Hi Paul, When manipulating any R object, the first thing to ascertain is what it is:
class(TSmodelForecast) should give you useful information. str(TSmodelForecast) should give you more. Because of the wealth of defined data structures in R, it is difficult to manipulate them without this information. I suspect that your output is something like a time series object, and once that is known, it should not be too hard to display its contents in the way you want. Jim On Sat, Mar 18, 2017 at 7:12 AM, Paul Bernal <paulberna...@gmail.com> wrote: > Dear Jim, > > Hope you are doing great. I tried to do what you suggested but R send an > error message saying that $ operator is invalid for atomic vectors. > > The format of the forecasts are as follows: forecasted years are as rows, > and forecasted months are in columns what I want to do is to have two > colums, one with the forecasted dates in (MMM-YYYY format) and the second > column with the actual forecast results. > > The output that is giving me hard time is the forecast output from nnetar > model. > > Thanks for your valuable support, > > Best of regards, > > Paul > > > 2017-03-16 18:23 GMT-05:00 Jim Lemon <drjimle...@gmail.com>: >> >> Hi Paul, >> It looks like the information that is printed is in: >> >> TSModelForecast$mean >> >> If str(TSModelForecast$mean) returns something like a list with two >> components, you can probably use something like this: >> >> paste(format(TSModelForecast$mean$Date,"%b-%Y"), >> TSModelForecast$mean$Forecast,sep="-",collapse="\n") >> >> It also might be in TSModelForecast$fitted >> >> Jim >> >> >> On Fri, Mar 17, 2017 at 5:34 AM, Paul Bernal <paulberna...@gmail.com> >> wrote: >> > Dear friends, >> > >> > I am currently using R version 3.3.3 (64-bit) and used the following >> > code >> > to generate forecasts: >> > >> >> library(forecast) >> >> >> >> library(tseries) >> > >> > ‘tseries’ version: 0.10-35 >> > >> > ‘tseries’ is a package for time series analysis and computational >> > finance. >> > >> > See ‘library(help="tseries")’ for details. >> > >> > >> >> DAT<-read.csv("TrainingData.csv") >> >> >> >> TSdata<-ts(DAT[,1], start=c(1994,10), frequency=12) >> >> >> >> TSmodel<-nnetar(TSdata) >> >> >> >> TSmodelForecast<-forecast(TSmodel, h=24) >> >> >> >> TSmodelForecast >> > >> > The problem is that the output comes in this fashion: >> > >> > Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug >> > Sep Oct >> > 2017 10 20 15 40 9 8 21 >> > 21 >> > 19 18 >> > 2018 34 15 7 6 10 11 >> > >> > The format I would like to have is the following: >> > >> > Date Forecast >> > Jan-2017 10 >> > Feb-2017 20 >> > Mar-2017 15 >> > Apr-2017 40 >> > May-2017 9 >> > Jun-2017 8 >> > Jul-2017 21 >> > Aug-2017 21 >> > Sep-2017 19 >> > etc etc >> > >> > Is there a way to make the results look like this? >> > >> > Attached is a dataset as a reference. >> > >> > Best regards, >> > >> > Paul >> > ______________________________________________ >> > R-help@r-project.org mailing list -- To UNSUBSCRIBE and more, see >> > https://stat.ethz.ch/mailman/listinfo/r-help >> > PLEASE do read the posting guide >> > http://www.R-project.org/posting-guide.html >> > and provide commented, minimal, self-contained, reproducible code. > > ______________________________________________ R-help@r-project.org mailing list -- To UNSUBSCRIBE and more, see https://stat.ethz.ch/mailman/listinfo/r-help PLEASE do read the posting guide http://www.R-project.org/posting-guide.html and provide commented, minimal, self-contained, reproducible code.