lag
Create a Lagged Time Series

Description

Returns a time series like the input but shifted in time.

Usage

lag(x, ...)
## Default S3 method:
lag(x, k = 1, ...) 

Arguments

x a vector or matrix, usually univariate or multivariate regular time series. Missing values (NAs) are allowed.
k an integer number, indicates the number of positions the new series is to lead the input series, i.e., the resulting series is shifted backwards in time; negative values lag the series forwards in time. Non-integer, values of k are rounded to the nearest integer.

Value
object of the same length and the same number of channels as x, with the "tsp" attribute, but lagged by k positions. Only the start and end dates are changed;
Differences between Spotfire Enterprise Runtime for R and Open-source R
In open-source R, the return value keeps the attribute of input object, whereas in Spotfire Enterprise Runtime for R, the return value is a "ts" object.
Note
Many think that k should have the opposite sign, but due to its pervasive use in other functions, lag it is as described.
Also, if the input is not of class "ts", neither will the output, although it will have the "tsp" attribute that "ts" objects have.
References
Becker, R. A., Chambers, J. M., and Wilks, A. R. 1988. The New S Language: A Programming Environment for Data Analysis and Graphics. Pacific Grove, CA: Wadsworth & Brooks/Cole Advanced Books and Software.
See Also
hasTsp, ts.union.
Examples
lag12co2 <- lag(co2, 12) # co2 lagged by 12 months
ts.union(co2, lag(co2, 12))
Package stats version 6.1.4-13
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