These are iso-year-week-day methods for the getter generics.
get_year()
returns the ISO year. Note that this can differ from the Gregorian year.get_week()
returns the ISO week of the current ISO year.get_day()
returns a value between 1-7 indicating the weekday of the current ISO week, where 1 = Monday and 7 = Sunday, in line with the ISO standard.There are sub-daily getters for extracting more precise components.
Usage
# S3 method for class 'clock_iso_year_week_day'
get_year(x)
# S3 method for class 'clock_iso_year_week_day'
get_week(x)
# S3 method for class 'clock_iso_year_week_day'
get_day(x)
# S3 method for class 'clock_iso_year_week_day'
get_hour(x)
# S3 method for class 'clock_iso_year_week_day'
get_minute(x)
# S3 method for class 'clock_iso_year_week_day'
get_second(x)
# S3 method for class 'clock_iso_year_week_day'
get_millisecond(x)
# S3 method for class 'clock_iso_year_week_day'
get_microsecond(x)
# S3 method for class 'clock_iso_year_week_day'
get_nanosecond(x)
Examples
x <- iso_year_week_day(2019, 50:52, 1:3)
x
#> <iso_year_week_day<day>[3]>
#> [1] "2019-W50-1" "2019-W51-2" "2019-W52-3"
# Get the ISO week
get_week(x)
#> [1] 50 51 52
# Gets the weekday, 1 = Monday, 7 = Sunday
get_day(x)
#> [1] 1 2 3
# Note that the ISO year can differ from the Gregorian year
iso <- iso_year_week_day(2019, 1, 1)
ymd <- as_year_month_day(iso)
get_year(iso)
#> [1] 2019
get_year(ymd)
#> [1] 2018