as.POSIX* {base}R Documentation

Date-time Conversion Functions

Description

Functions to manipulate objects of classes "POSIXlt" and "POSIXct" representing calendar dates and times.

Usage

as.POSIXct(x, tz = "")
as.POSIXlt(x, tz = "")

## S3 method for class 'POSIXlt':
as.numeric(x)

Arguments

x An object to be converted.
tz A timezone specification to be used for the conversion, if one is required. System-specific, but "" is the current timezone, and "GMT" is UTC (Coordinated Universal Time, in French).

Details

The as.POSIX* functions convert an object to one of the two classes used to represent date/times (calendar dates plus time to the nearest second). They can convert a wide variety of objects, including objects of the other class and of classes "Date", "date" (from package date or survival), "chron" and "dates" (from package chron) to these classes. Dates without times are treated as being at midnight UTC.

They can also convert character strings of the formats "2001-02-03" and "2001/02/03" optionally followed by white space and a time in the format "14:52" or "14:52:03". (Formats such as "01/02/03" are ambiguous but can be converted via a format specification by strptime.) (As from R 2.4.0 fractional seconds can be converted.)

Logical NAs can be converted to either of the classes, but no other logical vectors can be.

The as.numeric method converts "POSIXlt" objects to "POSIXct".

If you are given a numeric time as the number of seconds since an epoch, see the examples.

Where OSes describe their valid timezones can be obscure. The help for tzset (or _tzset on Windows) can be helpful, but it can also be inaccurate. There is a cumbersome POSIX specification, (listed under environment variable TZ at http://www.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/009695399/basedefs/xbd_chap08.html), which is often at least partially supported, but there may be other more user-friendly ways to specify timezones. For most Unix-alikes (including MacOS X) this can be an optional colon prepended to the path to a file (by default under ‘/usr/share/zoneinfo’ or ‘/usr/lib/zoneinfo’ (or even ‘/usr/share/lib/zoneinfo’ on Solaris)), for example ‘EST5EDT’ or ‘GB’ or ‘Europe/Paris’. See http://www.twinsun.com/tz/tz-link.htm for more details and references.

Value

as.POSIXct and as.POSIXlt return an object of the appropriate class. If tz was specified, as.POSIXlt will give an appropriate "tzone" attribute.

Note

If you want to extract specific aspects of a time (such as the day of the week) just convert it to class "POSIXlt" and extract the relevant component(s) of the list, or if you want a character representation (such as a named day of the week) use format.POSIXlt or format.POSIXct.

If a timezone is needed and that specified is invalid on your system, what happens is system-specific but it will probably be ignored.

See Also

DateTimeClasses for details of the classes; strptime for conversion to and from character representations.

Examples

(z <- Sys.time())             # the current datetime, as class "POSIXct"
unclass(z)                    # a large integer
floor(unclass(z)/86400)       # the number of days since 1970-01-01
(z <- as.POSIXlt(Sys.time())) # the current datetime, as class "POSIXlt"
unlist(unclass(z))            # a list shown as a named vector

## suppose we have a time in seconds since 1960-01-01 00:00:00 GMT
z <- 1472562988
# two ways to convert this
ISOdatetime(1960,1,1,0,0,0) + z # late August 2006
strptime("1960-01-01", "%Y-%m-%d", tz="GMT") + z

as.POSIXlt(Sys.time(), "GMT") # the current time in GMT
## Not run: 
## These may not be correct names on your system
as.POSIXlt(Sys.time(), "EST5EDT")  # the current time in New York
as.POSIXlt(Sys.time(), "EST" )     # ditto, ignoring DST
as.POSIXlt(Sys.time(), "HST")      # the current time in Hawaii
as.POSIXlt(Sys.time(), "Australia/Darwin")
## End(Not run)

[Package base version 2.5.0 Index]