60

The title has it: how do you convert a POSIX date to day-of-year?

5 Answers 5

74

An alternative is to format the "POSIXt" object using strftime():

R> today <- Sys.time()
R> today
[1] "2012-10-19 19:12:04 BST"
R> doy <- strftime(today, format = "%j")
R> doy
[1] "293"
R> as.numeric(doy)
[1] 293

which is preferable to remembering that the day of the years is zero-based in the POSIX standard.

3
  • Just ran into my first data set with a POSIXct column. Seemed like time to mark yours as the accepted answer. Dec 4, 2012 at 19:38
  • @Gavin, is it also possible to convert a date to days since a specified data, e.g.number of days since March 1st 2015? I can also post as a new question...
    – B. Davis
    Aug 11, 2015 at 12:06
  • 2
    @B.Davis You can do something like as.numeric(Sys.Date()-as.Date('2015-03-01',format='%Y-%m-%d'))
    – Henry
    Jan 5, 2016 at 15:32
38

As ?POSIXlt reveals, a $yday suffix to a POSIXlt date (or even a vector of such) will convert to day of year. Beware that POSIX counts Jan 1 as day 0, so you might want to add 1 to the result.

It took me embarrassingly long to find this, so I thought I'd ask and answer my own question.

Alternatively, the excellent lubridate package provides the yday function, which is just a wrapper for the above method. It conveniently defines similar functions for other units (month, year, hour, ...).

today <- Sys.time()
yday(today)
8
  • Part of why it took me so long is that if d is a POSIXlt object, str(d) gives no indication that d has any further attributes. This, and that the $ operator works element-wise on a vector of POSIXlt objects means more than just a usual extraction is going on. I'd be interested in reading a bit more about that if anyone can recommend a nice place to start. Oct 31, 2011 at 20:43
  • And, to respond to my own comment, attributes is the command I was looking for, attributes(d) provides all the ways of displaying d. Dec 15, 2011 at 22:30
  • Heh, I was struggling with this question too. Seems that you answered it yourself (as opposed to just doing it without posting it here). Thanks for that!
    – Mikko
    Jul 3, 2012 at 10:07
  • 3
    Note that this will only work with an object of class "POSIXlt". The other major class is "POSIXct" and that is stored internally in a very different way. Try your method on the output of Sys.time() for example. The strftime() approach works with both types. Oct 19, 2012 at 19:02
  • A warning from my side. Remember to use yday on POSIXct object only! yday runs on character without any error message, moreover giving reasonable doy number. However, these doy will be wrong.
    – FraNut
    Nov 7, 2022 at 16:21
4

I realize it isn't quite what the poster was looking for, but I needed to convert POSIX date-times into a fractional day of the year for time series analysis and ended up doing this:

today <- Sys.time()

doy2015f<-difftime(today,as.POSIXct(as.Date("2015-01-01 00:00", tzone="GMT")),units='days')
0
2

The data.table package also provides a yday() function.

require(data.table)
today <- Sys.time()
yday(today)
1

This is the way how I do it:

as.POSIXlt(c("15.4", "10.5", "15.5", "10.6"), format = "%d.%m")$yday
# [1] 104 129 134 160
1
  • Works well for POSIXlt (as mentioned in my answer), but not for POSIXct objects. E.g., Sys.time()$yday doesn't work. Nov 4, 2015 at 18:09

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