Reputation: 75
I have a .csv file with one field each for datetime, date and time. Originally they are all character fields and I have converted them accordingly. At the end of my code, if I do:
str(data)
I will get
datetime: POSIXct
date: Date
time: Class 'times' atomic [1:2820392] (....) attr(*, "format")= chr "h:m:s"
Now, I am very happy with this and I want to create a .csv file, so this is what I have:
write.csv(data, file = "data.csv", row.names = FALSE)
I have also tried
write.table(data, "data.csv", sep = ",", row.names = FALSE)
And I get the same result with both, which is all my convertion gets lost when writing the new .csv: everything is back to being a character.
I suspect I am missing some argument in the write function, but I have been searching all afternoon and I can't find out what. Can some please help?
Upvotes: 7
Views: 10698
Reputation: 24686
If you are willing to add dplyr
and lubridate
as dependencies you can generate the CSV with dates in ISO8601 (so you don't lose any information) like this:
#install.packages("tidyverse")
#install.packages("dplyr")
library(dplyr)
library(lubridate, warn.conflicts = FALSE)
dat <- data.frame(time=as.POSIXlt("2013-04-25 09:00 BST"), quantity=1) # example data
write.csv(mutate(dat, time=format(time, "%FT%H:%M:%S%z")), file="test.csv", row.names=FALSE)
That will generate a CSV file with the following content:
"time","quantity"
"2013-04-25T09:00:00+0200",1
As you can see the CSV contain the date in ISO8601 with the timezone information so no information is lost.
If you want to read back that CSV you can
df2 <- read.csv("test.csv") %>% mutate(time=ymd_hms(time))
Upvotes: 1
Reputation: 71
If you want to preserve all of the time information so it can be read in again, this recipe should work:
dat <- data.frame(time=as.POSIXlt("2013-04-25 09:00 BST"), quantity=1)
dat2 <- dat
dat2$time <- format(dat2$time, usetz=TRUE)
write.csv(dat2, "time.csv", row.names=FALSE)
It gives the following CSV file:
"time","quantity"
"2013-04-25 09:00:00 BST",1
in which the timezone information is presented explicitly; if you apply write.csv
to the original dat
, the formatting is lost.
Upvotes: 7
Reputation: 176648
According to ?write.table
:
Any columns in a data frame which are lists or have a class (e.g. dates) will be converted by the appropriate 'as.character' method: such columns are unquoted by default.
Simply put, you can only write text/characters to text files. Use save
if you want to preserve the binary R representation of your object(s).
Upvotes: 4