0

I have some lovely nanotimes:

> mynames
[1] "2020-04-15T00:29:00.000000000+00:00" "2020-04-15T00:33:00.000000000+00:00"

Which I'd like to add as dimnames to my array:

> a
     [,1] [,2]
[1,]   NA   NA
[2,]   NA   NA

However, they seem to be converted into rolled over strings:

> dimnames(a)[1] <- list(values=mynames)
> a
                      [,1] [,2]
1.39309697650764e-202   NA   NA
1.39315136717363e-202   NA   NA

> dimnames(a)
[[1]]
[1] "1.39309697650764e-202" "1.39315136717363e-202"

How can I keep my dimname assignment as nanotime/integer64s? Or if they are forced to character to be dimnames, how can I at least keep them from being strings of incorrect numbers?

You can see for example that these fail to round-trip back to suitable times:

> nanotime(dimnames(a)[1][[1]][1])
Error in RcppCCTZ::parseDouble(x, fmt = format, tz = tz) : 
  Parse error on 1.39309697650764e-202
1
  • 1
    A reproducible example using dput would help to verify possible solutions.
    – Ronak Shah
    May 30, 2020 at 9:15

1 Answer 1

2

The documentation of dimnames states that the value is coerced to character. To do all the coercing back and from to nanotime which is based on integer64, you can first coerce your nanotime to integer64 and then to character. Then the back coercion works:

library(nanotime)

mynames <- c(nanotime("2020-04-15T00:29:00.000000000+00:00"),
             nanotime("2020-04-15T00:33:00.000000000+00:00"))

a <- array(NA, dim = c(2, 2))
# nanotime -> integer64 -> charachter
dimnames(a)[1] <- list(values = as.character(as.integer64(mynames)))

# character -> integer64 -> nanotime
nanotime(as.integer64(dimnames(a)[1][[1]][1]))
[1] "2020-04-15T00:29:00.000000000+00:00"

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.