21
votes

I have a question similar to this one, but my dataset is a bit bigger: 50 columns with 1 column as UID and other columns carrying either TRUE or NA, I want to change all the NA to FALSE, but I don't want to use explicit loop.

Can plyr do the trick? Thanks.

UPDATE #1

Thanks for quick reply, but what if my dataset is like below:

df <- data.frame(
  id = c(rep(1:19),NA),
  x1 = sample(c(NA,TRUE), 20, replace = TRUE),
  x2 = sample(c(NA,TRUE), 20, replace = TRUE)
)

I only want X1 and X2 to be processed, how can this be done?

5

5 Answers

32
votes

If you want to do the replacement for a subset of variables, you can still use the is.na(*) <- trick, as follows:

df[c("x1", "x2")][is.na(df[c("x1", "x2")])] <- FALSE

IMO using temporary variables makes the logic easier to follow:

vars.to.replace <- c("x1", "x2")
df2 <- df[vars.to.replace]
df2[is.na(df2)] <- FALSE
df[vars.to.replace] <- df2
13
votes

tidyr::replace_na excellent function.

df %>%
  replace_na(list(x1 = FALSE, x2 = FALSE))

This is such a great quick fix. the only trick is you make a list of the columns you want to change.

9
votes

Try this code:

df <- data.frame(
  id = c(rep(1:19), NA),
  x1 = sample(c(NA, TRUE), 20, replace = TRUE),
  x2 = sample(c(NA, TRUE), 20, replace = TRUE)
)
replace(df, is.na(df), FALSE)

UPDATED for an another solution.

df2 <- df <- data.frame(
  id = c(rep(1:19), NA),
  x1 = sample(c(NA, TRUE), 20, replace = TRUE),
  x2 = sample(c(NA, TRUE), 20, replace = TRUE)
)
df2[names(df) == "id"] <- FALSE
df2[names(df) != "id"] <- TRUE
replace(df, is.na(df) & df2, FALSE)
4
votes

You can use the NAToUnknown function in the gdata package

df[,c('x1', 'x2')] = gdata::NAToUnknown(df[,c('x1', 'x2')], unknown = 'FALSE')
4
votes

With dplyr you could also do

df %>% mutate_each(funs(replace(., is.na(.), F)), x1, x2)

It is a bit less readable compared to just using replace() but more generic as it allows to select the columns to be transformed. This solution especially applies if you want to keep NAs in some columns but want to get rid of NAs in others.