Conversion S3 methods to coerce data objects of
arbitrary classes to class xts
and back, without
losing any attributes of the original format.
# S3 method for xts
as.xts(x,...,.RECLASS=FALSE)
# S3 method for timeSeries
as.xts(x, dateFormat="POSIXct", FinCenter, recordIDs,
title, documentation, ..., .RECLASS=FALSE)
# S3 method for zoo
as.xts(x, order.by=index(x), frequency=NULL, ..., .RECLASS=FALSE)
# S3 method for ts
as.xts(x, dateFormat,...,.RECLASS=FALSE)
# S3 method for data.frame
as.xts(x, order.by, dateFormat="POSIXct",
frequency=NULL, ...,.RECLASS=FALSE)
# S3 method for matrix
as.xts(x, order.by, dateFormat="POSIXct",
frequency=NULL, ..., .RECLASS=FALSE)
as.fts.xts(x)
data object to convert. See details for supported types
what format should the dates be converted to
see timeSeries help
see timeSeries help
see timeSeries help
see timeSeries help
see zoo help
see zoo help
additional parameters or attributes
should conversion be reversible?
An S3 object of class xts
.
A simple and reliable way to convert many different objects into a uniform format for use within R.
It is possible with a call to as.xts
to
convert objects of class timeSeries
, ts
,
matrix
, data.frame
, and zoo
.
Additional name=value pairs may be passed to the function
to be added to the new object. A special print.xts method
will assure that the attributes are hidden from view, but will
be available via R's standard attr
function.
If .RECLASS=TRUE, the returned object will preserve all relevant attribute/slot
data within itself, allowing for temporary conversion to use
zoo and xts compatible methods. A call to reclass
returns the object to its original class, with all original
attributes intact - unless otherwise changed. This is the default
behavior when try.xts
is used for conversion, and should
not be altered by the user; i.e. don't touch it unless you are
aware of the consequences.
It should be obvious, but any attributes added via the … argument will not be carried back to the original data object, as there would be no available storage slot/attribute.
# NOT RUN {
# }
# NOT RUN {
# timeSeries
library(timeSeries)
x <- timeSeries(1:10, 1:10)
str( as.xts(x) )
str( reclass(as.xts(x)) )
str( try.xts(x) )
str( reclass(try.xts(x)) )
# }
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