| tfwindow {tframe} | R Documentation | 
Truncate a Time Series
Description
Truncate a time series object to a time window.
Usage
    tfwindow(x, tf=NULL, start=tfstart(tf), end=tfend(tf), warn=TRUE)
    ## Default S3 method:
tfwindow(x, tf=NULL, start=tfstart(tf), end=tfend(tf), warn=TRUE)
    ## S3 method for class 'ts'
tfwindow(x, tf=NULL, start=tfstart(tf), end=tfend(tf), warn=TRUE)
    ## S3 method for class 'tframe'
tfwindow(x, tf=NULL, start=tfstart(tf), end=tfend(tf), warn=TRUE)
    Arguments
| x | A time series object. | 
| start | A start date of a format compatible with the time series | 
| end | An end date of a format compatible with the time series | 
| tf | A tframe or tframed object | 
| warn | A logical indicating if warning should be produced | 
Details
If start or end are omitted and tf is specified then the
start or end is taken from the tf object.
For ts class objects this function calls window but makes more effort to 
preserve seriesNames if x has them. 
It also supports the optional argument warn to suppress
warning messages. Frequently it is convenient to write code which always 
truncates to a window without first checking if the data is already within 
the window. Since window produces a warning in this situation, the optional 
argument is frequently useful when tfwindow is used by other code.
In Splus tfwindow also corrects for some bugs in older versions 
of window.
The method for windowing a tframe is a utility to be used by other programs and would not typically be called by a user.
Value
A time series object similar to x, but typically spanning a shorter time period.
Examples
  z <- ts(matrix(rnorm(24),24,1), start=c(1980,1), frequency=4)
  zz <- tfwindow(z, start=c(1982,2))
  zzz <- matrix(rnorm(24),24,1)
  tframe(zzz) <- tframe(z)
  tfwindow(zzz, tf=tframe(zz))