Henrik Bengtsson
2017-Apr-01 03:50 UTC
[Rd] mean(x) != mean(rev(x)) different with x <- c(NA, NaN) for some builds
In R 3.3.3, I observe the following on Ubuntu 16.04 (when building from source as well as for the sudo apt r-base build):> x <- c(NA, NaN) > mean(x)[1] NA> mean(rev(x))[1] NaN> rowMeans(matrix(x, nrow = 1, ncol = 2))[1] NA> rowMeans(matrix(rev(x), nrow = 1, ncol = 2))[1] NaN> .rowMeans(x, m = 1, n = 2)[1] NA> .rowMeans(rev(x), m = 1, n = 2)[1] NaN> .rowSums(x, m = 1, n = 2)[1] NA> .rowSums(rev(x), m = 1, n = 2)[1] NaN> rowSums(matrix(x, nrow = 1, ncol = 2))[1] NA> rowSums(matrix(rev(x), nrow = 1, ncol = 2))[1] NaN I'd expect NA to trump NaN in all cases (with na.rm = FALSE). sum() does not have this problem and returns NA in both cases (*). For the same R version build from source on RHEL 6.6 system (completely different architecture), I get the expected result (= NA) for all of the above cases, e.g.> x <- c(NA, NaN) > mean(x)[1] NA> mean(rev(x))[1] NA [...] Before going insane trying to troubleshoot this, I have a vague memory that this, or something related to this, has been discussed previously, but I cannot locate it. Is the above a bug in R, a FAQ, a build error, overzealous compiler optimization, and / or ...? Thanks, Henrik
Prof Brian Ripley
2017-Apr-01 05:14 UTC
[Rd] mean(x) != mean(rev(x)) different with x <- c(NA, NaN) for some builds
From ?NA Numerical computations using ?NA? will normally result in ?NA?: a possible exception is where ?NaN? is also involved, in which case either might result. and ?NaN Computations involving ?NaN? will return ?NaN? or perhaps ?NA?: which of those two is not guaranteed and may depend on the R platform (since compilers may re-order computations). fortunes::fortune(14) applies (yet again). On 01/04/2017 04:50, Henrik Bengtsson wrote:> In R 3.3.3, I observe the following on Ubuntu 16.04 (when building > from source as well as for the sudo apt r-base build): > >> x <- c(NA, NaN) >> mean(x) > [1] NA >> mean(rev(x)) > [1] NaN > >> rowMeans(matrix(x, nrow = 1, ncol = 2)) > [1] NA >> rowMeans(matrix(rev(x), nrow = 1, ncol = 2)) > [1] NaN > >> .rowMeans(x, m = 1, n = 2) > [1] NA >> .rowMeans(rev(x), m = 1, n = 2) > [1] NaN > >> .rowSums(x, m = 1, n = 2) > [1] NA >> .rowSums(rev(x), m = 1, n = 2) > [1] NaN > >> rowSums(matrix(x, nrow = 1, ncol = 2)) > [1] NA >> rowSums(matrix(rev(x), nrow = 1, ncol = 2)) > [1] NaN > > I'd expect NA to trump NaN in all cases (with na.rm = FALSE). sum() > does not have this problem and returns NA in both cases (*). > > For the same R version build from source on RHEL 6.6 system > (completely different architecture), I get the expected result (= NA) > for all of the above cases, e.g. > >> x <- c(NA, NaN) >> mean(x) > [1] NA >> mean(rev(x)) > [1] NA > [...] > > Before going insane trying to troubleshoot this, I have a vague memory > that this, or something related to this, has been discussed > previously, but I cannot locate it. > > Is the above a bug in R, a FAQ, a build error, overzealous compiler > optimization, and / or ...? > > Thanks, > > Henrik-- Brian D. Ripley, ripley at stats.ox.ac.uk Emeritus Professor of Applied Statistics, University of Oxford
Henrik Bengtsson
2017-Apr-01 05:51 UTC
[Rd] mean(x) != mean(rev(x)) different with x <- c(NA, NaN) for some builds
On Fri, Mar 31, 2017 at 10:14 PM, Prof Brian Ripley <ripley at stats.ox.ac.uk> wrote:> From ?NA > > Numerical computations using ?NA? will normally result in ?NA?: a > possible exception is where ?NaN? is also involved, in which case > either might result. > > and ?NaN > > Computations involving ?NaN? will return ?NaN? or perhaps ?NA?: > which of those two is not guaranteed and may depend on the R > platform (since compilers may re-order computations). > > fortunes::fortune(14) applies (yet again).Thanks; I'm often happy to have contributed to some of the fortune counters, but not so sure about this one. What's even worse is that one of my own matrixStats NEWS has an entry go a few years back which mentions "... incorrectly assumed that the value of prod(c(NaN, NA)) is uniquely defined. However, as documented in help("is.nan"), it may be NA or NaN depending on R system/platform." I guess the joke is on me - it's April 1st after all. But, technically one could test for ISNA(x) for each element before calculating the intermediate sum, but since that is a quite expensive test it is not done and sum += x is performed "as is" on NA and NaN (and -Inf and +Inf). Is that correct? /Henrik> > > On 01/04/2017 04:50, Henrik Bengtsson wrote: >> >> In R 3.3.3, I observe the following on Ubuntu 16.04 (when building >> from source as well as for the sudo apt r-base build): >> >>> x <- c(NA, NaN) >>> mean(x) >> >> [1] NA >>> >>> mean(rev(x)) >> >> [1] NaN >> >>> rowMeans(matrix(x, nrow = 1, ncol = 2)) >> >> [1] NA >>> >>> rowMeans(matrix(rev(x), nrow = 1, ncol = 2)) >> >> [1] NaN >> >>> .rowMeans(x, m = 1, n = 2) >> >> [1] NA >>> >>> .rowMeans(rev(x), m = 1, n = 2) >> >> [1] NaN >> >>> .rowSums(x, m = 1, n = 2) >> >> [1] NA >>> >>> .rowSums(rev(x), m = 1, n = 2) >> >> [1] NaN >> >>> rowSums(matrix(x, nrow = 1, ncol = 2)) >> >> [1] NA >>> >>> rowSums(matrix(rev(x), nrow = 1, ncol = 2)) >> >> [1] NaN >> >> I'd expect NA to trump NaN in all cases (with na.rm = FALSE). sum() >> does not have this problem and returns NA in both cases (*). >> >> For the same R version build from source on RHEL 6.6 system >> (completely different architecture), I get the expected result (= NA) >> for all of the above cases, e.g. >> >>> x <- c(NA, NaN) >>> mean(x) >> >> [1] NA >>> >>> mean(rev(x)) >> >> [1] NA >> [...] >> >> Before going insane trying to troubleshoot this, I have a vague memory >> that this, or something related to this, has been discussed >> previously, but I cannot locate it. >> >> Is the above a bug in R, a FAQ, a build error, overzealous compiler >> optimization, and / or ...? >> >> Thanks, >> >> Henrik > > > > -- > Brian D. Ripley, ripley at stats.ox.ac.uk > Emeritus Professor of Applied Statistics, University of Oxford > > ______________________________________________ > R-devel at r-project.org mailing list > https://stat.ethz.ch/mailman/listinfo/r-devel
Hervé Pagès
2017-Apr-01 23:59 UTC
[Rd] mean(x) != mean(rev(x)) different with x <- c(NA, NaN) for some builds
On 03/31/2017 10:14 PM, Prof Brian Ripley wrote:> From ?NA > > Numerical computations using ?NA? will normally result in ?NA?: a > possible exception is where ?NaN? is also involved, in which case > either might result. > > and ?NaN > > Computations involving ?NaN? will return ?NaN? or perhaps ?NA?: > which of those two is not guaranteed and may depend on the R > platform (since compilers may re-order computations). > > fortunes::fortune(14) applies (yet again).The problem is that TFM often contradicts itself e.g. in ?prod: If ?na.rm? is ?FALSE? an ?NA? value in any of the arguments will cause a value of ?NA? to be returned, otherwise ?NA? values are ignored. which is clearly not the case (at least for me): > x <- c(NaN, NA) > prod(x) [1] NaN H.> > On 01/04/2017 04:50, Henrik Bengtsson wrote: >> In R 3.3.3, I observe the following on Ubuntu 16.04 (when building >> from source as well as for the sudo apt r-base build): >> >>> x <- c(NA, NaN) >>> mean(x) >> [1] NA >>> mean(rev(x)) >> [1] NaN >> >>> rowMeans(matrix(x, nrow = 1, ncol = 2)) >> [1] NA >>> rowMeans(matrix(rev(x), nrow = 1, ncol = 2)) >> [1] NaN >> >>> .rowMeans(x, m = 1, n = 2) >> [1] NA >>> .rowMeans(rev(x), m = 1, n = 2) >> [1] NaN >> >>> .rowSums(x, m = 1, n = 2) >> [1] NA >>> .rowSums(rev(x), m = 1, n = 2) >> [1] NaN >> >>> rowSums(matrix(x, nrow = 1, ncol = 2)) >> [1] NA >>> rowSums(matrix(rev(x), nrow = 1, ncol = 2)) >> [1] NaN >> >> I'd expect NA to trump NaN in all cases (with na.rm = FALSE). sum() >> does not have this problem and returns NA in both cases (*). >> >> For the same R version build from source on RHEL 6.6 system >> (completely different architecture), I get the expected result (= NA) >> for all of the above cases, e.g. >> >>> x <- c(NA, NaN) >>> mean(x) >> [1] NA >>> mean(rev(x)) >> [1] NA >> [...] >> >> Before going insane trying to troubleshoot this, I have a vague memory >> that this, or something related to this, has been discussed >> previously, but I cannot locate it. >> >> Is the above a bug in R, a FAQ, a build error, overzealous compiler >> optimization, and / or ...? >> >> Thanks, >> >> Henrik > >-- Herv? Pag?s Program in Computational Biology Division of Public Health Sciences Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center 1100 Fairview Ave. N, M1-B514 P.O. Box 19024 Seattle, WA 98109-1024 E-mail: hpages at fredhutch.org Phone: (206) 667-5791 Fax: (206) 667-1319
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