Create array of all NaN values
X = NaN returns the scalar representation of
"not a number". Operations return NaN when they have undefined numeric
results, such as 0/0 or 0*Inf.
X = NaN( returns an
sz1,...,szN)sz1-by-...-by-szN array of NaN
values, where sz1,...,szN indicate the size of each dimension. For
example, NaN(3,4) returns a 3-by-4 matrix.
X = NaN(___, returns an
array of typename)NaN values of data type typename, which can
be either 'single' or 'double'.
X = NaN returns the scalar, type double,
IEEE® representation of "not a number". The exact bit-wise hexadecimal
representation of this value is fff8000000000000. MATLAB® preserves the "not a number" status of alternate NaN
representations and treats all representations equivalently. In some special cases, due to
hardware limitations for example, MATLAB does not preserve the exact bit pattern of the alternate representations
during computation, and instead uses the canonical NaN bit pattern
previously described.
NaN values are not equal to each other. As a result, comparison
operations involving NaN return false, except for the not equal
operator ~=. For example, NaN == NaN returns logical
0 (false) but NaN ~= NaN returns logical 1
(true).
NaN values in a vector are treated as different unique elements.
For example, unique([1 1 NaN NaN]) returns the row vector [1
NaN NaN].
Use the isnan or ismissing function to detect
NaN values in an array. The rmmissing function
detects and removes NaN values, and the fillmissing
function detects NaN values and replaces them with
non-NaN values.