Am Sa., 5. Juni 2021 um 11:47 Uhr schrieb Micha Silver <tsvi...@gmail.com>: > It's not clear what you're asking. The time strings already have the > timezone offset specified. If you get rid of the "T" character in the > strings, then you can use regular datetime formatting specifiers to > convert to R datetime objects, i.e. > > > my_dates = c("2021-06-19T13:45:00-03:00", "2020-07-20T11:39:12+02:00", > strftime(Sys.time(),"%Y-%m-%dT%H:%M:%S%z")) > my_dates > [1] "2021-06-19T13:45:00-03:00" "2020-07-20T11:39:12+02:00" > [3] "2021-06-05T12:33:11+0300" > my_dates2 = gsub(pattern="T", replacement=" ", x=my_dates) > my_dates2 > [1] "2021-06-19 13:45:00-03:00" "2020-07-20 11:39:12+02:00" > [3] "2021-06-05 12:33:11+0300" > > > # Now convert to datetime objects, including TZ offset: > > my_datetimes = as.POSIXct(my_dates2, "%Y-%m-%d %H:%M:%S%z") > > > # And these datetimes you can visualize any way you want: > > strftime(my_datetimes, format="%d/%b/%Y %H:%M %Z", tz="EST") > [1] "19/Jun/2021 08:45 EST" "20/Jul/2020 06:39 EST" "05/Jun/2021 07:33 EST" > > > Not sure if that helps at all...
Hi Micha, thank you very much for your detailed reply. In fact, I probably have not been too clear about my intentions, but you somehow managed to tell me everything I wanted to know... Your solution works perfectly for me! Thanks again and kind regards, Thomas ______________________________________________ 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.