Extract the weekday, month or quarter, or the Julian time (days since some origin). These are generic functions: the methods for the internal date-time classes are documented here.
weekdays(x, abbreviate)
# S3 method for POSIXt
weekdays(x, abbreviate = FALSE)
# S3 method for Date
weekdays(x, abbreviate = FALSE)months(x, abbreviate)
# S3 method for POSIXt
months(x, abbreviate = FALSE)
# S3 method for Date
months(x, abbreviate = FALSE)
quarters(x, abbreviate)
# S3 method for POSIXt
quarters(x, …)
# S3 method for Date
quarters(x, …)
julian(x, …)
# S3 method for POSIXt
julian(x, origin = as.POSIXct("1970-01-01", tz = "GMT"), …)
# S3 method for Date
julian(x, origin = as.Date("1970-01-01"), …)
an object inheriting from class "POSIXt"
or "Date"
.
logical vector (possibly recycled). Should the names be abbreviated?
an length-one object inheriting from class
"POSIXt"
or "Date"
.
arguments for other methods.
weekdays
and months
return a character
vector of names in the locale in use.
quarters
returns a character vector of "Q1"
to
"Q4"
.
julian
returns the number of days (possibly fractional)
since the origin, with the origin as a "origin"
attribute.
All time calculations in R are done ignoring leap-seconds.
# NOT RUN {
weekdays(.leap.seconds)
months(.leap.seconds)
quarters(.leap.seconds)
## Julian Day Number (JDN, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Julian_day)
## is the number of days since noon UTC on the first day of 4317 BC.
## in the proleptic Julian calendar. To more recently, in
## 'Terrestrial Time' which differs from UTC by a few seconds
## See https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Terrestrial_Time
julian(Sys.Date(), -2440588) # from a day
floor(as.numeric(julian(Sys.time())) + 2440587.5) # from a date-time
# }
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