| seq.POSIXt {base} | R Documentation | 
The method for seq for date-time classes.
## S3 method for class 'POSIXt': seq(from, to, by, length.out = NULL, along.with = NULL, ...)
from | 
starting date. Required. | 
to | 
end date. Optional. | 
by | 
increment of the sequence. Optional. See Details. | 
length.out | 
integer, optional. desired length of the sequence. | 
along.with | 
take the length from the length of this argument. | 
... | 
arguments passed to or from other methods. | 
by can be specified in several ways.
difftime
"sec",
"min", "hour", "day", "DSTday",
"week", "month" or "year".  This can optionally be
preceded by a (positive or negative) integer and a space,
or followed by "s".
The difference between "day" and "DSTday" is that the
former ignores changes to/from daylight savings time and the latter takes
the same clock time each day.  ("week" ignores DST (it is a
period of 144 hours), but "7 DSTdays") can be used as an
alternative.  "month" and "year" allow for DST.)
The timezone of the result is taken from from: remember than
GMT does not have daylight savings time.
Using "month" first advances the month without changing the
day: if this results in an invalid day of the month, it is counted
forward into the next month: see the examples.
A vector of class "POSIXct".
## first days of years seq(ISOdate(1910,1,1), ISOdate(1999,1,1), "years") ## by month seq(ISOdate(2000,1,1), by = "month", length = 12) seq(ISOdate(2000,1,31), by = "month", length = 4) ## quarters seq(ISOdate(1990,1,1), ISOdate(2000,1,1), by = "3 months") ## days vs DSTdays: use c() to lose the timezone. seq(c(ISOdate(2000,3,20)), by = "day", length = 10) seq(c(ISOdate(2000,3,20)), by = "DSTday", length = 10) seq(c(ISOdate(2000,3,20)), by = "7 DSTdays", length = 4)