When you are dealing with factors
, when the NA
is wrapped in angled brackets ( <NA>
), that indicates thtat it is in fact NA.
When it is NA
without brackets, then it is not NA, but rather a proper factor whose label is "NA"
# Note a 'real' NA and a string with the word "NA"
x <- factor(c("hello", NA, "world", "NA"))
x
[1] hello <NA> world NA
Levels: hello NA world <~~ The string appears as a level, the actual NA does not.
as.numeric(x)
[1] 1 NA 3 2 <~~ The string has a numeric value (here, 2, alphabetically)
The NA's numeric value is just NA
Edit to answer @Arun's question:
R
is simply trying to distinguish between a string whose value are the two letters "NA"
and an actual missing value, NA
Thus the difference you see when displaying df
versus df$y
. Example:
df <- data.frame(x=1:4, y=c("a", NA_character_, "c", "NA"), stringsAsFactors=FALSE)
Note the two different styles of NA:
> df
x y
1 1 a
2 2 <NA>
3 3 c
4 4 NA
However, if we look at just 'df$y'
[1] "a" NA "c" "NA"
But, if we remove the quotation marks (similar to what we see when printing a data.frame to the console):
print(df$y, quote=FALSE)
[1] a <NA> c NA
And thus, we once again have the distinction of NA
via the angled brackets.
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