I'm plotting and performing calculations on uniformly distributed time series. The timestamps are currently stored as integers representing the number of seconds since the UNIX epoch (e.g. 1352068320), but Date objects seem more appropriate for plotting. How can I do the conversion?

I've read ?Date, ?as.Date and ??epoch, but seem to have missed that information.

有帮助吗?

解决方案

Go via POSIXct and you want to set a TZ there -- here you see my (Chicago) default:

R> val <- 1352068320
R> as.POSIXct(val, origin="1970-01-01")
[1] "2012-11-04 22:32:00 CST"
R> as.Date(as.POSIXct(val, origin="1970-01-01"))
[1] "2012-11-05" 
R> 

Edit: A few years later, we can now use the anytime package:

R> library(anytime)
R> anytime(1352068320)
[1] "2012-11-04 16:32:00 CST"
R> anydate(1352068320)
[1] "2012-11-04"
R> 

Note how all this works without any format or origin arguments.

其他提示

With library(lubridate), numeric representations of date and time saved as the number of seconds since 1970-01-01 00:00:00 UTC, can be coerced into dates with as_datetime():

lubridate::as_datetime(1352068320)

[1] "2012-11-04 22:32:00 UTC"
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