strptime {stringx}R Documentation

Parse and Format Date-time Objects

Description

Note that the date-time processing functions in stringx are a work in progress. Feature requests/comments/remarks are welcome.

strptime parses strings representing date-time data and converts it to a date-time object.

strftime formats a date-time object and outputs it as a character vector.

The functions are meant to be compatible with each other, especially with regards to formatting/printing. This is why they return/deal with objects of a new class, POSIXxt, which expends upon the built-in POSIXct.

Usage

strptime(x, format, tz = "", lenient = FALSE, locale = NULL)

strftime(
  x,
  format = "%Y-%m-%dT%H:%M:%S%z",
  tz = attr(x, "tzone")[1L],
  usetz = FALSE,
  ...,
  locale = NULL
)

## S3 method for class 'POSIXxt'
format(
  x,
  format = "%Y-%m-%dT%H:%M:%S%z",
  tz = attr(x, "tzone")[1L],
  usetz = FALSE,
  ...,
  locale = NULL
)

is.POSIXxt(x)

as.POSIXxt(x, tz = "", ...)

## S3 method for class 'POSIXt'
as.POSIXxt(x, tz = attr(x, "tzone")[1L], ...)

## S3 method for class 'POSIXxt'
as.POSIXlt(x, tz = attr(x, "tzone")[1L], ..., locale = NULL)

## Default S3 method:
as.POSIXxt(x, tz = "", ...)

## S3 method for class 'POSIXxt'
as.Date(x, ...)

## S3 method for class 'Date'
as.POSIXxt(x, ...)

## S3 method for class 'character'
as.POSIXxt(x, tz = "", format = NULL, ..., lenient = FALSE, locale = NULL)

## S3 method for class 'POSIXxt'
Ops(e1, e2)

## S3 method for class 'POSIXxt'
seq(from, to, by, length.out = NULL, along.with = NULL, ...)

## S3 method for class 'POSIXxt'
c(..., recursive = FALSE)

## S3 method for class 'POSIXxt'
rep(..., recursive = FALSE)

Arguments

x

object to be converted: a character vector for strptime and as.POSIXxt.character, an object of class POSIXxt for strftime an object of class Date for as.POSIXxt.Date, or objects coercible to

format

character vector of date-time format specifiers, see stri_datetime_fstr; e.g., "%Y-%m-%d" or "datetime_full"; the default conforms to the ISO 8601 guideline

tz

NULL or '' for the default time zone (see stri_timezone_get) or a single string with a timezone identifier, see stri_timezone_list; note that when x is equipped with tzone attribute, this datum is used; as.POSIXxt.character treats dates as being at midnight local time

lenient

single logical value; should date/time parsing be lenient?

locale

NULL or '' for the default locale (see stri_locale_get) or a single string with a locale identifier, see stri_locale_list

usetz

not used (with a warning if attempting to do so) [DEPRECATED]

...

not used

e1, e2, from, to, by, length.out, along.with, recursive

arguments to c, rep, seq, etc.

Details

Note that the ISO 8601 guideline suggests a year-month-day date format and a 24-hour time format always indicating the effective time zone, e.g., 2015-12-31T23:59:59+0100. This is so as to avoid ambiguity.

When parsing strings, missing fields are filled based on today's midnight data.

Value

strftime and format return a character vector (in UTF-8).

strptime, as.POSIXxt.Date, and asPOSIXxt.character return an object of class POSIXxt, which extends upon POSIXct, see also DateTimeClasses.

Subtraction returns an object of the class difftime, see difftime.

If a string cannot be recognised as valid date/time specifier (as per the given format string), the corresponding output will be NA.

Differences from Base R

Replacements for base strptime and strftime implemented with stri_datetime_parse and stri_datetime_format.

format.POSIXxt is a thin wrapper around strftime.

Author(s)

Marek Gagolewski

See Also

The official online manual of stringx at https://stringx.gagolewski.com/

Related function(s): sprintf, ISOdatetime

Examples

strftime(Sys.time())  # default format - ISO 8601
f <- c("date_full", "%Y-%m-%d", "date_relative_short", "datetime_full")
strftime(Sys.time(), f)  # current default locale
strftime(Sys.time(), f, locale="de_DE")
strftime(Sys.time(), "date_short", locale="en_IL@calendar=hebrew")
strptime("1970-01-01 00:00:00", "%Y-%m-%d %H:%M:%S", tz="GMT")
strptime("14 Nisan 5703", "date_short", locale="en_IL@calendar=hebrew")
as.POSIXxt("1970-01-01")
as.POSIXxt("1970/01/01 12:00")



[Package stringx version 0.2.8 Index]