Convert an OHLC or univariate object to a specified periodicity lower than the given data object. For example, convert a daily series to a monthly series, or a monthly series to a yearly one, or a one minute series to an hourly series.
The result will contain the open and close for the given period, as well as the maximum and minimum over the new period, reflected in the new high and low, respectively.
If volume for a period was available, the new volume will also be calculated.
to.minutes(x,k,name,...)
to.minutes3(x,name,...)
to.minutes5(x,name,...)
to.minutes10(x,name,...)
to.minutes15(x,name,...)
to.minutes30(x,name,...)
to.hourly(x,name,...)
to.daily(x,drop.time=TRUE,name,...)to.weekly(x,drop.time=TRUE,name,...)
to.monthly(x,indexAt='yearmon',drop.time=TRUE,name,...)
to.quarterly(x,indexAt='yearqtr',drop.time=TRUE,name,...)
to.yearly(x,drop.time=TRUE,name,...)
to.period(x,
period = 'months',
k = 1,
indexAt,
name=NULL,
OHLC = TRUE,
...)
An object of the original type, with new periodicity.
a univariate or OHLC type time-series object
period to convert to. See details.
convert final index to new class or date. See details
remove time component of POSIX datestamp (if any)
number of sub periods to aggregate on (only for minutes and seconds)
override column names
should an OHLC object be returned? (only OHLC=TRUE
currently supported)
additional arguments
Jeffrey A. Ryan
Essentially an easy and reliable way to convert one periodicity of data
into any new periodicity. It is important to note
that all dates will be aligned to the end of each period
by default - with the exception of to.monthly
and to.quarterly
,
which index by ‘yearmon’ and ‘yearqtr’ from the zoo
package, respectively.
Valid period character strings include: "seconds"
,
"minutes"
, "hours"
, "days"
, "weeks"
,
"months"
, "quarters"
, and "years"
. These are
calculated internally via endpoints
. See that function's help
page for further details.
To adjust the final indexing style, it is possible to set
indexAt
to one of the following: ‘yearmon’,
‘yearqtr’, ‘firstof’, ‘lastof’,
‘startof’, or ‘endof’. The final index will
then be yearmon
, yearqtr
, the first time of the period,
the last time of the period, the starting time in the data for that
period, or the ending time in the data for that period, respectively.
It is also possible to pass a single time series, such as a univariate exchange rate, and return an OHLC object of lower frequency - e.g. the weekly OHLC of the daily series.
Setting drop.time
to TRUE
(the default)
will convert a series that includes a time
component into one with just a date index, as the time index
is often of little value in lower frequency series.
It is not possible to convert a series from a lower periodicity to a higher periodicity - e.g. weekly to daily or daily to 5 minute bars, as that would require magic.
data(sample_matrix)
samplexts <- as.xts(sample_matrix)
to.monthly(samplexts)
to.monthly(sample_matrix)
str(to.monthly(samplexts))
str(to.monthly(sample_matrix))
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