Missing Values
Julia provides support for representing missing values in the statistical sense. This is for situations where no value is available for a variable in an observation, but a valid value theoretically exists. Missing values are represented via the missing
object, which is the singleton instance of the type Missing
. missing
is equivalent to NULL
in SQL and NA
in R, and behaves like them in most situations.
Propagation of Missing Values
missing
values propagate automatically when passed to standard mathematical operators and functions. For these functions, uncertainty about the value of one of the operands induces uncertainty about the result. In practice, this means a math operation involving a missing
value generally returns missing
:
julia> missing + 1
missing
julia> "a" * missing
missing
julia> abs(missing)
missing
Since missing
is a normal Julia object, this propagation rule only works for functions which have opted in to implement this behavior. This can be achieved by:
- adding a specific method defined for arguments of type
Missing
, - accepting arguments of this type, and passing them to functions which propagate them (like standard math operators).
Packages should consider whether it makes sense to propagate missing values when defining new functions, and define methods appropriately if this is the case. Passing a missing
value to a function which does not have a method accepting arguments of type Missing
throws a MethodError
, just like for any other type.
Functions that do not propagate missing
values can be made to do so by wrapping them in the passmissing
function provided by the Missings.jl package. For example, f(x)
becomes passmissing(f)(x)
.
Equality and Comparison Operators
Standard equality and comparison operators follow the propagation rule presented above: if any of the operands is missing
, the result is missing
. Here are a few examples:
julia> missing == 1
missing
julia> missing == missing
missing
julia> missing < 1
missing
julia> 2 >= missing
missing
In particular, note that missing == missing
returns missing
, so ==
cannot be used to test whether a value is missing. To test whether x
is missing
, use ismissing(x)
.
Special comparison operators isequal
and ===
are exceptions to the propagation rule. They will always return a Bool
value, even in the presence of missing
values, considering missing
as equal to missing
and as different from any other value. They can therefore be used to test whether a value is missing
:
julia> missing === 1
false
julia> isequal(missing, 1)
false
julia> missing === missing
true
julia> isequal(missing, missing)
true
The isless
operator is another exception: missing
is considered as greater than any other value. This operator is used by sort
, which therefore places missing
values after all other values:
julia> isless(1, missing)
true
julia> isless(missing, Inf)
false
julia> isless(missing, missing)
false
Logical operators
Logical (or boolean) operators |
, &
and xor
are another special case since they only propagate missing
values when it is logically required. For these operators, whether or not the result is uncertain, depends on the particular operation. This follows the well-established rules of three-valued logic which are implemented by e.g. NULL
in SQL and NA
in R. This abstract definition corresponds to a relatively natural behavior which is best explained via concrete examples.
Let us illustrate this principle with the logical "or" operator |
. Following the rules of boolean logic, if one of the operands is true
, the value of the other operand does not have an influence on the result, which will always be true
:
julia> true | true
true
julia> true | false
true
julia> false | true
true
Based on this observation, we can conclude if one of the operands is true
and the other missing
, we know that the result is true
in spite of the uncertainty about the actual value of one of the operands. If we had been able to observe the actual value of the second operand, it could only be true
or false
, and in both cases the result would be true
. Therefore, in this particular case, missingness does not propagate:
julia> true | missing
true
julia> missing | true
true
On the contrary, if one of the operands is false
, the result could be either true
or false
depending on the value of the other operand. Therefore, if that operand is missing
, the result has to be missing
too:
julia> false | true
true
julia> true | false
true
julia> false | false
false
julia> false | missing
missing
julia> missing | false
missing
The behavior of the logical "and" operator &
is similar to that of the |
operator, with the difference that missingness does not propagate when one of the operands is false
. For example, when that is the case of the first operand:
julia> false & false
false
julia> false & true
false
julia> false & missing
false
On the other hand, missingness propagates when one of the operands is true
, for example the first one:
julia> true & true
true
julia> true & false
false
julia> true & missing
missing
Finally, the "exclusive or" logical operator xor
always propagates missing
values, since both operands always have an effect on the result. Also note that the negation operator !
returns missing
when the operand is missing
, just like other unary operators.
Control Flow and Short-Circuiting Operators
Control flow operators including if
, while
and the ternary operator x ? y : z
do not allow for missing values. This is because of the uncertainty about whether the actual value would be true
or false
if we could observe it. This implies we do not know how the program should behave. In this case, a TypeError
is thrown as soon as a missing
value is encountered in this context:
julia> if missing
println("here")
end
ERROR: TypeError: non-boolean (Missing) used in boolean context
For the same reason, contrary to logical operators presented above, the short-circuiting boolean operators &&
and ||
do not allow for missing
values in situations where the value of the operand determines whether the next operand is evaluated or not. For example:
julia> missing || false
ERROR: TypeError: non-boolean (Missing) used in boolean context
julia> missing && false
ERROR: TypeError: non-boolean (Missing) used in boolean context
julia> true && missing && false
ERROR: TypeError: non-boolean (Missing) used in boolean context
In contrast, there is no error thrown when the result can be determined without the missing
values. This is the case when the code short-circuits before evaluating the missing
operand, and when the missing
operand is the last one:
julia> true && missing
missing
julia> false && missing
false
Arrays With Missing Values
Arrays containing missing values can be created like other arrays:
julia> [1, missing]
2-element Vector{Union{Missing, Int64}}:
1
missing
As this example shows, the element type of such arrays is Union{Missing, T}
, with T
the type of the non-missing values. This reflects the fact that array entries can be either of type T
(here, Int64
) or of type Missing
. This kind of array uses an efficient memory storage equivalent to an Array{T}
holding the actual values combined with an Array{UInt8}
indicating the type of the entry (i.e. whether it is Missing
or T
).
Arrays allowing for missing values can be constructed with the standard syntax. Use Array{Union{Missing, T}}(missing, dims)
to create arrays filled with missing values:
julia> Array{Union{Missing, String}}(missing, 2, 3)
2×3 Matrix{Union{Missing, String}}:
missing missing missing
missing missing missing
Using undef
or similar
may currently give an array filled with missing
, but this is not the correct way to obtain such an array. Use a missing
constructor as shown above instead.
An array with element type allowing missing
entries (e.g. Vector{Union{Missing, T}}
) which does not contain any missing
entries can be converted to an array type that does not allow for missing
entries (e.g. Vector{T}
) using convert
. If the array contains missing
values, a MethodError
is thrown during conversion:
julia> x = Union{Missing, String}["a", "b"]
2-element Vector{Union{Missing, String}}:
"a"
"b"
julia> convert(Array{String}, x)
2-element Vector{String}:
"a"
"b"
julia> y = Union{Missing, String}[missing, "b"]
2-element Vector{Union{Missing, String}}:
missing
"b"
julia> convert(Array{String}, y)
ERROR: MethodError: Cannot `convert` an object of type Missing to an object of type String
Skipping Missing Values
Since missing
values propagate with standard mathematical operators, reduction functions return missing
when called on arrays which contain missing values:
julia> sum([1, missing])
missing
In this situation, use the skipmissing
function to skip missing values:
julia> sum(skipmissing([1, missing]))
1
This convenience function returns an iterator which filters out missing
values efficiently. It can therefore be used with any function which supports iterators:
julia> x = skipmissing([3, missing, 2, 1])
skipmissing(Union{Missing, Int64}[3, missing, 2, 1])
julia> maximum(x)
3
julia> mean(x)
2.0
julia> mapreduce(sqrt, +, x)
4.146264369941973
Objects created by calling skipmissing
on an array can be indexed using indices from the parent array. Indices corresponding to missing values are not valid for these objects, and an error is thrown when trying to use them (they are also skipped by keys
and eachindex
):
julia> x[1]
3
julia> x[2]
ERROR: MissingException: the value at index (2,) is missing
[...]
This allows functions which operate on indices to work in combination with skipmissing
. This is notably the case for search and find functions. These functions return indices valid for the object returned by skipmissing
, and are also the indices of the matching entries in the parent array:
julia> findall(==(1), x)
1-element Vector{Int64}:
4
julia> findfirst(!iszero, x)
1
julia> argmax(x)
1
Use collect
to extract non-missing
values and store them in an array:
julia> collect(x)
3-element Vector{Int64}:
3
2
1
Logical Operations on Arrays
The three-valued logic described above for logical operators is also used by logical functions applied to arrays. Thus, array equality tests using the ==
operator return missing
whenever the result cannot be determined without knowing the actual value of the missing
entry. In practice, this means missing
is returned if all non-missing values of the compared arrays are equal, but one or both arrays contain missing values (possibly at different positions):
julia> [1, missing] == [2, missing]
false
julia> [1, missing] == [1, missing]
missing
julia> [1, 2, missing] == [1, missing, 2]
missing
As for single values, use isequal
to treat missing
values as equal to other missing
values, but different from non-missing values:
julia> isequal([1, missing], [1, missing])
true
julia> isequal([1, 2, missing], [1, missing, 2])
false
Functions any
and all
also follow the rules of three-valued logic. Thus, returning missing
when the result cannot be determined:
julia> all([true, missing])
missing
julia> all([false, missing])
false
julia> any([true, missing])
true
julia> any([false, missing])
missing