Language Reference |
CHOOSE Function |
The CHOOSE function examines each element of the first argument for being true (nonzero and not missing) or false (zero or missing). For each true element, it returns the corresponding element in the second argument. For each false element, it returns the corresponding element in the third argument.
The arguments to the CHOOSE function are as follows:
is checked for being true or false for each element.
is returned when condition is true.
is returned when condition is false.
Each argument must be conformable with the others (or be a scalar value).
For example, suppose that you want to choose between and according to whether is odd or even, respectively. You can use the following statements to execute this task, as shown in Figure 23.53:
x = {1, 2, 3, 4, 5}; y = {101, 205, 133, 806, 500}; r = choose(mod(x#y,2)=1, x, y); print x y r;
As another example, the following statements replace all missing values in the matrix z with zeros, as shown in Figure 23.54:
z = {1 2 ., 100 . -90, . 5 8}; newZ = choose(z=., 0, z); print z, newZ;
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