% File src/library/base/man/seq.POSIXt.Rd % Part of the R package, http://www.R-project.org % Copyright 1995-2014 R Core Team % Distributed under GPL 2 or later \name{seq.POSIXt} \alias{seq.POSIXt} \title{Generate Regular Sequences of Times} \description{ The method for \code{\link{seq}} for date-time classes. } \usage{ \method{seq}{POSIXt}(from, to, by, length.out = NULL, along.with = NULL, \dots) } \arguments{ \item{from}{starting date. Required.} \item{to}{end date. Optional.} \item{by}{increment of the sequence. Optional. See \sQuote{Details}.} \item{length.out}{integer, optional. Desired length of the sequence.} \item{along.with}{take the length from the length of this argument.} \item{\dots}{arguments passed to or from other methods.} } \details{ \code{by} can be specified in several ways. \itemize{ \item A number, taken to be in seconds. \item A object of class \code{\link{difftime}} \item A character string, containing one of \code{"sec"}, \code{"min"}, \code{"hour"}, \code{"day"}, \code{"DSTday"}, \code{"week"}, \code{"month"}, \code{"quarter"} or \code{"year"}. This can optionally be preceded by a (positive or negative) integer and a space, or followed by \code{"s"}. } The difference between \code{"day"} and \code{"DSTday"} is that the former ignores changes to/from daylight savings time and the latter takes the same clock time each day. (\code{"week"} ignores DST (it is a period of 144 hours), but \code{"7 DSTdays"}) can be used as an alternative. \code{"month"} and \code{"year"} allow for DST.) The \link{time zone} of the result is taken from \code{from}: remember that GMT means UTC (and not the time zone of Greenwich, England) and so does not have daylight savings time. Using \code{"month"} first advances the month without changing the day: if this results in an invalid day of the month, it is counted forward into the next month: see the examples. } \value{ A vector of class \code{"POSIXct"}. } \note{ Quarterly increments were specified by \code{by = "3 months"} prior to \R 3.1.0. } \seealso{\code{\link{DateTimeClasses}}} \examples{ ## first days of years seq(ISOdate(1910,1,1), ISOdate(1999,1,1), "years") ## by month seq(ISOdate(2000,1,1), by = "month", length.out = 12) seq(ISOdate(2000,1,31), by = "month", length.out = 4) ## quarters seq(ISOdate(1990,1,1), ISOdate(2000,1,1), by = "quarter") # or "3 months" ## days vs DSTdays: use c() to lose the time zone. seq(c(ISOdate(2000,3,20)), by = "day", length.out = 10) seq(c(ISOdate(2000,3,20)), by = "DSTday", length.out = 10) seq(c(ISOdate(2000,3,20)), by = "7 DSTdays", length.out = 4) } \keyword{manip} \keyword{chron}