alpha stage. Expect it to change.
 This method is an extension to the default read.table
 function in R.  It is possible to specify a column name to column class
 map such that the column classes are automatically assigned from the
 column header in the file.
In addition, it is possible to read any subset of rows. The method is optimized such that only columns and rows that are of interest are parsed and read into R's memory. This minimizes memory usage at the same time as it speeds up the reading.
## S3 method for class 'default':
readTable(file, colClasses=NULL, isPatterns=FALSE, defColClass=NA, header=FALSE, skip=0,
  nrows=-1, rows=NULL, col.names=NULL, check.names=FALSE, path=NULL, ...,
  stripQuotes=TRUE, method=c("readLines", "intervals"), verbose=FALSE)connection or a filename.  If a filename, the path
     specified by path is added to the front of the
     filename.  Unopened files are opened and closed at the end.TRUE, the matching of names(colClasses) to
     the read column names is done by regular expressions matching.colClasses argument does not match some of the read column
     names, the column class is by default set to this class. The
     default is to read the columns in an "as is" way.TRUE, column names are read from the file.rows is specified.vector specifying which rows of the table
     to read, e.g. row one is the row following the header.
     Non-existing rows are ignored.  Note that rows are returned in
     the same order read.table().read.table(), but default value
     is FALSE here.file is a filename, this path is added to it,
    otherwise ignored.read.table used internally.TRUE, quotes are stripped from values before
    being parse.
    This argument is only effective when method=="readLines"."readLines", (readLines()) is used
    internally to first only read rows of interest, which is then
    passed to read.table().
    If "intervals", contigous intervals are first identified in
    thedata.frame.readTableIndex().
 read.table.
 colClasses().