Thanks a lot. I’ve got it just now.
On Wed, Aug 26, 2020 at 6:03 PM peter dalgaard wrote:
> It is because you don't know whether you want it or not.
>
> It is a bit more obvious with integer indexing, as in color[race]: if race
> is NA you don't know what color to put in, but the result should b
Thanks for your reply.
You're right, here is what I did:
> library(foreign)
> sz201401=read.spss("/Users/e.daadmehr/Desktop/Term/LastLast/untitled
folder/2014/1.sav", to.data.frame=TRUE)
Warning message:
In read.spss("/Users/e.daadmehr/Desktop/Term/LastLast/untitled
folder/2014/1.sav", :
/
Thanks guys. but I'm a bit confused. the input is the first column (z[,1]
and z1[,1]).
How is it possible that a subset of a non-NA vector, contains NA?
On Wed, Aug 26, 2020 at 4:58 PM Eric Berger wrote:
> Good point! :-)
>
>
> On Wed, Aug 26, 2020 at 5:55 PM peter dalgaard wrote:
>
>> Offhand,
It is because you don't know whether you want it or not.
It is a bit more obvious with integer indexing, as in color[race]: if race is
NA you don't know what color to put in, but the result should be the same
length as race.
With logical indices, the behaviour is a bit annoying, but ultimatel
c(1:3)[c(1,NA,3)]
[1] 1 NA 3
On Wed, Aug 26, 2020 at 6:06 PM Elham Daadmehr wrote:
> Thanks guys. but I'm a bit confused. the input is the first column (z[,1]
> and z1[,1]).
> How is it possible that a subset of a non-NA vector, contains NA?
>
> On Wed, Aug 26, 2020 at 4:58 PM Eric Berger wrot
Good point! :-)
On Wed, Aug 26, 2020 at 5:55 PM peter dalgaard wrote:
> Offhand, I suspect that the NAs are in the 8th column.
>
> > On 26 Aug 2020, at 10:57 , Elham Daadmehr wrote:
> >
> > Hi all,
> >
> > I have a simple problem. I get stuck in using the imported spss data
> (.sav)
> > using
Offhand, I suspect that the NAs are in the 8th column.
> On 26 Aug 2020, at 10:57 , Elham Daadmehr wrote:
>
> Hi all,
>
> I have a simple problem. I get stuck in using the imported spss data (.sav)
> using "read.spss".
> I imported data (z) without any problem. After importing, the first column
Hi Elham,
You are not giving us much to go on here.
Show us the commands that (a) confirm there are no NA's in the first column
of z
and (b) output a row of z that has an NA in the first column.
Here's how one might do this:
(a) sum(is.na(z[,1]))
(b) z[ match(TRUE, z[,8] %in% c("11","12","14")), ]
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