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Matrix (version 1.5-1)

is.na-methods: is.na(), is.infinite() Methods for 'Matrix' Objects

Description

Methods for functions is.na(), is.finite(), and is.infinite() for all Matrix objects (those extending class Matrix):

x = "denseMatrix"

returns an nMatrix of the same dimension as x, with TRUE whenever x is NA, finite, or infinite, respectively.

x = "sparseMatrix"

ditto.

Usage

# S4 method for lsparseMatrix
is.na(x)
# S4 method for dsparseMatrix
is.finite(x)
# S4 method for dgeMatrix
is.infinite(x)
## ...
## and for other classes

# S4 method for nMatrix anyNA(x) ## ... ## and for other classes

Arguments

x

sparse or dense matrix or sparse vector (here; any R object in general).

See Also

NA, is.na; is.finite, is.infinite; nMatrix, denseMatrix, sparseMatrix.

The sparseVector class.

Examples

Run this code
M <- Matrix(1:6, nrow=4, ncol=3,
       dimnames = list(c("a", "b", "c", "d"), c("A", "B", "C")))
stopifnot(all(!is.na(M)))
M[2:3,2] <- NA
is.na(M)
if(exists("anyNA", mode="function"))
anyNA(M)

A <- spMatrix(10,20, i = c(1,3:8),
                     j = c(2,9,6:10),
                     x = 7 * (1:7))
stopifnot(all(!is.na(A)))

A[2,3] <- A[1,2] <- A[5, 5:9] <- NA
inA <- is.na(A)
stopifnot(sum(inA) == 1+1+5)
# \dontshow{
if(exists("anyNA", mode="function"))
stopifnot(anyNA(M), anyNA(A))
# }

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