% File src/library/base/man/Sys.time.Rd % Part of the R package, http://www.R-project.org % Copyright 1995-2013 R Core Team % Distributed under GPL 2 or later \name{Sys.time} \alias{Sys.time} \alias{Sys.Date} \title{Get Current Date and Time} \description{ \code{Sys.time} and \code{Sys.Date} returns the system's idea of the current date with and without time. } \usage{ Sys.time() Sys.Date() } \details{ \code{Sys.time} returns an absolute date-time value which can be converted to various time zones and may return different days. \code{Sys.Date} returns the current day in the current \link{time zone}. } \value{ \code{Sys.time} returns an object of class \code{"POSIXct"} (see \link{DateTimeClasses}). On almost all systems it will have sub-second accuracy, possibly microseconds or better. On Windows it increments in clock ticks (usually 1/60 of a second) reported to millisecond accuracy. \code{Sys.Date} returns an object of class \code{"Date"} (see \link{Date}). } \note{ \code{Sys.time} may return fractional seconds, but they are ignored by the default conversions (e.g. printing) for class \code{"POSIXct"}. See the examples and \code{\link{format.POSIXct}} for ways to reveal them. } \seealso{ \code{\link{date}} for the system time in a fixed-format character string. \code{\link{Sys.timezone}}. \code{\link{system.time}} for measuring elapsed/CPU time of expressions. } \examples{\donttest{ Sys.time() ## print with possibly greater accuracy: op <- options(digits.secs = 6) Sys.time() options(op) ## locale-specific version of date() format(Sys.time(), "\%a \%b \%d \%X \%Y") Sys.Date() }} \keyword{utilities} \keyword{chron}