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lubridate

Overview

Date-time data can be frustrating to work with in R. R commands for date-times are generally unintuitive and change depending on the type of date-time object being used. Moreover, the methods we use with date-times must be robust to time zones, leap days, daylight savings times, and other time related quirks, and R lacks these capabilities in some situations. Lubridate makes it easier to do the things R does with date-times and possible to do the things R does not.

If you are new to lubridate, the best place to start is the date and times chapter in R for data science.

Installation

# The easiest way to get lubridate is to install the whole tidyverse:
install.packages("tidyverse")

# Alternatively, install just lubridate:
install.packages("lubridate")

# Or the the development version from GitHub:
# install.packages("devtools")
devtools::install_github("tidyverse/lubridate")

Cheatsheet

Features

library(lubridate, warn.conflicts = FALSE)
  • Easy and fast parsing of date-times: ymd(), ymd_hms, dmy(), dmy_hms, mdy(), …

    ymd(20101215)
    #> [1] "2010-12-15"
    mdy("4/1/17")
    #> [1] "2017-04-01"
  • Simple functions to get and set components of a date-time, such as year(), month(), mday(), hour(), minute() and second():

    bday <- dmy("14/10/1979")
    month(bday)
    #> [1] 10
    wday(bday, label = TRUE)
    #> [1] Sun
    #> Levels: Sun < Mon < Tue < Wed < Thu < Fri < Sat
    
    year(bday) <- 2016
    wday(bday, label = TRUE)
    #> [1] Fri
    #> Levels: Sun < Mon < Tue < Wed < Thu < Fri < Sat
  • Helper functions for handling time zones: with_tz(), force_tz()

    time <- ymd_hms("2010-12-13 15:30:30")
    time
    #> [1] "2010-12-13 15:30:30 UTC"
    
    # Changes printing
    with_tz(time, "America/Chicago")
    #> [1] "2010-12-13 09:30:30 CST"
    
    # Changes time
    force_tz(time, "America/Chicago")
    #> [1] "2010-12-13 15:30:30 CST"

Lubridate also expands the type of mathematical operations that can be performed with date-time objects. It introduces three new time span classes borrowed from https://www.joda.org.

  • durations, which measure the exact amount of time between two points

  • periods, which accurately track clock times despite leap years, leap seconds, and day light savings time

  • intervals, a protean summary of the time information between two points

Code of Conduct

Please note that the lubridate project is released with a Contributor Code of Conduct. By contributing to this project, you agree to abide by its terms.

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Version

Install

install.packages('lubridate')

Monthly Downloads

823,131

Version

1.9.3

License

GPL (>= 2)

Issues

Pull Requests

Stars

Forks

Maintainer

Last Published

September 27th, 2023

Functions in lubridate (1.9.3)

day

Get/set days component of a date-time
duration

Create a duration object.
fit_to_timeline

Fit a POSIXlt date-time to the timeline
days_in_month

Get the number of days in the month of a date-time
Duration-class

Duration class
is.Date

Various date utilities
hidden_aliases

Internal page for hidden aliases
cyclic_encoding

Cyclic encoding of date-times
date_decimal

Converts a decimal to a date
as.interval

Change an object to an interval
guess_formats

Guess possible date-times formats from a character vector
format_ISO8601_precision_check

Provide a format for ISO8601 dates and times with the requested precision.
lubridate-package

Dates and times made easy with lubridate
DateTimeUpdate

Changes the components of a date object
ms

Parse periods with hour, minute, and second components
date

Get/set date component of a date-time
minute

Get/set minutes component of a date-time
make_difftime

Create a difftime object.
as_date

Convert an object to a date or date-time
reclass_date

Convenience method to reclass dates post-modification.
is.timespan

Is x a length of time?
as.period

Change an object to a period
second

Get/set seconds component of a date-time
lakers

Lakers 2008-2009 basketball data set
parse_date_time

User friendly date-time parsing functions
ymd

Parse dates with year, month, and day components
reclass_timespan

Convenience method to reclass timespans post-modification.
period

Create or parse period objects
ymd_hms

Parse date-times with year, month, and day, hour, minute, and second components.
decimal_date

Converts a date to a decimal of its year
is.difftime

Is x a difftime object?
is.instant

Is x a date-time object?
now

The current day and time
%within%

Does a date (or interval) fall within an interval?
pretty_dates

Computes attractive axis breaks for date-time data
quarter

Get the fiscal quarter and semester of a date-time
origin

1970-01-01 UTC
with_tz

Get date-time in a different time zone
tz

Get/set time zone component of a date-time
timespan

Description of time span classes in lubridate
year

Get/set years component of a date-time
round_date

Round, floor and ceiling methods for date-time objects
week

Get/set weeks component of a date-time
dst

Get daylight savings time indicator of a date-time
period_to_seconds

Contrive a period to/from a given number of seconds
hour

Get/set hours component of a date-time
interval

Utilities for creation and manipulation of Interval objects
force_tz

Replace time zone to create new date-time
is.POSIXt

Various POSIX utilities
format_ISO8601

Format in ISO8601 character format
leap_year

Is a year a leap year?
make_datetime

Efficient creation of date-times from numeric representations
rollbackward

Roll backward or forward a date the previous, current or next month
reexports

Objects exported from other packages
local_time

Get local time from a date-time vector.
stamp

Format dates and times based on human-friendly templates
month

Get/set months component of a date-time
%m+%

Add and subtract months to a date without exceeding the last day of the new month
time_length

Compute the exact length of a time span
DateCoercion

Convert a variety of date-time classes to POSIXlt and POSIXct
Interval-class

Interval class
Deprecated-lubridate

Deprecated functions in the lubridate package
Period-class

Period class
as.duration

Change an object to a duration
Timespan-class

Timespan class
am

Does date time occur in the am or pm?