[R] extract date
Petr Pikal
petr.pikal at precheza.cz
Tue Apr 5 13:22:14 CEST 2005
Dear Prof.Ripley
Thank you for your answer. After some tests and errors I finished
with suitable extraction function which gives me substatnial
increase in positive answers.
Nevertheless I definitely need to gain more practice in regular
expressions, but from the help page I can grasp only easy things. Is
there any "Regular expressions for dummies" available?
Best regards
Petr Pikal
On 5 Apr 2005 at 10:23, Prof Brian Ripley wrote:
> On Tue, 5 Apr 2005, Petr Pikal wrote:
>
> > Dear all,
> >
> > please, is there any possibility how to extract a date from data
> > which are like this:
>
> Yes, if you delimit all the possibilities.
>
> > ....
> > "Date: Sat, 21 Feb 04 10:25:43 GMT"
> > "Date: 13 Feb 2004 13:54:22 -0600"
> > "Date: Fri, 20 Feb 2004 17:00:48 +0000"
> > "Date: Fri, 14 Jun 2002 16:22:27 -0400"
> > "Date: Wed, 18 Feb 2004 08:53:56 -0500"
> > "Date: 20 Feb 2004 02:18:58 -0600"
> > "Date: Sun, 15 Feb 2004 16:01:19 +0800"
> > ....
> >
> > I used
> >
> > strptime(paste(substr(x,12,13), substr(x,15,17), substr(x,19,22),
> > sep="-"), format="%d-%b-%Y")
> >
> > which suits to lines 3:5 and 7 (such are the most common in my
> > dataset) but obviously does not work with other lines.
>
> For those examples, in character vector 'dates' (without quotes):
>
> > nd <- gsub("^[^0-9]*([0-9]+) ([A-Za-z]+) ([0-9]+).*",
> "\\1 \\2 \\3", dates)
> > strptime(nd, "%d %b %y")
> [1] "2004-02-21" "2020-02-13" "2020-02-20" "2020-06-14" "2020-02-18"
> [6] "2020-02-20" "2020-02-15"
>
> You should be able to amend the regexp for a wider range of forms, but
> your first line is ambiguous (2004 or 2021?) so there are limits.
>
> > If there is no stightforward solution I can live with what I use now
> > but some automagical function like
> >
> > give.me.date.from.my.string.regardles.of.formating(x)
> > would be great.
>
> It would be impossible: when Americans write 07/04/2004 they do not
> mean April 7th.
>
> --
> Brian D. Ripley, ripley at stats.ox.ac.uk
> Professor of Applied Statistics, http://www.stats.ox.ac.uk/~ripley/
> University of Oxford, Tel: +44 1865 272861 (self) 1 South
> Parks Road, +44 1865 272866 (PA) Oxford OX1 3TG,
> UK Fax: +44 1865 272595
>
> ______________________________________________
> R-help at stat.math.ethz.ch mailing list
> https://stat.ethz.ch/mailman/listinfo/r-help
> PLEASE do read the posting guide!
> http://www.R-project.org/posting-guide.html
Petr Pikal
petr.pikal at precheza.cz
More information about the R-help
mailing list