DateTimeClasses {base} | R Documentation |
Description of the classes "POSIXlt"
and "POSIXct"
representing calendar dates and times (to the nearest second).
## S3 method for class 'POSIXct': print(x, ...) ## S3 method for class 'POSIXct': summary(object, digits = 15, ...) time + number time - number time1 lop time2
x, object |
An object to be printed or summarized from one of the date-time classes. |
digits |
Number of significant digits for the computations: should be high enough to represent the least important time unit exactly. |
... |
Further arguments to be passed from or to other methods. |
time, time1, time2 |
date-time objects. |
number |
a numeric object. |
lop |
One of == , != , < , <= , >
or >= . |
There are two basic classes of date/times. Class "POSIXct"
represents the (signed) number of seconds since the beginning of 1970
as a numeric vector. Class "POSIXlt"
is a named list of
vectors representing
sec
min
hour
mday
mon
year
wday
yday
isdst
The classes correspond to the ANSI C constructs of “calendar
time” (the time\_t
data type) and “local time” (or
broken-down time, the struct tm
data type), from which they
also inherit their names.
"POSIXct"
is more convenient for including in data frames, and
"POSIXlt"
is closer to human-readable forms.
A virtual class "POSIXt"
inherits from both of the classes: it
is used to allow operations such as subtraction to mix the two classes.
Logical comparisons and limited arithmetic are available for both classes.
One can add or subtract a number of seconds or a
difftime
object from a date-time object,
but not add two date-time objects. Subtraction of two date-time objects
is equivalent to using difftime
. Be aware
that "POSIXlt"
objects will be interpreted as being in the
current timezone for these operations, unless a timezone has been
specified.
"POSIXlt"
objects will often have an attribute "tzone"
,
a character vector of length 3 giving the timezone name from the
TZ
environment variable and the names of the base timezone
and the alternate (daylight-saving) timezone. Sometimes this may
just be of length one, giving the timezone name.
"POSIXct"
objects may also have an attribute "tzone"
, a
character vector of length one. If set, it will determine how the
object is converted to class "POSIXlt"
and in particular how it
is printed. This is usually desirable, but if you want to specify an
object in a particular timezone but to be printed in the current
timezone you may want to remove the "tzone"
attribute (e.g. by
c(x)
).
Unfortunately, the conversion is complicated by the operation of time
zones and leap seconds (22 days have been 86401 seconds long so far:
the times of the extra seconds are in the object .leap.seconds
).
The details of this are entrusted to the OS services where possible.
This will usually cover the period 1970–2037, and on Unix machines
back to 1902 (when time zones were in their infancy). Outside those
ranges we use our own C code. This uses the offset from GMT in use
in the timezone in 2000, and uses the alternate (daylight-saving)
timezone only if isdst
is positive.
It seems that some systems use leap seconds but most do not. This is
detected and corrected for at build time, so all "POSIXct"
times used by R do not include leap seconds. (Conceivably this could
be wrong if the system has changed since build time, just possibly by
changing locales.)
Using c
on "POSIXlt"
objects converts them to the
current time zone.
Some Unix-like systems (especially Linux ones) do not have "TZ"
set, yet have internal code that expects it (as does POSIX). We have
tried to work around this, but if you get unexpected results try
setting "TZ"
.
Dates for dates without times.
as.POSIXct
and as.POSIXlt
for conversion
between the classes.
strptime
for conversion to and from character
representations.
Sys.time
for clock time as a "POSIXct"
object.
difftime
for time intervals.
cut.POSIXt
, seq.POSIXt
,
round.POSIXt
and trunc.POSIXt
for methods
for these classes.
weekdays.POSIXt
for convenience extraction functions.
(z <- Sys.time()) # the current date, as class "POSIXct" Sys.time() - 3600 # an hour ago as.POSIXlt(Sys.time(), "GMT") # the current time in GMT format(.leap.seconds) # all 22 leapseconds in your timezone print(.leap.seconds, tz="PST8PDT") # and in Seattle's