Replace NaN's in table with zero
301 views (last 30 days)
Show older comments
Hello, I have a 1501x7 table called 'x' and there appears to be NaN's in the fourth and sixth column called "Age" and "height". I would like a way to replace NaN's with zeros. Take note, that I have already tried:
k = find(isnan(x))';
x(k) = 0;
% and
x(isnan(x)) = 0;
Yet, neither work because I am using a table, not a matrix. I have also tried converting my table into a cell array, and using these same functions, but they still do not work. They return:"Undefined function 'isnan' for input arguments of type 'cell'" ALSO, please note that the table has columns full of text. So, cell2mat does not work.
3 Comments
Accepted Answer
Peter Perkins
on 26 Jul 2015
There's a function called standardizeMissing that would replace a non-NaN value with NaN, but normally, replacing NaN with a constant value (as opposed to, for example, some sort estimated value) would be kind of a funny thing to do. I'll assume you have a good reason.
Either of the following should work:
>> t = table({'smith';'jones';'doe'},[20;NaN;40],[NaN;72;66],[120;130;140],'VariableNames',{'Name' 'Age' 'Height' 'Weight'})
t =
Name Age Height Weight
_______ ___ ______ ______
'smith' 20 NaN 120
'jones' NaN 72 130
'doe' 40 66 140
>> vars = {'Age' 'Height'};
>> t2 = t{:,vars};
>> t2(isnan(t2)) = 0;
>> t{:,vars} = t2
t =
Name Age Height Weight
_______ ___ ______ ______
'smith' 20 0 120
'jones' 0 72 130
'doe' 40 66 140
>> t = table({'smith';'jones';'doe'},[20;NaN;40],[NaN;72;66],[120;130;140],'VariableNames',{'Name' 'Age' 'Height' 'Weight'});
>> [~,vars] = ismember({'Age' 'Height'},t.Properties.VariableNames)
vars =
2 3
>> for i=vars, t.(i)(isnan(t.(i))) = 0; end
Hope this helps.
1 Comment
Chris Hooper
on 23 Aug 2024
NaN does not work as desired in unique function:
An option in the unique fuction to treat NaN as a distinct would negate one reason for replacing NaN.
More Answers (9)
Akira Agata
on 17 Feb 2017
For example:
% Make a sample table 'T' and replace 'NaN' with 0
T = table({'smith';'jones';'doe'},[20;NaN;40],[NaN;72;66],[120;130;140],'VariableNames',{'Name' 'Age' 'Height' 'Weight'});
idx = ismissing(T(:,{'Age','Height'}));
T{:,{'Age','Height'}}(idx) = 0;
Yuting Mou
on 29 Jul 2016
I also run across the problem, but there seems to be an easier way:
x.age(isnan(x.age)) = 0;
This is OK in my case
1 Comment
Steven Lord
on 23 Jul 2018
I would use the fillmissing function introduced in release R2016b. See the "Table with Multiple Data Types" example on that documentation page for a demonstration of how to replace NaN values with 0.
J.M. Verduijn
on 8 Feb 2019
for i= 1: width(T)
T.(i)(isnan(T.(i))) = 0;
end
Works for me, replaces all NaN values in table T with 0
Zachary Smith
on 19 Mar 2020
If you are using readtable() to load the table from a file, then you can add the name-value pair argument 'EmptyValue',0 to do this automatically.
0 Comments
Aron Magesh
on 7 Mar 2021
Edited: Aron Magesh
on 7 Mar 2021
Just use fillmissing function if the data is in a table or timetable.
1 Comment
Walter Roberson
on 7 Mar 2021
That is what Steven Lord suggested in https://www.mathworks.com/matlabcentral/answers/231096-replace-nan-s-in-table-with-zero#answer_329967
carolina franco
on 28 Jan 2020
Hi,
Another simple way to understand what's going on .
For me, it works well in R2014a. You only need to enter the matrix with NaN values without specifying the columns where NaN values are.
%Input
m_data=C{1,1}; % Matrix with NaN values
%Code
s1=size(m_data,1);
for i= 1: s1
msubs=m_data(i,1:end); % Save existing data in ith row of m_data
msubs=msubs(isnan(m_data(i,1:end))==0); %Substitute matrix/ taking only non-NaN values
m_data(i,1:end)=0; %Erase all existing values in ith row of m_data
m_data(i,1:size(msubs,2))=msubs; %Substitute values without NaN
end
2 Comments
Stephen23
on 28 Jan 2020
Note that all the original question explicitly states that "..I am using a table, not a matrix", and all of the other answers work with tables, not numeric matrices. Tables are a container array type:
Gabor
on 11 Mar 2021
T{:,2:4}(ismissing(T{:,2:4})) = 0;
2:4 are the columns which are containing NaN values.
1 Comment
Walter Roberson
on 11 Mar 2021
Interesting, that does work.
T = table({'smith';'jones';'doe'},[20;NaN;40],[NaN;72;66],[120;130;140],'VariableNames',{'Name' 'Age' 'Height' 'Weight'})
T{:,2:4}(ismissing(T{:,2:4})) = 0
See Also
Categories
Find more on Tables in Help Center and File Exchange
Community Treasure Hunt
Find the treasures in MATLAB Central and discover how the community can help you!
Start Hunting!