The class git_time stores the time a Git object was created.
# S3 method for class 'git_time'
as.character(x, tz = "GMT", origin = "1970-01-01", usetz = TRUE, ...)
# S3 method for class 'git_time'
format(x, tz = "GMT", origin = "1970-01-01", usetz = TRUE, ...)
# S3 method for class 'git_time'
as.POSIXct(x, tz = "GMT", origin = "1970-01-01", ...)
# S3 method for class 'git_time'
print(x, tz = "GMT", origin = "1970-01-01", usetz = TRUE, ...)R object to be converted.
a character string. The time zone specification to be used
for the conversion, if one is required. System-specific (see
time zones), but "" is the current time zone, and
"GMT" is UTC (Universal Time, Coordinated). Invalid values
are most commonly treated as UTC, on some platforms with a warning.
a date-time object, or something which can be coerced by
as.POSIXct(tz = "GMT") to such an object. Optional since R
4.3.0, where the equivalent of "1970-01-01" is used.
logical. Should the time zone abbreviation be appended
to the output? This is used in printing times, and more reliable
than using "%Z".
further arguments to be passed to or from other methods.
The default is to use tz = "GMT" and origin =
"1970-01-01". To use your local timezone, set tz =
Sys.timezone().
if (FALSE) { # \dontrun{
## Initialize a temporary repository
path <- tempfile(pattern="git2r-")
dir.create(path)
repo <- init(path)
## Create a first user and commit a file
config(repo, user.name = "Alice", user.email = "alice@example.org")
writeLines("Hello world!", file.path(path, "example.txt"))
add(repo, "example.txt")
commit(repo, "First commit message")
## Create tag
tag(repo, "Tagname", "Tag message")
as.POSIXct(commits(repo)[[1]]$author$when)
as.POSIXct(tags(repo)[[1]]$tagger$when)
as.POSIXct(tags(repo)[[1]]$tagger$when, tz = Sys.timezone())
} # }