knitr::opts_chunk$set( collapse = TRUE, comment = "#>" )
The goal of mde
is to ease exploration of missingness.
Installation
CRAN release
install.packages("mde")
Stable Development version
devtools::install_github("Nelson-Gon/mde") devtools::install_github("Nelson-Gon/mde", build_vignettes=TRUE)
Unstable Development version
devtools::install_github("Nelson-Gon/mde@develop")
Loading the package
library(mde)
To get a simple missingness report, use na_summary
:
na_summary(airquality)
To sort this summary by a given column :
na_summary(airquality,sort_by = "percent_complete")
To sort by percent_missing
instead:
na_summary(airquality, sort_by = "percent_missing")
To sort the above in descending order:
na_summary(airquality, sort_by="percent_missing", descending = TRUE)
To exclude certain columns from the analysis:
na_summary(airquality, exclude_cols = c("Day", "Wind"))
To include or exclude via regex match:
na_summary(airquality, regex_kind = "inclusion",pattern_type = "starts_with", pattern = "O|S")
na_summary(airquality, regex_kind = "exclusion",pattern_type = "regex", pattern = "^[O|S]")
To get this summary by group:
test2 <- data.frame(ID= c("A","A","B","A","B"), Vals = c(rep(NA,4),"No"),ID2 = c("E","E","D","E","D")) na_summary(test2,grouping_cols = c("ID","ID2"))
na_summary(test2, grouping_cols="ID")
get_na_counts
This provides a convenient way to show the number of missing values column-wise. It is relatively fast(tests done on about 400,000 rows, took a few microseconds.)
To get the number of missing values in each column of airquality
, we can use the function as follows:
get_na_counts(airquality)
The above might be less useful if one would like to get the results by group. In that case, one can provide a grouping vector of names in grouping_cols
.
test <- structure(list(Subject = structure(c(1L, 1L, 2L, 2L), .Label = c("A", "B"), class = "factor"), res = c(NA, 1, 2, 3), ID = structure(c(1L, 1L, 2L, 2L), .Label = c("1", "2"), class = "factor")), class = "data.frame", row.names = c(NA, -4L)) get_na_counts(test, grouping_cols = "ID")
percent_missing
This is a very simple to use but quick way to take a look at the percentage of data that is missing column-wise.
percent_missing(airquality)
We can get the results by group by providing an optional grouping_cols
character vector.
percent_missing(test, grouping_cols = "Subject")
To exclude some columns from the above exploration, one can provide an optional character vector in exclude_cols
.
percent_missing(airquality,exclude_cols = c("Day","Temp"))
sort_by_missingness
This provides a very simple but relatively fast way to sort variables by missingness. Unless otherwise stated, this does not currently support arranging grouped percents.
Usage:
sort_by_missingness(airquality, sort_by = "counts")
To sort in descending order:
sort_by_missingness(airquality, sort_by = "counts", descend = TRUE)
To use percentages instead:
sort_by_missingness(airquality, sort_by = "percents")
recode_as_na
As the name might imply, this converts any value or vector of values to NA
i.e. we take a value such as "missing" or "NA" (not a real NA
according to R
) and convert it to R's known handler for missing values (NA
).
To use the function out of the box (with default arguments), one simply does something like:
dummy_test <- data.frame(ID = c("A","B","B","A"), values = c("n/a",NA,"Yes","No")) # Convert n/a and no to NA head(recode_as_na(dummy_test, value = c("n/a","No")))
Great, but I want to do so for specific columns not the entire dataset. You can do this by providing column names to subset_cols
.
another_dummy <- data.frame(ID = 1:5, Subject = 7:11, Change = c("missing","n/a",2:4 )) # Only change values at the column Change head(recode_as_na(another_dummy, subset_cols = "Change", value = c("n/a","missing")))
To recode columns using RegEx,one can provide pattern_type
and a target pattern
. Currently supported pattern_types
are starts_with
, ends_with
, contains
and regex
. See docs for more details.:
# only change at columns that start with Solar head(recode_as_na(airquality,value=190,pattern_type="starts_with",pattern="Solar"))
# recode at columns that start with O or S(case sensitive) head(recode_as_na(airquality,value=c(67,118),pattern_type="starts_with",pattern="S|O"))
# use my own RegEx head(recode_as_na(airquality,value=c(67,118),pattern_type="regex",pattern="(?i)^(s|o)"))
recode_as_na_if
This function allows one to deliberately introduce missing values if a column meets a certain threshold of missing values. This is similar to amputation
but is much more basic. It is only provided here because it is hoped it may be useful to someone for whatever reason.
head(recode_as_na_if(airquality,sign="gt", percent_na=20))
recode_as_na_str
This allows recoding as NA
based on a string match.
partial_match <- data.frame(A=c("Hi","match_me","nope"), B=c(NA, "not_me","nah")) recode_as_na_str(partial_match,"ends_with","ME", case_sensitive=FALSE)
recode_as_na_for
For all values greater/less/less or equal/greater or equal than some value, can I convert them to NA
?!
Yes You Can! All we have to do is use recode_as_na_for
:
head(recode_as_na_for(airquality,criteria="gt",value=25))
To do so at specific columns, pass an optional subset_cols
character vector:
head(recode_as_na_for(airquality, value=40,subset_cols=c("Solar.R","Ozone"), criteria="gt"))
recode_na_as
Sometimes, for whatever reason, one would like to replace NA
s with whatever value they would like. recode_na_as
provides a very simple way to do just that.
head(recode_na_as(airquality)) # use NaN head(recode_na_as(airquality, value=NaN))
As a "bonus", you can manipulate the data only at specific columns as shown here:
head(recode_na_as(airquality, value=0, subset_cols="Ozone"))
The above also supports custom recoding similar to recode_na_as
:
head(mde::recode_na_as(airquality, value=0, pattern_type="starts_with",pattern="Solar"))
column_based_recode
Ever needed to change values in a given column based on the proportions of NA
s in other columns(row-wise)?!. The goal of column_based_recode
is to achieve just that. Let's see how we could do this with a simple example:
head(column_based_recode(airquality, values_from = "Wind", values_to="Wind", pattern_type = "regex", pattern = "Solar|Ozone"))
custom_na_recode
This allows recoding NA
values with common stats functions such as mean
,max
,min
,sd
.
To use default values:
head(custom_na_recode(airquality))
To use select columns:
head(custom_na_recode(airquality,func="mean",across_columns=c("Solar.R","Ozone")))
To use a function from another package to perform replacements:
To perform a forward fill with dplyr
's lead
:
# use lag for a backfill head(custom_na_recode(airquality,func=dplyr::lead ))
To perform replacement by group:
some_data <- data.frame(ID=c("A1","A1","A1","A2","A2", "A2"),A=c(5,NA,0,8,3,4),B=c(10,0,0,NA,5,6),C=c(1,NA,NA,25,7,8)) head(custom_na_recode(some_data,func = "mean", grouping_cols = "ID"))
Across specific columns:
head(custom_na_recode(some_data,func = "mean", grouping_cols = "ID", across_columns = c("C", "A")))
recode_na_if
Given a data.frame
object, one can recode NA
s as another value based on a grouping variable. In the example below, we replace all NA
s in all columns with 0s if the ID is A2
or A3
some_data <- data.frame(ID=c("A1","A2","A3", "A4"), A=c(5,NA,0,8), B=c(10,0,0,1), C=c(1,NA,NA,25)) head(recode_na_if(some_data,grouping_col="ID", target_groups=c("A2","A3"), replacement= 0))
drop_na_if
Suppose you wanted to drop any column that has a percentage of NA
s greater than or equal to a certain value? drop_na_if
does just that.
We can drop any columns that have greater than or equal(gteq) to 24% of the values missing from airquality
:
head(drop_na_if(airquality, sign="gteq",percent_na = 24))
The above also supports less than or equal to(lteq
), equal to(eq
), greater than(gt
) and less than(lt
).
To keep certain columns despite fitting the target percent_na
criteria, one can provide an optional keep_columns
character vector.
head(drop_na_if(airquality, percent_na = 24, keep_columns = "Ozone"))
Compare the above result to the following:
head(drop_na_if(airquality, percent_na = 24))
To drop groups that meet a set missingness criterion, we proceed as follows.
grouped_drop <- structure(list(ID = c("A", "A", "B", "A", "B"), Vals = c(4, NA, NA, NA, NA), Values = c(5, 6, 7, 8, NA)), row.names = c(NA, -5L), class = "data.frame") # Drop all columns for groups that meet a percent missingness of greater than or # equal to 67 drop_na_if(grouped_drop,percent_na = 67,sign="gteq", grouping_cols = "ID")
drop_row_if
This is similar to drop_na_if
but does operations rowwise not columnwise. Compare to the example above:
# Drop rows with at least two NAs head(drop_row_if(airquality, sign="gteq", type="count" , value = 2))
To drop based on percentages:
# Drops 42 rows head(drop_row_if(airquality, type="percent", value=16, sign="gteq", as_percent=TRUE))
For more details, please see the documentation of drop_row_if
.
drop_na_at
This provides a simple way to drop missing values only at specific columns. It currently only returns those columns with their missing values removed. See usage below. Further details are given in the documentation. It is currently case sensitive.
head(drop_na_at(airquality,pattern_type = "starts_with","O"))
drop_all_na
This drops columns where all values are missing.
test2 <- data.frame(ID= c("A","A","B","A","B"), Vals = c(4,rep(NA, 4))) drop_all_na(test2, grouping_cols="ID")
Alternatively, we can drop groups where all variables are all NA.
test2 <- data.frame(ID= c("A","A","B","A","B"), Vals = rep(NA, 5)) head(drop_all_na(test, grouping_cols = "ID"))
Please note that the mde
project is released with a
Contributor Code of Conduct.
By contributing to this project, you agree to abide by its terms.
For further exploration, please browseVignettes("mde")
.
To raise an issue, please do so here
Thank you, feedback is always welcome :)
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