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Replace negative values by zero


We want to set all values in an array zero that are negative.

I tried out a a lot of stuff but did not yet achieve a working solution. I thought about a for loop with condition, however this seems not to work.

#pred_precipitation is our array
pred_precipitation <-rnorm(25,2,4)     

for (i in nrow(pred_precipitation))
{
  if (pred_precipitation[i]<0) {pred_precipitation[i] = 0}
  else{pred_precipitation[i] = pred_precipitation[i]}
}

Solution

  • Thanks for the reproducible example. This is pretty basic R stuff. You can assign to selected elements of a vector (note an array has dimensions, and what you've given is a vector not an array):

    > pred_precipitation[pred_precipitation<0] <- 0
    > pred_precipitation
     [1] 1.2091281 0.0000000 7.7665555 0.0000000 0.0000000 0.0000000 0.5151504 0.0000000 1.8281251
    [10] 0.5098688 2.8370263 0.4895606 1.5152191 4.1740177 7.1527742 2.8992215 4.5322934 6.7180530
    [19] 0.0000000 1.1914052 3.6152333 0.0000000 0.3778717 0.0000000 1.4940469
    

    Benchmark wars!

    @James has found an even faster method and left it in a comment. I upvoted him, if only because I know his victory will be short-lived.

    First, I try compiling, but that doesn't seem to help anyone:

    p <- rnorm(10000)
    gsk3 <- function(x) { x[x<0] <- 0; x }
    jmsigner <- function(x) ifelse(x<0, 0, x)
    joshua <- function(x) pmin(x,0)
    james <- function(x) (abs(x)+x)/2
    library(compiler)
    gsk3.c <- cmpfun(gsk3)
    jmsigner.c <- cmpfun(jmsigner)
    joshua.c <- cmpfun(joshua)
    james.c <- cmpfun(james)
    
    microbenchmark(joshua(p),joshua.c(p),gsk3(p),gsk3.c(p),jmsigner(p),james(p),jmsigner.c(p),james.c(p))
               expr      min        lq    median        uq      max
    1     gsk3.c(p)  251.782  255.0515  266.8685  269.5205  457.998
    2       gsk3(p)  256.262  261.6105  270.7340  281.3560 2940.486
    3    james.c(p)   38.418   41.3770   43.3020   45.6160  132.342
    4      james(p)   38.934   42.1965   43.5700   47.2085 4524.303
    5 jmsigner.c(p) 2047.739 2145.9915 2198.6170 2291.8475 4879.418
    6   jmsigner(p) 2047.502 2169.9555 2258.6225 2405.0730 5064.334
    7   joshua.c(p)  237.008  244.3570  251.7375  265.2545  376.684
    8     joshua(p)  237.545  244.8635  255.1690  271.9910  430.566
    

    compiled comparison

    But wait! Dirk wrote this Rcpp thing. Can a complete C++ incompetent read his JSS paper, adapt his example, and write the fastest function of them all? Stay tuned, dear listeners.

    library(inline)
    cpp_if_src <- '
      Rcpp::NumericVector xa(a);
      int n_xa = xa.size();
      for(int i=0; i < n_xa; i++) {
        if(xa[i]<0) xa[i] = 0;
      }
      return xa;
    '
    cpp_if <- cxxfunction(signature(a="numeric"), cpp_if_src, plugin="Rcpp")
    microbenchmark(joshua(p),joshua.c(p),gsk3(p),gsk3.c(p),jmsigner(p),james(p),jmsigner.c(p),james.c(p), cpp_if(p))
             expr      min        lq    median        uq       max
    1   cpp_if(p)    8.233   10.4865   11.6000   12.4090    69.512
    2     gsk3(p)  170.572  172.7975  175.0515  182.4035  2515.870
    3    james(p)   37.074   39.6955   40.5720   42.1965  2396.758
    4 jmsigner(p) 1110.313 1118.9445 1133.4725 1164.2305 65942.680
    5   joshua(p)  237.135  240.1655  243.3990  250.3660  2597.429
    

    with rcpp comparison

    That's affirmative, captain.

    This modifies the input p even if you don't assign to it. If you want to avoid that behavior, you have to clone:

    cpp_ifclone_src <- '
      Rcpp::NumericVector xa(Rcpp::clone(a));
      int n_xa = xa.size();
      for(int i=0; i < n_xa; i++) {
        if(xa[i]<0) xa[i] = 0;
      }
      return xa;
    '
    cpp_ifclone <- cxxfunction(signature(a="numeric"), cpp_ifclone_src, plugin="Rcpp")
    

    Which unfortunately kills the speed advantage.