What exactly is the problem? Those appear to be the same time, in
different time zones. Is the problem that you are in the N Hemisphere
(your email address is) trying to use S Hemisphere times on an OS
that does not support pre-1970 times?
You seem to be confusing the time and how it is printed. What do you
want to do with these times?
On Fri, 21 Feb 2003 arnima@u.washington.edu wrote:
> Full_Name: Arni Magnusson
> Version: 1.6.2
> OS: Windows XP
> Submission from: (NULL) (210.48.49.68)
>
>
> Hi there. I'm experiencing unexpected behaviour from as.POSIXct:
>
> > as.POSIXct("1969-12-24")
> [1] "1969-12-23 23:00:00 New Zealand Standard Time"
> > as.POSIXlt("1969-12-24")
> [1] "1969-12-24"
> > as.POSIXlt("1969-12-24")+1
> [1] "1969-12-23 23:00:01 New Zealand Standard Time"
>
>
> My friend on the US West Coast tells me he has not encountered this
problem.
> I've read some of the glibc discussion, but I believe that's not
relevant for
> Windows XP. I also read that tz="GMT" could circumvent some
problems, but not
> mine:
>
> > as.POSIXct("1969-12-24 12:00:00", "GMT")
> [1] "1969-12-25 New Zealand Standard Time"
That's correct. You need to *print* in GMT too.
> If I can get around this problem, I'd prefer using POSIX rather than
the date or
> chron classes. Perhaps a Windows environment variable is the key?
--
Brian D. Ripley, ripley@stats.ox.ac.uk
Professor of Applied Statistics, http://www.stats.ox.ac.uk/~ripley/
University of Oxford, Tel: +44 1865 272861 (self)
1 South Parks Road, +44 1865 272866 (PA)
Oxford OX1 3TG, UK Fax: +44 1865 272595