% File src/library/base/man/NA.Rd % Part of the R package, http://www.R-project.org % Copyright 1995-2007 R Core Development Team % Distributed under GPL 2 or later \name{NA} \alias{NA} \alias{NA_integer_} \alias{NA_real_} \alias{NA_complex_} \alias{NA_character_} \alias{is.na} \alias{is.na.data.frame} \alias{is.na<-} \alias{is.na<-.default} \title{Not Available / ``Missing'' Values} \description{ \code{NA} is a logical constant of length 1 which contains a missing value indicator. \code{NA} can be freely coerced to any other vector type except raw. There are also constants \code{NA_integer_}, \code{NA_real_}, \code{NA_complex_} and \code{NA_character_} of the other atomic vector types which support missing values: all of these are \link{reserved} words in the \R language. The generic function \code{is.na} indicates which elements are missing. The generic function \code{is.na<-} sets elements to \code{NA}. } \usage{ NA is.na(x) \method{is.na}{data.frame}(x) is.na(x) <- value } \arguments{ \item{x}{an \R object to be tested.} \item{value}{a suitable index vector for use with \code{x}.} } \details{ %% Next par on character NAs taken from R-lang.texi: The \code{NA} of character type is distinct from the string \code{"NA"}. Programmers who need to specify an explicit string \code{NA} should use \code{NA_character_} rather than \code{"NA"}, or set elements to \code{NA} using \code{is.na<-}. \code{is.na(x)} works elementwise when \code{x} is a \code{\link{list}}. It is generic: you can write methods to handle specific classes of objects, see \link{InternalMethods}. A complex value is regarded as \code{NA} if either its real or imaginary part is \code{NA} or \code{NaN}. Function \code{is.na<-} may provide a safer way to set missingness. It behaves differently for factors, for example. } \value{ The default method for \code{is.na} returns a logical vector of the same length as its argument \code{x}, containing \code{TRUE} for those elements marked \code{NA} or \code{\link{NaN}} (!) and \code{FALSE} otherwise. \code{dim}, \code{dimnames} and \code{names} attributes are preserved. The method \code{is.na.data.frame} returns a logical matrix with the same dimensions as the data frame, and with dimnames taken from the row and column names of the data frame. } \references{ Becker, R. A., Chambers, J. M. and Wilks, A. R. (1988) \emph{The New S Language}. Wadsworth \& Brooks/Cole. Chambers, J. M. (1998) \emph{Programming with Data. A Guide to the S Language}. Springer. } \seealso{ \code{\link{NaN}}, \code{\link{is.nan}}, etc., and the utility function \code{\link{complete.cases}}. \code{\link{na.action}}, \code{\link{na.omit}}, \code{\link{na.fail}} on how methods can be tuned to deal with missing values. } \examples{ is.na(c(1, NA)) #> FALSE TRUE is.na(paste(c(1, NA))) #> FALSE FALSE (xx <- c(0:4)) is.na(xx) <- c(2, 4) xx #> 0 NA 2 NA 4 } \keyword{NA} \keyword{logic} \keyword{manip}