How to ignore nan values in using trapz function

Hello.. I have two column matrix one is height another one is data, both are of same sizes. But both includes some NaN values.
height=[NaN;NaN;NaN;0.246;1.252;2.253;3.2470;4.228;5.192;6.139;7.072];
data=[NaN;NaN;NaN;NaN;NaN;0.0014428;0.0018342;0.0019822;0.0017613;0.0013172;NaN];
I want to integrate the data with respect to height, but as expected it gives NaN output, as the data contains NaN values. Actually the number of NaN is varying for different sets. So can anyone help in general way to omit this NaN element in using trapz function (just like nanmean, nansum, nanstd etc). Extrapolation will give error in my case, so I need answer without extrapolation. Any answer will be helpful. Thanks in advance

 Respuesta aceptada

Birdman
Birdman el 13 de Feb. de 2018
Editada: Birdman el 13 de Feb. de 2018
Before evaluation, you can get rid of nans as follows:
height=height(~isnan(height))
data=data(~isnan(data))

7 comentarios

Bijay Guha
Bijay Guha el 13 de Feb. de 2018
as you can see in the example, it will definitely remove the nans, but will disrupts the order of remaining. Means 0.246 height level corresponds NaN value of data, but after doing the above mentioned ops the 1st row contains 0.246 and 0.0014428, in addition the length of them will also not be the same hence can't perform trapz.
Try this idea:
height=[NaN;NaN;NaN;0.246;1.252;2.253;3.2470;4.228;5.192;6.139;7.072].'
data=[NaN;NaN;NaN;NaN;NaN;0.0014428;0.0018342;0.0019822;0.0017613;0.0013172;NaN].'
if sum(isnan(data))>sum(isnan(height))
heightNew=height(~isnan(height));
dataNew=data(~isnan(height));
idx=find(~isnan(dataNew));
dataNew(isnan(dataNew))=dataNew(idx(1));
elseif sum(isnan(height))>sum(isnan(data))
dataNew=data(~isnan(data));
heightNew=height(~isnan(data));
idx=find(~isnan(heightNew));
heightNew(isnan(heightNew))=heightNew(idx(1));
else
heightNew=height(~isnan(height));
dataNew=data(~isnan(data));
end
trapz(dataNew,heightNew)
Bijay Guha
Bijay Guha el 13 de Feb. de 2018
Editada: Bijay Guha el 13 de Feb. de 2018
Thanks for your idea. But, it may end up adding many extra data sometimes which will be erroneous in this case. The organization of height according to the availability of data will be helpful rather. So I built up this little code with your idea, which works fine in my case.
dataNew=data(~isnan(data));
idx=find(~isnan(data));
heightNew=height(idx);
if(isnan(heightNew)==false)
I=trapz(dataNew,heightNew);
else
heightNew1=heightNew(~isnan(heightNew));
idx1=find(~isnan(heightNew));
dataNew1=dataNew(idx1);
I=trapz(dataNew1,heightNew1);
end
Thanks again..
Birdman
Birdman el 13 de Feb. de 2018
You are welcome. If my answer helped you can accept it so that others will know that this question has been solved.
hxen
hxen el 18 de Dic. de 2023
This was helpful. Hopefully a future version of Matlab should have an 'omitnan' built in option like for mean.
Torsten
Torsten el 18 de Dic. de 2023
Editada: Torsten el 18 de Dic. de 2023
It's not possible that each function takes care about imported NaN values. You are the one who should "omitnan" whereever possible in your computations.
Luis
Luis el 1 de Abr. de 2024
Editada: Luis el 1 de Abr. de 2024
Even the following is still wrong, as it adds erroneous area where the ~nan segments are joined together:
dataNans = isnan(Data); heightNans = isnan(Height);
useIndicees = ~dataNans & ~heightNans
trapz(Data(useIndicees),Height(useIndicees))
(Consider e.g. integrating the area of a wall where x=data is along width, and nan's in y=height signify gaps in the wall. I won't show my ugly code here to take care of that, but may be you can come up with something elegant.)

Iniciar sesión para comentar.

Más respuestas (0)

Categorías

Preguntada:

el 13 de Feb. de 2018

Editada:

el 1 de Abr. de 2024

Community Treasure Hunt

Find the treasures in MATLAB Central and discover how the community can help you!

Start Hunting!

Translated by