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sjmisc (version 2.6.3)

set_na: Replace specific values in vector with NA

Description

This function replaces specific values of variables with NA.

Usage

set_na(x, ..., na, drop.levels = TRUE, as.tag = FALSE)

Arguments

x

A vector or data frame.

...

Optional, unquoted names of variables that should be selected for further processing. Required, if x is a data frame (and no vector) and only selected variables from x should be processed. You may also use functions like : or dplyr's select_helpers. See 'Examples' or package-vignette.

na

Numeric vector with values that should be replaced with NA values, or a character vector if values of factors or character vectors should be replaced. For labelled vectors, may also be the name of a value label. In this case, the associated values for the value labels in each vector will be replaced with NA (see 'Examples').

drop.levels

Logical, if TRUE, factor levels of values that have been replaced with NA are dropped. See 'Examples'.

as.tag

Logical, if TRUE, values in x will be replaced by tagged_na, else by usual NA values. Use a named vector to assign the value label to the tagged NA value (see 'Examples').

Value

x, with all elements of na being replaced by NA. If x is a data frame, the complete data frame x will be returned, with NA's set for variables specified in ...; if ... is not specified, applies to all variables in the data frame.

Details

set_na() converts all values defined in na with a related NA or tagged NA value (see tagged_na). Tagged NAs work exactly like regular R missing values except that they store one additional byte of information: a tag, which is usually a letter ("a" to "z") or character number ("0" to "9").

Furthermore, see also 'Details' in get_na.

See Also

replace_na to replace NA's with specific values, rec for general recoding of variables and recode_to for re-shifting value ranges. See get_na to get values of missing values in labelled vectors.

Examples

Run this code
# NOT RUN {
# create random variable
dummy <- sample(1:8, 100, replace = TRUE)
# show value distribution
table(dummy)
# set value 1 and 8 as missings
dummy <- set_na(dummy, na = c(1, 8))
# show value distribution, including missings
table(dummy, useNA = "always")

# add named vector as further missing value
set_na(dummy, na = c("Refused" = 5), as.tag = TRUE)
# see different missing types
library(haven)
library(sjlabelled)
print_tagged_na(set_na(dummy, na = c("Refused" = 5), as.tag = TRUE))


# create sample data frame
dummy <- data.frame(var1 = sample(1:8, 100, replace = TRUE),
                    var2 = sample(1:10, 100, replace = TRUE),
                    var3 = sample(1:6, 100, replace = TRUE))
# set value 2 and 4 as missings
dummy %>% set_na(na = c(2, 4)) %>% head()
dummy %>% set_na(na = c(2, 4), as.tag = TRUE) %>% get_na()
dummy %>% set_na(na = c(2, 4), as.tag = TRUE) %>% get_values()

data(efc)
dummy <- data.frame(
  var1 = efc$c82cop1,
  var2 = efc$c83cop2,
  var3 = efc$c84cop3
)
# check original distribution of categories
lapply(dummy, table, useNA = "always")
# set 3 to NA for two variables
lapply(set_na(dummy, var1, var3, na = 3), table, useNA = "always")

# drop unused factor levels when being set to NA
x <- factor(c("a", "b", "c"))
x
set_na(x, na = "b", as.tag = TRUE)
set_na(x, na = "b", drop.levels = FALSE, as.tag = TRUE)

# set_na() can also remove a missing by defining the value label
# of the value that should be replaced with NA. This is in particular
# helpful if a certain category should be set as NA, however, this category
# is assigned with different values accross variables
x1 <- sample(1:4, 20, replace = TRUE)
x2 <- sample(1:7, 20, replace = TRUE)
x1 <- set_labels(x1, labels = c("Refused" = 3, "No answer" = 4))
x2 <- set_labels(x2, labels = c("Refused" = 6, "No answer" = 7))

tmp <- data.frame(x1, x2)
get_labels(tmp)
get_labels(set_na(tmp, na = "No answer"))
get_labels(set_na(tmp, na = c("Refused", "No answer")))

# show values
tmp
set_na(tmp, na = c("Refused", "No answer"))


# }

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