similar to: strptime mysteriously adds a day - 0S-specific: Linux and (PR#1467)

Displaying 20 results from an estimated 8000 matches similar to: "strptime mysteriously adds a day - 0S-specific: Linux and (PR#1467)"

2002 Apr 18
0
strptime mysteriously adds a day - 0S-specific: Linux and (PR#1468)
On Thu, 18 Apr 2002 ripley@stats.ox.ac.uk wrote: > On Thu, 18 Apr 2002, Martin Maechler wrote: > > > >>>>> "Jason" == Jason Turner <jasont@indigoindustrial.co.nz> writes: > > > > Jason> strptime() mysteriously adds a day to a date, unless the year > > Jason> is specified. Tested on: > > Jason> Linux (RedHat
2002 Apr 18
1
strptime mysteriously adds a day - 0S-specific: Linux and Windows (so far) (PR#1466)
strptime() mysteriously adds a day to a date, unless the year is specified. Tested on: Linux (RedHat 6.0) - R version 1.4.1 and R-devel. Windows - R version 1.4.1 Bug isn't found on OpenBSD, R version 1.4.1. Transcript: R : Copyright 2002, The R Development Core Team Version 1.4.1 (2002-01-30) ... > ## BUG: > ## strptime seems to add a day to the request, unless the year > ##
2003 Mar 12
1
'summary' with logicals (PR#2629)
Consider > oj <- data.frame(x = c(TRUE, FALSE, NA)) > oj x 1 TRUE 2 FALSE 3 NA > summary(oj) x Mode :logical FALSE:1 TRUE :1 But > oj$x <- factor(oj$x) > summary(oj) x FALSE:1 TRUE :1 NA's :1 My point is that NA's should be reported for logicals like they are for other data types. Göran --- Göran
2002 Feb 20
3
Pointer to covariates?
In the first line, use the dist function, found in library mva, to get the distance between each pair of rows. From this calculate an incidence matrix for which element i,j is true if row i in dat equals row j in dat (and false elsewhere). In the second line, for each row calculate the indices of the matching rows and take the minimum of those as the key. incid <-
2001 Jan 30
1
link in FAQ incorrect (PR#833)
Hi, the link to the R code for repeated measurement analyses of J Lindsey is unfortunately not working. I am desperate for repeated measurements in R; could you please help me out. Sincerely, Dr. G. Stoet -- Dr. Gijsbert Stoet email: stoet@thalamus.wustl.edu Web: http://eye-hand.wustl.edu/lab/people/stoet.html Phone: (314)7474095 Fax: (314)7474370
1999 Apr 02
4
PLATFORMS Update
NAME Douglas Bates EMAIL bates@stat.wisc.edu VERSION 0.63.3 PLATFORM i386-unknown-linux SYSTEM Debian 2.1 CC/FC/MAKE egcs/g77/make NAME Martyn Plummer EMAIL plummer@iarc.fr VERSION 0.63.3 PLATFORM i386-unknown-linux SYSTEM Redhat 5.1 CC/FC/MAKE gcc/egcs-g77/make NAME Göran Broström EMAIL gb@stat.umu.se VERSION 0.63.3 PLATFORM
2002 Oct 17
2
'text' can't find "x"
I wanted to add some text to a plot and got (R-1.6.0, Linux): > text(x = c(1, 4), y = 5, labels = x) Error in text.default(x = c(1766, 1895), y = 5, labels = x) : Object "x" not found With the default value of 'labels': > text(x = c(1, 2), y = 5, labels = seq(along = x)) Error in seq(along = x) : Object "x" not found A scoping bug? :) But >
2002 Jan 04
2
R CMD check (PR#1240)
SunOS fluke 5.8 Generic_108528-07 sun4u sparc SUNW,Ultra-Enterprise R-1.4.0 Running from the command line R CMD check chlib results in the log file 00check.log: * using log directory `/home/woodstock/hoffmann/R/Sources/chlib.Rcheck' * checking for file `chlib/DESCRIPTION' ... OK * checking package directory ... OK * checking for sufficient/correct file permissions ... WARNING *
2007 Mar 21
1
bug and patch: strptime first-of-month error in (possibly unsupported use of) "%j" format (PR#9577)
Full_Name: John Brzustowski Version: R-devel-trunk OS: linux (problem under Windows too) Submission from: (NULL) (74.101.124.238) (This bug was discovered by Phil Taylor, Acadia University.) I'm not sure from reading the documentation whether strptime(x, "%j") is meant to be supported, but if so, there is a bug which prevents it from working on the first day of months after
2002 Sep 19
2
R 1.6 for windows?
On Thu, 19 Sep 2002 10:43:01 -0400 (EDT), you wrote in message <200209191443.KAA17404@falmouth.bwh.harvard.edu>: >Hi Duncan -- I am curious as to whether you are building/distributing >R 1.6.0 for windows? There's nothing urgent about it, I have one. >The question is how to identify a distribution URL if one exists. I will be building and distributing the final release.
2012 Feb 20
10
[PATCH] hvm: Correct RTC time offset update error due to tm->tm_year
Hi In rtc_set_time, mktime is called to calculate seconds since 1970/01/01, input parameters of mktime are required to be in normal date format. Such as: year=1980, mon=12, day=31, hour=23, min=59, sec=59. However, the current input parameter of mktime is tm->tm_year, and it is the number of years since 1900. (For example, if current time is 2012/12/31, and tm->tm_year is 112). This is
2003 Nov 26
4
strptime Usage
Hi, I have a column in a dataframe in the form of: > as.vector(SLDATX[1:20]) [1] "1/6/1986" "1/17/1986" "2/2/1986" "2/4/1986" "2/4/1986" [6] "2/21/1986" "3/6/1986" "3/25/1986" "4/6/1986" "4/10/1986" [11] "4/23/1986" "4/30/1986" "5/8/1986"
2002 Sep 10
9
R 1.6.0 beta
R 1.6.0 has gone into final feature freeze as of today. As a new feature, we'll make interim beta versions available via ftp://cran.us.r-project.org/pub/R/src/base alias http://cran.us.r-project.org/src/base (filename R-1.6.0beta_*.tar.gz, where * is the creation date). If you want to help ensure that the final 1.6.0 works satisfactorily on *your* platform, it might be a good idea to
2009 Feb 27
0
POSIXlt, POSIXct, strptime, GMT and 1969-12-31 23:59:59
R-devel: Some very inconsistent behavior, that I can't seem to find documented. Sys.setenv(TZ="GMT") str(unclass(strptime("1969-12-31 23:59:59","%Y-%m-%d %H:%M:%S"))) List of 9 $ sec : num 59 $ min : int 59 $ hour : int 23 $ mday : int 31 $ mon : int 11 $ year : int 69 $ wday : int 3 $ yday : int 364 $ isdst: int 0 - attr(*, "tzone")= chr
2002 Oct 01
6
R-1.6.0 is released
I've rolled up R-1.6.0.tgz a short while ago. This is a major upgrade, with several new features. A few of the changes generate compatibility issues. You may wish to consult http://developer.r-project.org/160update.txt. We no longer ship the set of recommended packages separately, but bundle them up with the main distribution. Thus there is now only a single file to fetch and (barring
2002 Oct 01
6
R-1.6.0 is released
I've rolled up R-1.6.0.tgz a short while ago. This is a major upgrade, with several new features. A few of the changes generate compatibility issues. You may wish to consult http://developer.r-project.org/160update.txt. We no longer ship the set of recommended packages separately, but bundle them up with the main distribution. Thus there is now only a single file to fetch and (barring
2001 Oct 31
4
strptime bug (PR#1155)
## rw1031 Version 1.3.1 (2001-08-31) ## > version ## _ ## platform i386-pc-mingw32 ## arch x86 ## os Win32 ## system x86, Win32 ## status ## major 1 ## minor 3.1 ## year 2001 ## month 08 ## day 31 ## language R ## The
2003 Nov 14
5
ISOdate() and strptime()
Dear R-people! I am using R 1.8.0, under Windows XP. While using ISOdate() and strptime(), I noticed the following behaviour when "wrong" arguments (e.g., months>12) are given to these functions: > ISOdate(year=2003,month=2,day=20) #ok [1] "2003-02-20 13:00:00 Westeurop?ische Normalzeit" > ISOdate(year=2003,month=2,day=30) #wrong day, but returns a value [1]
2016 Mar 12
2
Regression in strptime
On 3/12/16 12:33 AM, peter dalgaard wrote: >> On 12 Mar 2016, at 00:05 , Mick Jordan <mick.jordan at oracle.com> wrote: >> >> This is definitely obscure but we had a unit test that called .Internal(strptime, "1942/01/01", %Y/%m/%d") with timezone (TZ) set to CET. > Umm, that doesn't even parse. And fixing the typo, it doesn't run: > >>
2016 Mar 15
4
Regression in strptime
>>>>> peter dalgaard <pdalgd at gmail.com> >>>>> on Sat, 12 Mar 2016 19:11:40 +0100 writes: > OK, .Internal is not necessary to reproduce oddity in this area. I also see things like (notice 1980) >> strptime(paste0(sample(1900:1999,80,replace=TRUE),"/01/01"), "%Y/%m/%d", tz="CET") ............... >