Convert an object to a date or date-time
as_date(x, ...) # S4 method for ANY as_date(x, ...) # S4 method for POSIXt as_date(x, tz = NULL) # S4 method for numeric as_date(x, origin = lubridate::origin) # S4 method for character as_date(x, tz = NULL, format = NULL) as_datetime(x, ...) # S4 method for POSIXt as_datetime(x, tz = "UTC") # S4 method for numeric as_datetime(x, origin = lubridate::origin, tz = "UTC") # S4 method for character as_datetime(x, tz = "UTC", format = NULL) # S4 method for ANY as_datetime(x, tz = "UTC")
| x | a vector of POSIXt, numeric or character objects |
|---|---|
| ... | further arguments to be passed to specific methods (see above). |
| tz | a time zone name (default: time zone of the POSIXt object |
| origin | a Date object, or something which can be coerced by
|
| format | format argument for character methods. When supplied parsing is
performed by |
a vector of Date objects corresponding to x.
These are drop in replacements for as.Date() and as.POSIXct(), with a few
tweaks to make them work more intuitively.
as_date() ignores the timezone attribute, resulting in
a more intuitive conversion (see examples)
Both functions provide a default origin argument for numeric vectors.
as_datetime() defaults to using UTC.
dt_utc <- ymd_hms("2010-08-03 00:50:50") dt_europe <- ymd_hms("2010-08-03 00:50:50", tz="Europe/London") c(as_date(dt_utc), as.Date(dt_utc))#> [1] "2010-08-03" "2010-08-03"#> [1] "2010-08-03" "2010-08-02"## need not supply origin as_date(10)#> [1] "1970-01-11"