Dates {base} | R Documentation |
Description of the class "Date"
representing calendar dates.
## S3 method for class 'Date' summary(object, digits = 12, ...) ## S3 method for class 'Date' print(x, max = NULL, ...)
object, x |
a |
digits |
number of significant digits for the computations. |
max |
numeric or |
... |
further arguments to be passed from or to other methods. |
Dates are represented as the number of days since 1970-01-01, with negative values for earlier dates. They are always printed following the rules of the current Gregorian calendar, even though that calendar was not in use long ago (it was adopted in 1752 in Great Britain and its colonies).
It is intended that the date should be an integer, but this is not
enforced in the internal representation. Fractional days will be
ignored when printing. It is possible to produce fractional days via
the mean
method or by adding or subtracting (see
Ops.Date
).
From the many methods, see methods(class = "Date")
, a few are
documented separately, see below.
Sys.Date
for the current date.
weekdays
for convenience extraction functions.
Methods with extra arguments and documentation:
Ops.Date
for operators on "Date"
objects.
format.Date
for conversion to and from character strings.
axis.Date
and hist.Date
for plotting.
seq.Date
, cut.Date
, and
round.Date
for utility operations.
DateTimeClasses
for date-time classes.
(today <- Sys.Date()) format(today, "%d %b %Y") # with month as a word (tenweeks <- seq(today, length.out=10, by="1 week")) # next ten weeks weekdays(today) months(tenweeks) (Dls <- as.Date(.leap.seconds)) ## length(<Date>) <- n now works ls <- Dls; length(ls) <- 12 l2 <- Dls; length(l2) <- 5 + length(Dls) stopifnot(exprs = { ## length(.) <- * is compatible to subsetting/indexing: identical(ls, Dls[seq_along(ls)]) identical(l2, Dls[seq_along(l2)]) ## has filled with NA's is.na(l2[(length(Dls)+1):length(l2)]) })