You can order (which is not the same as sort) POSIXct vectors but not POSIXlt ones.

class() on your objects (or str(), but that only shows one class) would have been revealing.

It is somewhat fortuitous that you can order and sort POSIXct vectors, as you are ordering the underlying numeric representation.

On Wed, 9 Feb 2005, bogdan romocea wrote:

Dear useRs,

How come the first attempt to sort a POSIXt vector fails (Error:
non-atomic type in greater), while the second succeeds? (Code inserted
below.) The documentation says that POSIXt is used to allow operations
such as subtraction, so I'd expect sorting to work.

I didn't know sorting was like subtraction. What I found was

     Logical comparisons and limited arithmetic are available for both
     classes.

Try the documentation on order() and sort(), which is clear that these apply only to certain sorts of vectors, and for DateTimeClasses which tells you POSIXlt is a list and POSIXct is a numeric vector.


Is this perhaps an
OS issue? (I run R 2.0.1 on Win xp.)

Thank you,
b.

#------------code
test <- c("2005-02-08 18:49:15","2005-02-07 18:36:54",
        "2005-02-04 18:37:03","2005-02-06 18:29:04")
test <- strptime(test,format="%Y-%m-%d %H:%M:%S")
order(test,decreasing=F)        #doesn't work - why?
tst <- test + 0
order(tst,decreasing=F) #works - how come?
print(tst)
#------------run
test <- c("2005-02-08 18:49:15","2005-02-07 18:36:54",
+ "2005-02-04 18:37:03","2005-02-06 18:29:04")
test <- strptime(test,format="%Y-%m-%d %H:%M:%S")
order(test,decreasing=F)#doesn't work - why?
Error in order(test, decreasing = F) : non-atomic type in greater
tst <- test + 0
order(tst,decreasing=F)#works - how come?
[1] 3 4 2 1
print(tst)
[1] "2005-02-08 18:49:15 Eastern Standard Time" "2005-02-07 18:36:54
Eastern Standard Time"
[3] "2005-02-04 18:37:03 Eastern Standard Time" "2005-02-06 18:29:04
Eastern Standard Time"


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