can I write an xts object using write.csv in R

六眼飞鱼酱① 提交于 2019-11-29 04:02:57

Yes you can, and the easiest way may be via write.zoo:

R> write.zoo
function (x, file = "", index.name = "Index", row.names = FALSE, 
    col.names = NULL, ...) 
{
    if (is.null(col.names)) 
        col.names <- !is.null(colnames(x))
    dx <- as.data.frame(x)
    stopifnot(all(names(dx) != index.name))
    dx[[index.name]] <- index(x)
    dx <- dx[, c(ncol(dx), 1:(ncol(dx) - 1))]
    write.table(dx, file = file, row.names = row.names, col.names = col.names, 
        ...)
}
<environment: namespace:zoo>
R> 

and here is a complete example:

R> mat <- matrix(rnorm(20),5,4, dimnames=list(NULL, LETTERS[1:4]))
R> mat
              A          B         C         D
[1,] -2.5304768  0.5454043  0.754670  0.330617
[2,] -0.5199045  0.3943289 -1.271524 -2.243113
[3,] -0.0996277 -0.0513063 -0.846310 -0.140727
[4,]  0.3819981  0.5230709  1.131108  2.398311
[5,]  1.4366976 -1.7750772  0.193936  1.047754
R> xmat <- xts(mat, order.by=Sys.Date() + seq(-4,0))
R> xmat
                    A          B         C         D
2012-01-19 -2.5304768  0.5454043  0.754670  0.330617
2012-01-20 -0.5199045  0.3943289 -1.271524 -2.243113
2012-01-21 -0.0996277 -0.0513063 -0.846310 -0.140727
2012-01-22  0.3819981  0.5230709  1.131108  2.398311
2012-01-23  1.4366976 -1.7750772  0.193936  1.047754

So now that we have our data, it is just a matter of writing it:

R> write.zoo(xmat, file="/tmp/demo.csv", sep=",")
R> system("cat /tmp/demo.csv")
"Index","A","B","C","D"
2012-01-19,-2.53047680387774,0.545404313269755,0.754669841541681,0.330616876246245
2012-01-20,-0.519904544868541,0.394328857686792,-1.27152367237311,-2.24311276135881
2012-01-21,-0.0996276931028331,-0.0513062656752562,-0.846309564748021,-0.14072731914499
2012-01-22,0.381998053276389,0.523070920853495,1.13110826400249,2.39831100812159
2012-01-23,1.43669757366164,-1.77507724264279,0.193935657150967,1.04775355172344
R> 

Edit on 25 Jan 2012 Use row.names=FALSE, not TRUE to suppress double row names. And as row.names=FALSE is the default, remove it from the call.

The easiest way is simply to convert to a data frame first in your write.csv call.

ie

write.csv(as.data.frame(test),"test.csv")

and you're done.

If you open this up in, say, Excel, you should now have your date / time index in column A, with your OHLC objects in columns B:E

Why not just use saveSymbols()?

Going off the matrix that @Dirk Eddelbuettel provided in his answer

xmat <- xts(mat, order.by=Sys.Date() + seq(-4,0))
saveSymbols(xmat, file.path="/tmp/xmat.csv")
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