Replacing values in a table

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Bruce MacWilliams
Bruce MacWilliams el 11 de Abr. de 2018
Comentada: Peter Perkins el 13 de Abr. de 2018
I have a table created from a database query using T = select(conn,selectquery); Missing database entries for numeric integer types are read as -2147483648 for long integer types (int32) and -32768 (int16) for short integer types. I would like to replace these with NaN throughout the entire table. If I use I=ismissing(T,[-2147483648 -32768]) I returns logical array with all the table indices where there are missing values as 1=true, in other words, this works. However, if I try to use T = standardizeMissing(T,[-32768 -2147483648]) or any variation, the values are not replaced with NaN as the command would suggest should happen.
  3 comentarios
Bruce MacWilliams
Bruce MacWilliams el 11 de Abr. de 2018
Thanks for the reply. Your suggestion was my initial try, and what I was referring to when I mentioned "any variation" of the standardizeMissing() command. So, in short, using the "one-at-a-time" approach does not solve this issue.
dpb
dpb el 11 de Abr. de 2018
OK, I see Peter already identified what was going to be my second thought (that didn't come to me until after the posting, I'll admit)

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Respuesta aceptada

Peter Perkins
Peter Perkins el 11 de Abr. de 2018
Are these actual integer types, and not just doubles with integer values in them? Because you can't put NaNs into int16 and int32. standardizeMissing completely ignores integer types:
>> T = table([1;-32768;3;4],[5;6;-2147483648;8])
T =
4×2 table
Var1 Var2
______ ___________
1 5
-32768 6
3 -2.1475e+09
4 8
>> T = standardizeMissing(T,[-32768 -2147483648])
T =
4×2 table
Var1 Var2
____ ____
1 5
NaN 6
3 NaN
4 8
>> T = table(int16([1;-32768;3;4]),int32([5;6;-2147483648;8]))
T =
4×2 table
Var1 Var2
______ ___________
1 5
-32768 6
3 -2147483648
4 8
>> T = standardizeMissing(T,[-32768 -2147483648])
T =
4×2 table
Var1 Var2
______ ___________
1 5
-32768 6
3 -2147483648
4 8
  2 comentarios
Bruce MacWilliams
Bruce MacWilliams el 11 de Abr. de 2018
Yes, that is the case, they are int data types, and I was wondering about that but the documentation seems to suggest that int types are acceptable:
Data Types: double | single | int8 | int16 | int32 | int64 | uint8 | uint16 | uint32 | uint64 | logical | char | string | cell | table | timetable | categorical | datetime | duration
Is there a suggested work around? Convert the columns to a different data type first?
Peter Perkins
Peter Perkins el 13 de Abr. de 2018
I'll make a note to tweak the doc.
There is no "work-around" per se because integer types just don't have the notion of a NaN value. The thing to do is to convert to either 1) floating point, maybe single if memory is an issue 2) categorical, if these are really categorical data (categorical has undefined analogous to NaN)

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Más respuestas (1)

David Fletcher
David Fletcher el 11 de Abr. de 2018
tab =
10×2 table
C1 C2
__ ___________
1 -32768
2 9
3 3
4 2
5 1
6 -2.1475e+09
7 7
8 9
9 1
10 2
standardizeMissing(tab,{-32768,-2147483648},'DataVariables',{'C2'})
ans =
10×2 table
C1 C2
__ ___
1 NaN
2 9
3 3
4 2
5 1
6 NaN
7 7
8 9
9 1
10 2
  2 comentarios
David Fletcher
David Fletcher el 11 de Abr. de 2018
See the answer below - these weren't expressly cast to ints so would have been doubles. I still have a nasty habit of typing what I assume is an int and forgetting that Matlab defaults to a double type.
Bruce MacWilliams
Bruce MacWilliams el 11 de Abr. de 2018
David: Thanks for your assistance, when I first saw this your post I tried it, but it did not work and I'm pretty sure I had already attempted the 'DataVariables' argument. Conversion of the table column/variable from int to double solves the problem, so that is what I will do.

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