Adrian
Adrian

Reputation: 9793

Removing NULL elements from a list

mylist <- list(NULL, NULL, NULL, NULL, NULL, NULL, NULL, NULL, NULL, NULL, 
    123, NULL, 456)

> mylist
[[1]]
NULL

[[2]]
NULL

[[3]]
NULL

[[4]]
NULL

[[5]]
NULL

[[6]]
NULL

[[7]]
NULL

[[8]]
NULL

[[9]]
NULL

[[10]]
NULL

[[11]]
[1] 123

[[12]]
NULL

[[13]]
[1] 456

My list has 13 elements, 11 of which are NULL. I would like to remove them, but preserve the indices of the elements that are nonempty.

mylist2 = mylist[-which(sapply(mylist, is.null))]
> mylist2
[[1]]
[1] 123

[[2]]
[1] 456

This removes the NULL elements just fine, but I don't want the nonempty elements to be reindexed, i.e, I want mylist2 to look something like this, where the indices of the nonempty entries are preserved.

> mylist2
[[11]]
[1] 123

[[13]]
[1] 456

Upvotes: 126

Views: 108908

Answers (8)

F. Priv&#233;
F. Priv&#233;

Reputation: 11728

Simply use mylist[lengths(mylist) != 0].

Function lengths() was introduced in R 3.2.0 (April 2015).

Upvotes: 77

Hayward Oblad
Hayward Oblad

Reputation: 849

The purrr package, included in Tidyverse, has elegant and fast functions for working with lists:

require(tidyverse)

# this works
compact(mylist)

# or this
mylist %>% discard(is.null)

# or this
# pipe "my_list" data object into function "keep()", make lambda function inside "keep()" to return TRUE FALSE.
mylist %>% keep( ~ !is.null(.) )

All above options are from Purrr. Output is:

[[1]] 
[1] 123

[[2]] 
[1] 456

Note: compact() was in plyr, but dplyr superseded plyr, and compact() stayed around but moved to purrr. Anyway, all the functions are within the parent package tidyverse.



Here's a link to the Purrr cheat sheet download:

https://rstudio.com/resources/cheatsheets/

Or to view the Purrr cheatsheet directly in a browser:

https://evoldyn.gitlab.io/evomics-2018/ref-sheets/R_purrr.pdf

Upvotes: 67

Adam Lee Perelman
Adam Lee Perelman

Reputation: 890

This solution works with nested list as well

rlist::list.clean(myNestedlist ,recursive = T)

Upvotes: 7

itsmisterbrown
itsmisterbrown

Reputation: 531

here's a very simple way to do it using only base R functions:

names(mylist) <- 1:length(mylist)
mylist2 <- mylist[which(!sapply(mylist, is.null))]

Upvotes: 6

David Rodriguez Lores
David Rodriguez Lores

Reputation: 459

There's a function that automatically removes all the null entries of a list, and if the list is named, it maintains the names of the non-null entries.

This function is called compact from the package plyr.

l <- list( NULL, NULL, foo, bar)
names(l) <- c( "one", "two", "three", "four" )

plyr::compact(l)

If you want to preserve the indexes of the non-null entries, you can name the list as it is done in the post before and then compact your list:

names(l) <- seq_along(l)
plyr::compact(l)

Upvotes: 30

bramtayl
bramtayl

Reputation: 4024

Here it is with convenient chaining notation

library(magrittr)

mylist %>%
  setNames(seq_along(.)) %>%
  Filter(. %>% is.null %>% `!`, .)

Upvotes: 5

Josh O&#39;Brien
Josh O&#39;Brien

Reputation: 162321

The closest you'll be able to get is to first name the list elements and then remove the NULLs.

names(x) <- seq_along(x)

## Using some higher-order convenience functions
Filter(Negate(is.null), x)
# $`11`
# [1] 123
# 
# $`13`
# [1] 456

# Or, using a slightly more standard R idiom
x[sapply(x, is.null)] <- NULL
x
# $`11`
# [1] 123
# 
# $`13`
# [1] 456

Upvotes: 140

Felipe Gerard
Felipe Gerard

Reputation: 1622

If you want to keep the names you can do

a <- list(NULL, NULL, NULL, NULL, NULL, NULL, NULL, NULL, NULL, NULL, 
          123, NULL, 456)
non_null_names <- which(!sapply(a, is.null))
a <- a[non_null_names]
names(a) <- non_null_names
a

You can then access the elements like so

a[['11']]
num <- 11
a[[as.character(num)]]
a[[as.character(11)]]
a$`11`

You can't get them in the neat [[11]], [[13]] notation, though, because those represent numerical indices.

Upvotes: 6

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