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r - Replace <NA> in a factor column

I want to replace <NA> values in a factors column with a valid value. But I can not find a way. This example is only for demonstration. The original data comes from a foreign csv file I have to deal with.

df <- data.frame(a=sample(0:10, size=10, replace=TRUE),
                 b=sample(20:30, size=10, replace=TRUE))
df[df$a==0,'a'] <- NA
df$a <- as.factor(df$a)

Could look like this

      a  b
1     1 29
2     2 23
3     3 23
4     3 22
5     4 28
6  <NA> 24
7     2 21
8     4 25
9  <NA> 29
10    3 24

Now I want to replace the <NA> values with a number.

df[is.na(df$a), 'a'] <- 88
In `[<-.factor`(`*tmp*`, iseq, value = c(88, 88)) :
  invalid factor level, NA generated

I think I missed a fundamental R concept about factors. Am I? I can not understand why it doesn't work. I think invalid factor level means that 88 is not a valid level in that factor, right? So I have to tell the factor column that there is another level?

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1) addNA If fac is a factor addNA(fac) is the same factor but with NA added as a level. See ?addNA

To force the NA level to be 88:

facna <- addNA(fac)
levels(facna) <- c(levels(fac), 88)

giving:

> facna
 [1] 1  2  3  3  4  88 2  4  88 3 
Levels: 1 2 3 4 88

1a) This can be written in a single line as follows:

`levels<-`(addNA(fac), c(levels(fac), 88))

2) factor It can also be done in one line using the various arguments of factor like this:

factor(fac, levels = levels(addNA(fac)), labels = c(levels(fac), 88), exclude = NULL)

2a) or equivalently:

factor(fac, levels = c(levels(fac), NA), labels = c(levels(fac), 88), exclude = NULL)

3) ifelse Another approach is:

factor(ifelse(is.na(fac), 88, paste(fac)), levels = c(levels(fac), 88))

4) forcats The forcats package has a function for this:

library(forcats)

fct_explicit_na(fac, "88")
## [1] 1  2  3  3  4  88 2  4  88 3 
## Levels: 1 2 3 4 88

Note: We used the following for input fac

fac <- structure(c(1L, 2L, 3L, 3L, 4L, NA, 2L, 4L, NA, 3L), .Label = c("1", 
"2", "3", "4"), class = "factor")

Update: Have improved (1) and added (1a). Later added (4).


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