Pregunta

Here is a vector

a <- c(TRUE, FALSE, FALSE, NA, FALSE, TRUE, NA, FALSE, TRUE)

I'd like a simple function that returns TRUE everytime there is a TRUE in "a", and FALSE everytime there is a FALSE or a NA in "a".

The three following things do not work

a == TRUE
identical(TRUE, a)
isTRUE(a)

Here is a solution

a[-which(is.na(a))]

but it doesn't seem to be a straightforward and easy solution

Is there another solution ?

Here are some functions (and operators) I know:

identical()
isTRUE()
is.na()
na.rm()
&
|
!
  • What are the other functions (operators, tips, whatever,...) that are useful to deal with TRUE, FALSE, NA, NaN?

  • What are the differences between NA and NaN?

  • Are there other "logical things" than TRUE, FALSE, NA and NaN?

Thanks a lot !

¿Fue útil?

Solución 2

To answer your questions in order:

1) The == operator does indeed not treat NA's as you would expect it to. A very useful function is this compareNA function from r-cookbook.com:

  compareNA <- function(v1,v2) {
    # This function returns TRUE wherever elements are the same, including NA's,
    # and false everywhere else.
    same <- (v1 == v2)  |  (is.na(v1) & is.na(v2))
    same[is.na(same)] <- FALSE
    return(same)
   }

2) NA stands for "Not available", and is not the same as the general NaN ("not a number"). NA is generally used for a default value for a number to stand in for missing data; NaN's are normally generated because a numerical issue (taking log of -1 or similar).

3) I'm not really sure what you mean by "logical things"--many different data types, including numeric vectors, can be used as input to logical operators. You might want to try reading the R logical operators page: http://stat.ethz.ch/R-manual/R-patched/library/base/html/Logic.html.

Hope this helps!

Otros consejos

You don't need to wrap anything in a function - the following works

a = c(T,F,NA)

a %in% TRUE

[1]  TRUE FALSE FALSE

So you want TRUE to remain TRUE and FALSE to remain FALSE, the only real change is that NA needs to become FALSE, so just do this change like:

a[ is.na(a) ] <- FALSE

Or you could rephrase to say it is only TRUE if it is TRUE and not missing:

a <- a & !is.na(a)

Taking Ben Bolker's suggestion above you could set your own function following the is.na() syntax

is.true <- function(x) {
  !is.na(x) & x
}

a = c(T,F,F,NA,F,T,NA,F,T)

is.true(a)
[1]  TRUE FALSE FALSE FALSE FALSE  TRUE FALSE FALSE  TRUE

This also works for subsetting data.

b = c(1:9)
df <- as.data.frame(cbind(a,b))

df[is.true(df$a),]

  a b
1 1 1
6 1 6
9 1 9

And helps avoid accidentally incorporating empty rows where NA do exist in the data.

df[df$a == TRUE,]

      a  b
1     1  1
NA   NA NA
6     1  6
NA.1 NA NA
9     1  9

I like the is.element-function:

is.element(a, T)
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