>>>>> Davis Vaughan via R-devel >>>>> on Fri, 28 Apr 2023 11:12:27 -0400 writes:
> Hi all, > I noticed that `range.default()` has a nice `finite = > TRUE` argument, but it doesn't actually apply to Date or > POSIXct due to how `is.numeric()` works. Well, I think it would / should never apply: range() belongs to the "Summary" group generics (as min, max, ...) and there *are* Summary.Date() and Summary.POSIX{c,l}t() methods. Without checking further for now, I think you are indirectly suggesting to enhance these three Summary.*() methods so they do obey 'finite = TRUE' . I think I agree they should. Martin > ``` x <- .Date(c(0, Inf, 1, 2, Inf)) x #> [1] "1970-01-01" > "Inf" "1970-01-02" "1970-01-03" "Inf" > # Darn! range(x, finite = TRUE) #> [1] "1970-01-01" "Inf" > # What I want .Date(range(unclass(x), finite = TRUE)) #> > [1] "1970-01-01" "1970-01-03" ``` > I think `finite = TRUE` would be pretty nice for Dates in > particular. > As a motivating example, sometimes you have ranges of > dates represented by start/end pairs. It is fairly natural > to represent an event that hasn't ended yet with an > infinite date. If you need to then compute a sequence of > dates spanning the full range of the start/end pairs, it > would be nice to be able to use `range(finite = TRUE)` to > do so: > ``` start <- as.Date(c("2019-01-05", "2019-01-10", > "2019-01-11", "2019-01-14")) end <- > as.Date(c("2019-01-07", NA, "2019-01-14", NA)) > end[is.na(end)] <- Inf > # `end = Inf` means that the event hasn't "ended" yet > data.frame(start, end) #> start end #> 1 2019-01-05 > 2019-01-07 #> 2 2019-01-10 Inf #> 3 2019-01-11 2019-01-14 > #> 4 2019-01-14 Inf > # Create a full sequence along all days in start/end range > <- .Date(range(unclass(c(start, end)), finite = TRUE)) > seq(range[1], range[2], by = 1) #> [1] "2019-01-05" > "2019-01-06" "2019-01-07" "2019-01-08" "2019-01-09" #> [6] > "2019-01-10" "2019-01-11" "2019-01-12" "2019-01-13" > "2019-01-14" ``` > It seems like one option is to create a `range.Date()` > method that unclasses, forwards the arguments on to a > second call to `range()`, and then reclasses? > ``` range.Date <- function(x, ..., na.rm = FALSE, finite = > FALSE) { .Date(range(unclass(x), na.rm = na.rm, finite = > finite), oldClass(x)) } ``` > This is similar to how `rep.Date()` works. > Thanks, Davis Vaughan > ______________________________________________ > R-devel@r-project.org mailing list > https://stat.ethz.ch/mailman/listinfo/r-devel ______________________________________________ R-devel@r-project.org mailing list https://stat.ethz.ch/mailman/listinfo/r-devel