ak.fill_none#
Defined in awkward.operations.ak_fill_none on line 22.
- ak.fill_none(array, value, axis=-1, *, highlevel=True, behavior=None, attrs=None)#
- Parameters:
array – Array-like data (anything
ak.to_layout
recognizes).value – Data with which to replace None.
axis (None or int) – If None, replace all None values in the array with the given value; if an int, The dimension at which this operation is applied. The outermost dimension is
0
, followed by1
, etc., and negative values count backward from the innermost:-1
is the innermost dimension,-2
is the next level up, etc.highlevel (bool) – If True, return an
ak.Array
; otherwise, return a low-levelak.contents.Content
subclass.behavior (None or dict) – Custom
ak.behavior
for the output array, if high-level.attrs (None or dict) – Custom attributes for the output array, if high-level.
Replaces missing values (None) with a given value
.
For example, in the following
>>> array = ak.Array([[1.1, None, 2.2], [], [None, 3.3, 4.4]])
The None values could be replaced with 0
by
>>> ak.fill_none(array, 0)
<Array [[1.1, 0, 2.2], [], [0, 3.3, 4.4]] type='3 * var * float64'>
The replacement value doesn’t strictly need the same type as the surrounding data. For example, the None values could also be replaced by a string.
>>> ak.fill_none(array, "hi")
<Array [[1.1, 'hi', 2.2], [], ['hi', ...]] type='3 * var * union[float64, s...'>
The list content now has a union type:
>>> ak.fill_none(array, "hi").type.show()
3 * var * union[
float64,
string
]
The values could be floating-point numbers or strings.