142

I generally prefer to code R so that I don't get warnings, but I don't know how to avoid getting a warning when using as.numeric to convert a character vector.

For example:

x <- as.numeric(c("1", "2", "X"))

Will give me a warning because it introduced NAs by coercion. I want NAs introduced by coercion - is there a way to tell it "yes this is what I want to do". Or should I just live with the warning?

Or should I be using a different function for this task?

5
  • 8
    See ?suppressWarnings perhaps? Feb 20, 2013 at 16:32
  • 4
    What is the problem with this warning? Generally it gives valuable information. I prefer a more verbose output in the R console to nasty surprises.
    – Roland
    Feb 20, 2013 at 16:53
  • 13
    @Roland I totally agree, but the usefulness of warnings diminishes if you get used to just ignoring them. That's why I generally like to "tackle" the warnings. In this case, I will ALWAYS generate warnings, and lots of them - my data is coming in as strings with "X" representing NA, and so the function is doing exactly what I want it to do. I wanted to says "Thanks for letting me know, but it's ok I know what I'm doing". suppressWarnings seems perfect.
    – Corvus
    Feb 20, 2013 at 16:56
  • 6
    You know that read.table accepts an argument na.strings?
    – Roland
    Feb 20, 2013 at 17:03
  • It's useful to suppress them if you already have a work around to a known bug in a library. That's how I'm going to use this!
    – Clem Wang
    Jan 7, 2019 at 21:25

5 Answers 5

161

Use suppressWarnings():

suppressWarnings(as.numeric(c("1", "2", "X")))
[1]  1  2 NA

This suppresses warnings.

1
  • 1
    Although this is the preferred response, the answer by jangorecki below seems, to me, more solid.
    – Ian
    Jul 6, 2020 at 15:29
40

suppressWarnings() has already been mentioned. An alternative is to manually convert the problematic characters to NA first. For your particular problem, taRifx::destring does just that. This way if you get some other, unexpected warning out of your function, it won't be suppressed.

> library(taRifx)
> x <- as.numeric(c("1", "2", "X"))
Warning message:
NAs introduced by coercion 
> y <- destring(c("1", "2", "X"))
> y
[1]  1  2 NA
> x
[1]  1  2 NA
2
  • 6
    I know this is an old thread and destring works perfectly for op's example, but one caveat for anyone who sees this thread in the future is that destring works differently from as.numeric when the target string is a mixture of string and numeric : that is, destring("x1") gives 1 but as.numeric("x1") gives NA
    – Hong
    Mar 17, 2020 at 20:52
  • Error in library(taRifx): there is no package called ‘taRifx’ There is only Zuul. knowyourmeme.com/memes/there-is-no-dana-only-zuul Jun 19, 2022 at 3:31
38

In general suppressing warnings is not the best solution as you may want to be warned when some unexpected input will be provided.
Solution below is wrapper for maintaining just NA during data type conversion. Doesn't require any package.

    as.num = function(x, na.strings = "NA") {
        stopifnot(is.character(x))
        na = x %in% na.strings
        x[na] = "0"
        x = as.numeric(x)
        x[na] = NA_real_
        x
    }
    as.num(c("1", "2", "X"), na.strings="X")
    #[1]  1  2 NA
1
  • 6
    This is the best answer. Using suppressWarnings() is generally a bad idea, because we sometimes need to see those warnings.
    – keberwein
    Sep 26, 2017 at 18:49
1

I have slightly modified the jangorecki function for the case where we may have a variety of values that cannot be converted to a number. In my function, a template search is performed and if the template is not found, FALSE is returned.! before gperl, it means that we need those vector elements that do not match the template. The rest is similar to the as.num function. Example:

as.num.pattern <- function(x, pattern){
  stopifnot(is.character(x))
  na = !grepl(pattern, x)
  x[na] = -Inf
  x = as.numeric(x)
  x[na] = NA_real_
  x
}

as.num.pattern(c('1', '2', '3.43', 'char1', 'test2', 'other3', '23/40', '23, 54 cm.'))

[1] 1.00 2.00 3.43   NA   NA   NA   NA   NA
1
  • The example will not run presently because pattern has not been specified. as.num.pattern(c('1', '2', '3.43', NA, 'char1', 'test2', 'other3', '23/40', '23, 54 cm.'),pattern = "^[0-9\\.,]+$") will reproduce the results.
    – ckx
    Jun 17, 2022 at 9:42
0

One way to silence only particular warnings is to use the approach at Suppress warning based on their position in warning list or based on a regular expression in R

Here's a full example for the specific OP's case:

with_warning_handler <- function(reg, ...)
{
  withCallingHandlers(..., warning = function(w)
    {
        condition <- conditionMessage(w)
        if(grepl(reg, condition)) invokeRestart("muffleWarning")
  })
}


with_warning_handler("NAs introduced by coercion",
  x <- as.numeric(c("1", "2", "X"))
)

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