read.sealevel(file, tz=getOption("oceTz"),
history, debug=getOption("oceDebug"))
oceTz
, is set to UTC
at setup. (If a time zone is present in the file header, this will
supercede the value given here.)TRUE
to get debugging information during processing.class
"sealevel"
, which
is a list
containingdata.frame
containing
[object Object],[object Object]oce
format.Station_Name
on the first line
of the file, indicating type 2.) If the file is in neither of these
formats, the user might wish to scan it directly, and then to use
as.sealevel
to create a sealevel
object.read.oce
provides an
alternative to this. A sealevel
object may be summarized with
summary.sealevel
. Use plot.sealevel
to
produce a summary plot, and use tidem
to fit a tidal
model to the data. A "sealevel"
object can also be constructed with
as.sealevel
(and, in fact, read.sealevel
uses
this routine to actually create the "sealevel"
object.)
Tidal models may be fitted to "sealevel"
objects with
tidem
.
library(oce)
# sealevelHalifax
sl <- read.oce("h275a96.dat")
summary(sl)
plot(sl)
m <- tidem(sl)
plot(m)
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