convert zeros to nan

I have an array (10 rows,10 columns,5 bands) and wonder how I can convert the zero values to NaN. I used the following command line but it's not working. If I replace zero values with another value (like 2) it works but for an odd reason is not working with NaN. A(A==0)=NaN
I apperciate your help.

1 Comment

Marina
Marina on 9 Feb 2024
Try the standardizeMissing function.

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 Accepted Answer

Given that your array is truly uint32, try this:
clear
uint32(nan)
ans =
0
NaNs are only defined in context of FLOATING point numbers.

1 Comment

Hassan
Hassan on 22 Apr 2011
I tried that. I got the same answer (ans=0).

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More Answers (3)

John D'Errico
John D'Errico on 22 Apr 2011
It DOES work.
A = [1 2 0 -4 5 0 0 6];
A(A == 0) = NaN
A =
1 2 NaN -4 5 NaN NaN 6
So you are mistaken that it fails. Very likely, you are failing to understand that matlab sometimes displays a number as 0, yet it is NOT zero.
format short
A = [1 2 0.00000001 -4 5 0.000000023 0.000000000001 6]
A =
1.0000 2.0000 0.0000 -4.0000 5.0000 0.0000 0.0000 6.0000
See that there are still three values that are displayed as zero, but the simple test for zero fails to see any of them
A == 0
ans =
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
I will also point out that you CANNOT test for a NaN using ==, as that test will always return false. This is easy to prove.
nan == nan
ans =
0
The final possibility is that you have defined nan to be some other value. Thus
nan = 5;
Now I will not be able to assign something as a true nan, instead, matlab will use 5 when you try that. So, if you have defined nan = 0 someplace, then replacing zeros by nan will just insert zeros directly back in.

7 Comments

Hassan
Hassan on 22 Apr 2011
thanks John for the comment. when I do A==0 then it reconizes zeros. when I convert zero values to other values, the conversion works fine. and nan value is NaN and not other values as I check it. I don't know what the problem is.
You have said ONLY that it does not work for you. You have NOT said what it does when you try to do this though. Show an example where it fails.
What class is your data?
>> class(A)
Nan is not defined for all classes.
Hassan
Hassan on 22 Apr 2011
class(A) is unit32. it works when I creat an array with zero values but not for my data. my data is big and I can not show them here but can send you by email. using A(A==0)=2 it finds zero values and convert them to 2 and using A(A==2)=nan it finds 2 values but convert them to zero.
I think Sean has the answer. Are you using some other class? If you don't give us sufficient information, we are just guessing here.
Nan is not defined as a valid value for uint32 numbers.
Hassan
Hassan on 22 Apr 2011
OK, in that case I need to use other values instead of NaN. thanks John for the help.

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Try this:
A(find(A==0)) = NaN;

4 Comments

Hassan
Hassan on 22 Apr 2011
thanks Ali for the reply. I tried that but it's not working. if I use A(A==0)=NaN or A(find(A==0))=NaN, the zero values stay zero. I can change the zero values to another value like 2 but I can not convert them to NaN.
What does it do when you try that? Have you possibly defined a variable nan to have some other value?
Hassan
Hassan on 22 Apr 2011
I clear all variables using 'clear all' command. it can't convert zeros to nan for no reason.
Hassan
Hassan on 22 Apr 2011
when I convert a value to NaN, it is converted to zero.

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Matt Fig
Matt Fig on 22 Apr 2011
Please do these three commands on your machine and paste the output, just like I did. Remember to use the {} Code button!
>> which nan
built-in (C:\Program Files\MATLAB\R2007b\toolbox\matlab\elmat\nan)
>> B = mod(1:5,2)
B =
1 0 1 0 1
>> B(~B)=nan
B =
1 NaN 1 NaN 1
.
. EDIT
Hassan, don't put in the >> when you run the code.

3 Comments

Hassan
Hassan on 22 Apr 2011
thanks Matt for the comment. it gives me the following error:
??? built-in (C:\Program Files\MATLAB\R2007b\toolbox\matlab\elmat\nan)
|
Error: Unexpected MATLAB operator.
Matt Fig
Matt Fig on 22 Apr 2011
I hope you didn't try to put in the >> when you did the commands, did you?? I only left them there to show that I did this at the command window!
Hassan
Hassan on 22 Apr 2011
No I didn't. I am using Matlab 2009b version on the university network. i couldn't find Matlab folder in Program Files.

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on 22 Apr 2011

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on 9 Feb 2024

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