Hi Werner, on ?is.na it says:
> The default method for anyNA handles atomic vectors without a class and NULL. I hear you, and it is confusing to say the least. Looking deeper, the culprit seems to be in the conversion of a Date to POSIXlt prior to the formatting: > x <- as.Date(Inf,origin = '1970-01-01') > is.na(as.POSIXlt(x)) [1] TRUE Given this implicit conversion, I'd argue that as.Date should really return NA as well when passed an infinite value. The other option is to provide an is.na method for the Date class, which is -given is.na is an internal generic- rather trivial: > is.na.Date <- function(x) is.na(as.POSIXlt(x)) > is.na(x) [1] TRUE This might be a workaround for your current problem without needing changes to R itself. But this will give a "wrong" answer in the sense that this still works: > Sys.Date() - x Time difference of -Inf days I personally would go for NA as the "correct" date for an infinite value, but given that this will have implications in other areas, there is a possibility of breaking code and it should be investigated a bit further imho. Cheers Joris On Fri, Jun 8, 2018 at 11:21 PM, Werner Grundlingh <wgrundli...@gmail.com> wrote: > Indeed. as_date is from lubridate, but the same holds for as.Date. > > The output and it's interpretation should be consistent, otherwise it leads > to confusion when programming. I understand that the difference exists > after asking a question on Stack Overflow: > https://stackoverflow.com/q/50766089/914686 > This understanding is never mentioned in the documentation - that an Inf > date is actually represented as NA: > https://www.rdocumentation.org/packages/base/versions/3. > 5.0/topics/as.Date > So I'm of the impression that the display should be fixed as a first option > (thereby providing clarity/transparency in terms of back-end and output), > or the documentation amended (to highlight this) as a second option. > > [[alternative HTML version deleted]] > > ______________________________________________ > R-devel@r-project.org mailing list > https://stat.ethz.ch/mailman/listinfo/r-devel > -- Joris Meys Statistical consultant Department of Data Analysis and Mathematical Modelling Ghent University Coupure Links 653, B-9000 Gent (Belgium) <https://maps.google.com/?q=Coupure+links+653,%C2%A0B-9000+Gent,%C2%A0Belgium&entry=gmail&source=g> ----------- Biowiskundedagen 2017-2018 http://www.biowiskundedagen.ugent.be/ ------------------------------- Disclaimer : http://helpdesk.ugent.be/e-maildisclaimer.php [[alternative HTML version deleted]] ______________________________________________ R-devel@r-project.org mailing list https://stat.ethz.ch/mailman/listinfo/r-devel