Noah,
For me xcoredata() returns a vector of the results, which makes me
wonder if you are using an old version of R or your data is somehow
stored differently.
Cheers,
Josh
On Sun, Aug 21, 2011 at 10:15 AM, Noah Silverman wrote:
> Josh,
>
> Good point about including an example.
>
> calling x
Josh,
Good point about including an example.
calling xcoredata() does work, but only for a *single* row of the data at a
time. In R, I'm used to passing an entire data structure or vector to a
function and automatically getting back a vector of all the results. In this
case, it doesn't work
Hi Noah,
This is one of those cases where following the posting guide
(particularly the minimal, reproducible example part) would have
really helped. Are you saying that calling:
xcoredata(your_xts_object) does not give you the internal
representation of time that you want?
data(sample_matrix)
s
Hi,
I have a very large data set stored as an xts object.
xts is very nice about showing row labels as "human readable" dates and times.
I want the actual epoch values that are stored internally. The only way I can
find to access them is one-at-a-time using the internal function: xcoredata()
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