Please provide a reproducible examples. You can use the following style: > Lines <- "01:01:01 11 55 + 01:01:04 22 66 + 01:01:07 33 77 + 01:01:10 44 88" > library(zoo) > library(chron) > z <- read.zoo(textConnection(Lines), FUN = times) > z V2 V3 01:01:01 11 55 01:01:04 22 66 01:01:07 33 77 01:01:10 44 88
On Fri, Jan 29, 2010 at 8:34 AM, e-letter <inp...@gmail.com> wrote: > Assuming my documentation is correct, my version shows faq 1 to refer > to duplicate times but if file2 is: > > 01:01:01 11 55 > 01:01:04 22 66 > 01:01:07 33 77 > 01:01:10 44 88 > > I cannot see what is duplicate? If I create two new files: > > file3: > 01:01:01 11 > 01:01:04 22 > 01:01:07 33 > 01:01:10 44 > > file4: > 01:01:01 55 > 01:01:04 66 > 01:01:07 77 > 01:01:10 88 > > The previous commands work: > > z1<-read.zoo("path/to/file1.csv",header=TRUE,sep=",",FUN=times) > z2<-read.zoo("path/to/file3.csv",header=TRUE,sep=",",FUN=times) > z3<-(na.approx(merge(z1,z2),time(z1))) > plot(z3$z1,z3$z2) > > and: > > z1<-read.zoo("path/to/file1.csv",header=TRUE,sep=",",FUN=times) > z2<-read.zoo("path/to/file4.csv",header=TRUE,sep=",",FUN=times) > z3<-(na.approx(merge(z1,z2),time(z1))) > plot(z3$z1,z3$z2) > > Shouldn't I be able to have one file containing all the columns I want > to make graphs, instead of having to create numerous files of only two > columns of data? > ______________________________________________ R-help@r-project.org mailing list 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.