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r-cran-cftime 1.5.1-1
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#' Create a CFTime object
#'
#' This function creates an instance of the [CFTime] class. The arguments to the
#' call are typically read from a CF-compliant data file with climatological
#' observations or climate projections. Specification of arguments can also be
#' made manually in a variety of combinations.
#'
#' @param definition A character string describing the time coordinate.
#' @param calendar A character string describing the calendar to use with the
#'   time dimension definition string. Default value is "standard".
#' @param offsets Numeric or character vector, optional. When numeric, a vector
#'   of offsets from the origin in the time series. When a character vector of
#'   length 2 or more, timestamps in ISO8601 or UDUNITS format. When a character
#'   string, a timestamp in ISO8601 or UDUNITS format and then a time series
#'   will be generated with a separation between steps equal to the unit of
#'   measure in the definition, inclusive of the definition timestamp. The unit
#'   of measure of the offsets is defined by the time series definition.
#' @returns An instance of the `CFTime` class.
#' @export
#' @name CFtime-function
#' @examples
#' CFtime("days since 1850-01-01", "julian", 0:364)
#'
#' CFtime("hours since 2023-01-01", "360_day", "2023-01-30T23:00")
CFtime <- function(definition, calendar = "standard", offsets = NULL) {
  CFTime$new(definition, calendar, offsets)
}

# ==============================================================================
# Functions to access CFTime properties and methods

#' @aliases properties
#' @title Properties of a CFTime object
#'
#' @description These functions return the properties of an instance of the
#'   [CFTime] class. The properties are all read-only, but offsets can be added
#'   using the `+` operator.
#'
#' @param t An instance of `CFTime`.
#'
#' @returns `calendar()` and `unit()` return a character string.
#'   `origin()` returns a data frame of timestamp elements with a single row
#'   of data. `timezone()` returns the calendar time zone as a character
#'   string. `offsets()` returns a vector of offsets or `NULL` if no offsets
#'   have been set.
#'
#' @examples
#' t <- CFtime("days since 1850-01-01", "julian", 0:364)
#' definition(t)
#' calendar(t)
#' unit(t)
#' timezone(t)
#' origin(t)
#' offsets(t)
#' resolution(t)

#' @describeIn properties The definition string of the `CFTime` instance.
#' @export
definition <- function(t) t$cal$definition

#' @describeIn properties The calendar of the `CFTime` instance.
#' @export
calendar <- function(t) t$cal$name

#' @describeIn properties The unit of the `CFTime` instance.
#' @export
unit <- function(t) t$unit

#' @describeIn properties The origin of the `CFTime` instance in timestamp elements.
#' @export
origin <- function(t) t$cal$origin

#' @describeIn properties The time zone of the calendar of the `CFTime` instance as a character string.
#' @export
timezone <- function(t) t$cal$timezone

#' @describeIn properties The offsets of the `CFTime` instance as a numeric vector.
#' @export
offsets <- function(t) t$offsets

#' @describeIn properties The average separation between the offsets in the `CFTime` instance.
#' @export
resolution <- function(t) t$resolution

#' Bounds of the time offsets
#'
#' CF-compliant netCDF files store time information as a single offset value for
#' each step along the dimension, typically centered on the valid interval of
#' the data (e.g. 12-noon for day data). Optionally, the lower and upper values
#' of the valid interval are stored in a so-called "bounds" variable, as an
#' array with two rows (lower and higher value) and a column for each offset.
#' With function `bounds()<-` those bounds can be set for a `CFTime` instance.
#' The bounds can be retrieved with the `bounds()` function.
#'
#' @param x A `CFTime` instance.
#' @param format Optional. A single string with format specifiers, see
#'   [CFtime::format()] for details.
#' @return If bounds have been set, an array of bounds values with dimensions
#'   (2, length(offsets)). The first row gives the lower bound, the second row
#'   the upper bound, with each column representing an offset of `x`. If the
#'   `format` argument is specified, the bounds values are returned as strings
#'   according to the format. `NULL` when no bounds have been set.
#' @aliases bounds
#' @export
#' @examples
#' t <- CFtime("days since 2024-01-01", "standard", seq(0.5, by = 1, length.out = 366))
#' as_timestamp(t)[1:3]
#' bounds(t) <- rbind(0:365, 1:366)
#' bounds(t)[, 1:3]
#' bounds(t, "%d-%b-%Y")[, 1:3]
bounds <- function(x, format) {
  x$get_bounds(format)
}

#' @rdname bounds
#' @param value A `matrix` (or `array`) with dimensions (2, length(offsets))
#'   giving the lower (first row) and higher (second row) bounds of each offset
#'   (this is the format that the CF Metadata Conventions uses for storage in
#'   netCDF files). Use `FALSE` to unset any previously set bounds, `TRUE` to
#'   set regular bounds at mid-points between the offsets (which must be regular
#'   as well).
#' @export
`bounds<-` <- function(x, value) {
  x$set_bounds(value)
  x
}

#' The length of the offsets contained in the `CFTime` instance.
#'
#' @param x The `CFTime` instance whose length will be returned
#'
#' @return The number of offsets in the specified `CFTime` instance.
#' @export
#'
#' @examples
#' t <- CFtime("days since 1850-01-01", "julian", 0:364)
#' length(t)
length.CFTime <- function(x) base::length(x$offsets)

#' Return the timestamps contained in the `CFTime` instance.
#'
#' @param x The `CFTime` instance whose timestamps will be returned.
#' @param ... Ignored.
#'
#' @return The timestamps in the specified `CFTime` instance.
#' @export
#'
#' @examples
#' t <- CFtime("days since 1850-01-01", "julian", 0:364)
#' as.character(t)
as.character.CFTime <- function(x, ...) {
  x$as_timestamp()
}

#' Create a factor for a `CFTime` instance
#'
#' Method for [base::cut()] applied to [CFTime] objects.
#'
#' When `breaks` is one of `"year", "season", "quarter", "month", "dekad",
#' "day"` a factor is generated like by [CFfactor()].
#'
#' When `breaks` is a vector of character timestamps a factor is produced with a
#' level for every interval between timestamps. The last timestamp, therefore,
#' is only used to close the interval started by the pen-ultimate timestamp -
#' use a distant timestamp (e.g. `range(x)[2]`) to ensure that all offsets to
#' the end of the CFTime time series are included, if so desired. The last
#' timestamp will become the upper bound in the `CFTime` instance that is
#' returned as an attribute to this function so a sensible value for the last
#' timestamp is advisable.
#'
#' This method works similar to [base::cut.POSIXt()] but there are some
#' differences in the arguments: for `breaks` the set of options is different
#' and no preceding integer is allowed, `labels` are always assigned using
#' values of `breaks`, and the interval is always left-closed.
#'
#' @param x An instance of `CFTime`.
#' @param breaks A character string of a factor period (see [CFfactor()] for a
#'   description), or a character vector of timestamps that conform to the
#'   calendar of `x`, with a length of at least 2. Timestamps must be given in
#'   ISO8601 format, e.g. "2024-04-10 21:31:43".
#' @param ... Ignored.
#' @returns A factor with levels according to the `breaks` argument, with
#'   attributes 'period', 'era' and 'CFTime'. When `breaks` is a factor
#'   period, attribute 'period' has that value, otherwise it is '"day"'. When
#'   `breaks` is a character vector of timestamps, attribute 'CFTime' holds an
#'   instance of `CFTime` that has the same definition as `x`, but with (ordered)
#'   offsets generated from the `breaks`. Attribute 'era' is always -1.
#' @aliases cut
#' @seealso [CFfactor()] produces a factor for several fixed periods, including
#'   for eras.
#' @export
#' @examples
#' x <- CFtime("days since 2021-01-01", "365_day", 0:729)
#' breaks <- c("2022-02-01", "2021-12-01", "2023-01-01")
#' cut(x, breaks)
cut.CFTime <- function (x, breaks, ...) {
  if (!inherits(x, "CFTime"))
    stop("Argument 'x' must be a CFTime instance", call. = FALSE)
  x$cut(breaks)
}

#' Find the index of timestamps in the time series
#'
#' Find the index in the time series for each timestamp given in argument `x`.
#' Values of `x` that are before the earliest value in `y` will be returned as
#' `0`; values of `x` that are after the latest values in `y` will be returned
#' as `.Machine$integer.max`. Alternatively, when `x` is a numeric vector of
#' index values, return the valid indices of the same vector, with the side
#' effect being the attribute "CFTime" associated with the result.
#'
#' Timestamps can be provided as vectors of character strings, `POSIXct` or
#' `Date.`
#'
#' Matching also returns index values for timestamps that fall between two
#' elements of the time series - this can lead to surprising results when time
#' series elements are positioned in the middle of an interval (as the CF
#' Metadata Conventions instruct us to "reasonably assume"): a time series of
#' days in January would be encoded in a netCDF file as
#' `c("2024-01-01 12:00:00", "2024-01-02 12:00:00", "2024-01-03 12:00:00", ...)`
#' so `x <- c("2024-01-01", "2024-01-02", "2024-01-03")` would result in
#' `(NA, 1, 2)` (or `(NA, 1.5, 2.5)` with `method = "linear"`) because the date
#' values in `x` are at midnight. This situation is easily avoided by ensuring
#' that `y` has bounds set (use `bounds(y) <- TRUE` as a proximate solution if
#' bounds are not stored in the netCDF file). See the Examples.
#'
#' If bounds are set, the indices are taken from those bounds. Returned indices
#' may fall in between bounds if the latter are not contiguous, with the
#' exception of the extreme values in `x`.
#'
#' Values of `x` that are not valid timestamps according to the calendar of `y`
#' will be returned as `NA`.
#'
#' `x` can also be a numeric vector of index values, in which case the valid
#' values in `x` are returned. If negative values are passed, the positive
#' counterparts will be excluded and then the remainder returned. Positive and
#' negative values may not be mixed. Using a numeric vector has the side effect
#' that the result has the attribute "CFTime" describing the temporal dimension
#' of the slice. If index values outside of the range of `y` (`1:length(y)`) are
#' provided, an error will be thrown.
#'
#' @param x Vector of `character`, `POSIXt` or `Date` values to find indices
#'   for, or a numeric vector.
#' @param y [CFTime] instance.
#' @param method Single value of "constant" or "linear". If `"constant"` or when
#'   bounds are set on argument `y`, return the index value for each match. If
#'   `"linear"`, return the index value with any fractional value.
#'
#' @returns A numeric vector giving indices into the "time" dimension of the
#'   data set associated with `y` for the values of `x`. If there is at least 1
#'   valid index, then attribute "CFTime" contains an instance of `CFTime` that
#'   describes the dimension of filtering the data set associated with `y` with
#'   the result of this function, excluding any `NA`, `0` and
#'   `.Machine$integer.max` values.
#' @export
#'
#' @examples
#' cf <- CFtime("days since 2020-01-01", "360_day", 1440:1799 + 0.5)
#' as_timestamp(cf)[1:3]
#' x <- c("2024-01-01", "2024-01-02", "2024-01-03")
#' indexOf(x, cf)
#' indexOf(x, cf, method = "linear")
#'
#' bounds(cf) <- TRUE
#' indexOf(x, cf)
#'
#' # Non-existent calendar day in a `360_day` calendar
#' x <- c("2024-03-30", "2024-03-31", "2024-04-01")
#' indexOf(x, cf)
#'
#' # Numeric x
#' indexOf(c(29, 30, 31), cf)
indexOf <- function(x, y, method = "constant") {
  y$indexOf(x, method)
}

#' Extreme time series values
#'
#' Character representation of the extreme values in the time series.
#'
#' @param x An instance of the [CFTime] class.
#' @param format A character string with format specifiers, optional. If it is
#'   missing or an empty string, the most economical ISO8601 format is chosen:
#'   "date" when no time information is present in `x`, "timestamp" otherwise.
#'   Otherwise a suitable format specifier can be provided.
#' @param bounds Logical to indicate if the extremes from the bounds should be
#'   used, if set. Defaults to `FALSE`.
#' @param ... Ignored.
#' @param na.rm Ignored.
#' @return Vector of two character representations of the extremes of the time
#'   series.
#' @export
#' @examples
#' cf <- CFtime("days since 1850-01-01", "julian", 0:364)
#' range(cf)
#' range(cf, "%Y-%b-%e")
range.CFTime <- function(x, format = "", bounds = FALSE, ..., na.rm = FALSE) {
  x$range(format, bounds)
}

#' Indicates if the time series is complete
#'
#' This function indicates if the time series is complete, meaning that the time
#' steps are equally spaced and there are thus no gaps in the time series.
#'
#' This function gives exact results for time series where the nominal
#' *unit of separation* between observations in the time series is exact in
#' terms of the calendar unit. As an example, for a calendar unit of "days" where the
#' observations are spaced a fixed number of days apart the result is exact, but
#' if the same calendar unit is used for data that is on a monthly basis, the
#' *assessment* is approximate because the number of days per month is variable
#' and dependent on the calendar (the exception being the `360_day` calendar,
#' where the assessment is exact). The *result* is still correct in most cases
#' (including all CF-compliant data sets that the developers have seen) although
#' there may be esoteric constructions of CFTime and offsets that trip up this
#' implementation.
#'
#' @param x An instance of the [CFTime] class.
#' @returns logical. `TRUE` if the time series is complete, with no gaps;
#'   `FALSE` otherwise. If no offsets have been added to the `CFTime` instance,
#'   `NA` is returned.
#' @export
#' @examples
#' t <- CFtime("days since 1850-01-01", "julian", 0:364)
#' is_complete(t)
is_complete <- function(x) {
  if (!inherits(x, "CFTime")) stop("Argument must be an instance of `CFTime`", call. = FALSE)
  x$equidistant()
}

#' Which time steps fall within two extreme values
#'
#' Given two extreme character timestamps, return a logical vector of a length
#' equal to the number of time steps in the [CFTime] instance with values `TRUE`
#' for those time steps that fall between the two extreme values, `FALSE`
#' otherwise. This can be used to select slices from the time series in reading
#' or analysing data.
#'
#' If bounds were set these will be preserved.
#'
#' @param x The `CFTime` instance to operate on.
#' @param extremes Character vector of two timestamps that represent the
#'   extremes of the time period of interest. The timestamps must be in
#'   increasing order. The timestamps need not fall in the range of the time
#'   steps in argument `x.
#' @param rightmost.closed Is the larger extreme value included in the result?
#'   Default is `FALSE`.
#' @returns A logical vector with a length equal to the number of time steps in
#'   `x` with values `TRUE` for those time steps that fall between the two
#'   extreme values, `FALSE` otherwise. The earlier timestamp is included, the
#'   later timestamp is excluded. A specification of `c("2022-01-01", "2023-01-01")`
#'   will thus include all time steps that fall in the year 2022.
#' @export
#' @examples
#' t <- CFtime("hours since 2023-01-01 00:00:00", "standard", 0:23)
#' slice(t, c("2022-12-01", "2023-01-01 03:00"))
slice <- function(x, extremes, rightmost.closed = FALSE) {
  if (!inherits(x, "CFTime")) stop("First argument must be an instance of `CFTime`", call. = FALSE)
  x$slice(extremes, rightmost.closed)
}

#' Which time steps fall within two extreme values
#'
#' Avoid using this function, use [slice()] instead. This function will be
#' deprecated in the near future.
#'
#' @param x,extremes,rightmost.closed See `slice()`.
#' @returns See `slice()`.
#' @export
#' @examples
#' t <- CFtime("hours since 2023-01-01 00:00:00", "standard", 0:23)
#' slab(t, c("2022-12-01", "2023-01-01 03:00"))
slab <- function(x, extremes, rightmost.closed = FALSE) {
  # FIXME: Deprecate 2025-06
  x$slice(extremes, rightmost.closed)
}

#' Equivalence of CFTime objects
#'
#' This operator can be used to test if two [CFTime] objects represent the same
#' CF-convention time coordinates. Two `CFTime` objects are considered equivalent
#' if they have an equivalent calendar and the same offsets.
#'
#' @param e1,e2 Instances of the `CFTime` class.
#' @returns `TRUE` if the `CFTime` objects are equivalent, `FALSE` otherwise.
#' @export
#' @aliases CFtime-equivalent
#' @examples
#' e1 <- CFtime("days since 1850-01-01", "gregorian", 0:364)
#' e2 <- CFtime("days since 1850-01-01 00:00:00", "standard", 0:364)
#' e1 == e2
"==.CFTime" <- function(e1, e2)
  e1$cal$is_equivalent(e2$cal) &&
  length(e1$offsets) == length(e2$offsets) &&
  all(e1$offsets == e2$offsets)

#' Extend a CFTime object
#'
#' A [CFTime] instance can be extended with this operator, using values from
#' another `CFTime` instance, or a vector of numeric offsets or character
#' timestamps. If the values come from another `CFTime` instance, the calendars
#' of the two instances must be compatible If the calendars of the `CFTime`
#' instances are not compatible, an error is thrown.
#'
#' The resulting `CFTime` instance will have the offsets of the original
#' `CFTime` instance, appended with offsets from argument `e2` in the order that
#' they are specified. If the new sequence of offsets is not monotonically
#' increasing a warning is generated (the COARDS metadata convention requires
#' offsets to be monotonically increasing).
#'
#' There is no reordering or removal of duplicates. This is because the time
#' series are usually associated with a data set and the correspondence between
#' the data in the files and the `CFTime` instance is thus preserved. When
#' merging the data sets described by this time series, the order must be
#' identical to the merging here.
#'
#' Note that when adding multiple vectors of offsets to a `CFTime` instance, it
#' is more efficient to first concatenate the vectors and then do a final
#' addition to the `CFTime` instance. So avoid
#' `CFtime(definition, calendar, e1) + CFtime(definition, calendar, e2) + CFtime(definition, calendar, e3) + ...`
#' but rather do `CFtime(definition, calendar) + c(e1, e2, e3, ...)`. It is the
#' responsibility of the operator to ensure that the offsets of the different
#' data sets are in reference to the same calendar.
#'
#' Note also that `RNetCDF` and `ncdf4` packages both return the values of the
#' "time" dimension as a 1-dimensional array. You have to `dim(time_values) <-
#' NULL` to de-class the array to a vector before adding offsets to an existing
#' `CFtime` instance.
#'
#' Any bounds that were set will be removed. Use [bounds()] to retrieve the
#' bounds of the individual `CFTime` instances and then set them again after
#' merging the two instances.
#'
#' @param e1 Instance of the `CFTime` class.
#' @param e2 Instance of the `CFTime` class with a calendar compatible with that
#'   of argument `e1`, or a numeric vector with offsets from the origin of
#'   argument `e1`, or a vector of `character` timestamps in ISO8601 or UDUNITS
#'   format.
#' @returns A `CFTime` object with the offsets of argument `e1` extended by the
#'   values from argument `e2`.
#' @export
#' @aliases CFtime-merge
#' @examples
#' e1 <- CFtime("days since 1850-01-01", "gregorian", 0:364)
#' e2 <- CFtime("days since 1850-01-01 00:00:00", "standard", 365:729)
#' e1 + e2
"+.CFTime" <- function(e1, e2) {
  if (inherits(e2, "CFTime")) {
    if (!e1$cal$is_compatible(e2$cal)) stop("Calendars not compatible", call. = FALSE) # nocov
    if (all(e1$cal$origin[1:6] == e2$cal$origin[1:6]))
      CFTime$new(e1$cal$definition, e1$cal$name, c(e1$offsets, e2$offsets))
    else {
      diff <- e1$cal$parse(paste(e2$cal$origin_date, e2$cal$origin_time))$offset
      CFTime$new(e1$cal$definition, e1$cal$name, c(e1$offsets, e2$offsets + diff))
    }
  } else if (is.numeric(e2) && .validOffsets(e2)) {
    CFTime$new(e1$cal$definition, e1$cal$name, c(e1$offsets, e2))
  } else {
    time <- e1$cal$parse(e2)
    if (anyNA(time$year)) stop("Argument `e2` contains invalid timestamps", call. = FALSE) # nocov
    CFTime$new(e1$cal$definition, e1$cal$name, c(e1$offsets, time$offset))
  }
}

# ==============================================================================
# Factors and coverage

#' Create a factor from the offsets in a `CFTime` instance
#'
#' With this function a factor can be generated for the time series, or a part
#' thereof, contained in the [CFTime] instance. This is specifically interesting
#' for creating factors from the date part of the time series that aggregate the
#' time series into longer time periods (such as month) that can then be used to
#' process daily CF data sets using, for instance, `tapply()`.
#'
#' The factor will respect the calendar that the time series is built on. For
#' `period`s longer than a day this will result in a factor where the calendar
#' is no longer relevant (because calendars impacts days, not dekads, months,
#' quarters, seasons or years).
#'
#' The factor will be generated in the order of the offsets of the `CFTime`
#' instance. While typical CF-compliant data sources use ordered time series
#' there is, however, no guarantee that the factor is ordered as multiple
#' `CFTime` objects may have been merged out of order. For most processing with
#' a factor the ordering is of no concern.
#'
#' If the `era` parameter is specified, either as a vector of years to include
#' in the factor, or as a list of such vectors, the factor will only consider
#' those values in the time series that fall within the list of years, inclusive
#' of boundary values. Other values in the factor will be set to `NA`. The years
#' need not be contiguous, within a single vector or among the list items, or in
#' order.
#'
#' The following periods are supported by this function:
#'
#' \itemize{
#'   \item `year`, the year of each offset is returned as "YYYY".
#'   \item `season`, the meteorological season of each offset is returned as
#'   "Sx", with x being 1-4, preceeded by "YYYY" if no `era` is
#'   specified. Note that December dates are labeled as belonging to the
#'   subsequent year, so the date "2020-12-01" yields "2021S1". This implies
#'   that for standard CMIP files having one or more full years of data the
#'   first season will have data for the first two months (January and
#'   February), while the final season will have only a single month of data
#'   (December).
#'   \item `quarter`, the calendar quarter of each offset is returned as "Qx",
#'   with x being 1-4, preceeded by "YYYY" if no `era` is specified.
#'   \item `month`, the month of each offset is returned as "01" to
#'   "12", preceeded by "YYYY-" if no `era` is specified. This is the default
#'   period.
#'   \item `dekad`, ten-day periods are returned as
#'   "Dxx", where xx runs from "01" to "36", preceeded by "YYYY" if no `era`
#'   is specified. Each month is subdivided in dekads as follows: 1- days 01 -
#'   10; 2- days 11 - 20; 3- remainder of the month.
#'   \item `day`, the month and day of each offset are returned as "MM-DD",
#'   preceeded by "YYYY-" if no `era` is specified.
#' }
#'
#' It is not possible to create a factor for a period that is shorter than the
#' temporal resolution of the source data set from which the `t` argument
#' derives. As an example, if the source data set has monthly data, a dekad or
#' day factor cannot be created.
#'
#' Creating factors for other periods is not supported by this function. Factors
#' based on the timestamp information and not dependent on the calendar can
#' trivially be constructed from the output of the [as_timestamp()] function.
#'
#' For non-era factors the attribute 'CFTime' of the result contains a `CFTime`
#' instance that is valid for the result of applying the factor to a data set
#' that the `t` argument is associated with. In other words, if `CFTime`
#' instance 'At' describes the temporal dimension of data set 'A' and a factor
#' 'Af' is generated like `Af <- CFfactor(At)`, then `Bt <- attr(Af, "CFTime")`
#' describes the temporal dimension of the result of, say,
#' `B <- apply(A, 1:2, tapply, Af, FUN)`. The 'CFTime' attribute is `NULL` for
#' era factors.
#'
#' @param t An instance of the `CFTime` class whose offsets will be used to
#'   construct the factor.
#' @param period character. A character string with one of the values "year",
#'   "season", "quarter", "month" (the default), "dekad" or "day".
#' @param era numeric or list, optional. Vector of years for which to
#'   construct the factor, or a list whose elements are each a vector of years.
#'   If `era` is not specified, the factor will use the entire time series for
#'   the factor.
#'
#' @returns If `era` is a single vector or not specified, a factor with a
#'   length equal to the number of offsets in `t`. If `era` is a list, a list
#'   with the same number of elements and names as `era`, each containing a
#'   factor. Elements in the factor will be set to `NA` for time series values
#'   outside of the range of specified years.
#'
#'   The factor, or factors in the list, have attributes 'period', 'era' and
#'   'CFTime'. Attribute 'period' holds the value of the `period` argument.
#'   Attribute 'era' indicates the number of years that are included in the
#'   era, or -1 if no `era` is provided. Attribute 'CFTime' holds an
#'   instance of `CFTime` that has the same definition as `t`, but with offsets
#'   corresponding to the mid-point of non-era factor levels; if the `era`
#'   argument is specified, attribute 'CFTime' is `NULL`.
#' @seealso [cut()] creates a non-era factor for arbitrary cut points.
#' @export
#'
#' @examples
#' t <- CFtime("days since 1949-12-01", "360_day", 19830:54029)
#'
#' # Create a dekad factor for the whole time series
#' f <- CFfactor(t, "dekad")
#'
#' # Create three monthly factors for early, mid and late 21st century eras
#' ep <- CFfactor(t, era = list(early = 2021:2040, mid = 2041:2060, late = 2061:2080))
CFfactor <- function(t, period = "month", era = NULL) {
  if (!(inherits(t, "CFTime"))) stop("First argument to CFfactor() must be an instance of the `CFTime` class", call. = FALSE) # nocov
  t$factor(period, era)
}

#' Number of base time units in each factor level
#'
#' Given a factor as returned by [CFfactor()] and the [CFTime] instance from
#' which the factor was derived, this function will return a numeric vector with
#' the number of time units in each level of the factor.
#'
#' The result of this function is useful to convert between absolute and
#' relative values. Climate change anomalies, for instance, are usually computed
#' by differencing average values between a future period and a baseline period.
#' Going from average values back to absolute values for an aggregate period
#' (which is typical for temperature and precipitation, among other variables)
#' is easily done with the result of this function, without having to consider
#' the specifics of the calendar of the data set.
#'
#' If the factor `f` is for an era (e.g. spanning multiple years and the
#' levels do not indicate the specific year), then the result will indicate the
#' number of time units of the period in a regular single year. In other words,
#' for an era of 2041-2060 and a monthly factor on a standard calendar with a
#' `days` unit, the result will be `c(31, 28, 31, 30, 31, 30, 31, 31, 30, 31, 30, 31)`.
#' Leap days are thus only considered for the `366_day` and `all_leap` calendars.
#'
#' Note that this function gives the number of time units in each level of the
#' factor - the actual number of data points in the `cf` instance per factor
#' level may be different. Use [CFfactor_coverage()] to determine the actual
#' number of data points or the coverage of data points relative to the factor
#' level.
#'
#' @param t An instance of `CFTime`.
#' @param f A factor or a list of factors derived from the
#'   parameter `t`. The factor or list thereof should generally be generated by
#'   the function [CFfactor()].
#'
#' @returns If `f` is a factor, a numeric vector with a length equal to the
#'   number of levels in the factor, indicating the number of time units in each
#'   level of the factor. If `f` is a list of factors, a list with each element
#'   a numeric vector as above.
#' @export
#'
#' @examples
#' t <- CFtime("days since 2001-01-01", "365_day", 0:364)
#' f <- CFfactor(t, "dekad")
#' CFfactor_units(t, f)
CFfactor_units <- function(t, f) {
  if (!inherits(t, "CFTime")) stop("First argument to `CFfactor_units()` must be an instance of the `CFTime` class", call. = FALSE)
  t$factor_units(f)
}

#' Coverage of time elements for each factor level
#'
#' This function calculates the number of time elements, or the relative
#' coverage, in each level of a factor generated by [CFfactor()].
#'
#' @param t An instance of [CFTime].
#' @param f factor or list. A factor or a list of factors derived from the
#'   parameter `t`. The factor or list thereof should generally be generated by
#'   the function [CFfactor()].
#' @param coverage "absolute" or "relative".
#' @returns If `f` is a factor, a numeric vector with a length equal to the
#'   number of levels in the factor, indicating the number of units from the
#'   time series in `t` contained in each level of the factor when
#'   `coverage = "absolute"` or the proportion of units present relative to the
#'   maximum number when `coverage = "relative"`. If `f` is a list of factors, a
#'   list with each element a numeric vector as above.
#' @export
#'
#' @examples
#' t <- CFtime("days since 2001-01-01", "365_day", 0:364)
#' f <- CFfactor(t, "dekad")
#' CFfactor_coverage(t, f, "absolute")
CFfactor_coverage <- function(t, f, coverage = "absolute") {
  if (!inherits(t, "CFTime")) stop("First argument to `CFfactor_coverage()` must be an instance of the `CFTime` class", call. = FALSE) # nocov
  t$factor_coverage(f, coverage)
}

# ==============================================================================
# Regular functions

#' Create a vector that represents CF timestamps
#'
#' This function generates a vector of character strings or `POSIXct`s that
#' represent the date and time in a selectable combination for each offset.
#'
#' The character strings use the format `YYYY-MM-DDThh:mm:ss±hhmm`, depending on
#' the `format` specifier. The date in the string is not necessarily compatible
#' with `POSIXt` - in the `360_day` calendar `2017-02-30` is valid and
#' `2017-03-31` is not.
#'
#' For the "proleptic_gregorian" calendar the output can also be generated as a
#' vector of `POSIXct` values by specifying `asPOSIX = TRUE`. The same is
#' possible for the "standard" and "gregorian" calendars but only if all
#' timestamps fall on or after 1582-10-15.
#'
#' @param t The `CFTime` instance that contains the offsets to use.
#' @param format character. A character string with either of the values "date"
#'   or "timestamp". If the argument is not specified, the format used is
#'   "timestamp" if there is time information, "date" otherwise.
#' @param asPOSIX logical. If `TRUE`, for "standard", "gregorian" and
#'   "proleptic_gregorian" calendars the output is a vector of `POSIXct` - for
#'   other calendars an error will be thrown. Default value is `FALSE`.
#' @seealso The [CFTime] `format()` method gives greater flexibility through
#'   the use of `strptime`-like format specifiers.
#' @returns A character vector where each element represents a moment in time
#'   according to the `format` specifier.
#' @export
#' @examples
#' t <- CFtime("hours since 2020-01-01", "standard", seq(0, 24, by = 0.25))
#' as_timestamp(t, "timestamp")
#'
#' t2 <- CFtime("days since 2002-01-21", "standard", 0:20)
#' tail(as_timestamp(t2, asPOSIX = TRUE))
#'
#' tail(as_timestamp(t2))
#'
#' tail(as_timestamp(t2 + 1.5))
as_timestamp <- function(t, format = NULL, asPOSIX = FALSE) {
  if (!(inherits(t, "CFTime")))
    stop("First argument to `as_timestamp()` must be an instance of the `CFTime` class", call. = FALSE)
  t$as_timestamp(format, asPOSIX)
}

#' Return the number of days in a month given a certain CF calendar
#'
#' Given a vector of dates as strings in ISO 8601 or UDUNITS format and a
#' [CFTime] object, this function will return a vector of the same length as the
#' dates, indicating the number of days in the month according to the calendar
#' specification. If no vector of days is supplied, the function will return an
#' integer vector of length 12 with the number of days for each month of the
#' calendar (disregarding the leap day for `standard` and `julian` calendars).
#'
#' @param t The `CFtime` instance to use.
#' @param x character. An optional vector of dates as strings with format
#'   `YYYY-MM-DD`. Any time part will be silently ingested.
#'
#' @returns A vector indicating the number of days in each month for the vector
#'   of dates supplied as argument `x. Invalidly specified dates will result in
#'   an `NA` value. If no dates are supplied, the number of days per month for
#'   the calendar as a vector of length 12.
#'
#' @export
#' @seealso When working with factors generated by [CFfactor()], it is usually
#'   better to use [CFfactor_units()] as that will consider leap days for
#'   non-era factors. [CFfactor_units()] can also work with other time periods
#'   and calendar units, such as "hours per month", or "days per season".
#' @examples
#' dates <- c("2021-11-27", "2021-12-10", "2022-01-14", "2022-02-18")
#' t <- CFtime("days since 1850-01-01", "standard")
#' month_days(t, dates)
#'
#' t <- CFtime("days since 1850-01-01", "360_day")
#' month_days(t, dates)
#'
#' t <- CFtime("days since 1850-01-01", "all_leap")
#' month_days(t, dates)
#'
#' month_days(t)
month_days <- function(t, x = NULL) {
  stopifnot(inherits(t, "CFTime"))

  if (is.null(x))
    return(t$cal$month_days())
  else {
    if (!(is.character(x))) stop("Argument `x` must be a character vector of dates in 'YYYY-MM-DD' format")

    ymd <- t$cal$parse(x)
    if (anyNA(ymd$year)) warning("Some dates could not be parsed. Result contains `NA` values.", call. = FALSE)
    return(t$cal$month_days(ymd))
  }
}

#' Parse series of timestamps in CF format to date-time elements
#'
#' This function will parse a vector of timestamps in ISO8601 or UDUNITS format
#' into a data frame with columns for the elements of the timestamp: year,
#' month, day, hour, minute, second, time zone. Those timestamps that could not
#' be parsed or which represent an invalid date in the indicated `CFtime`
#' instance will have `NA` values for the elements of the offending timestamp
#' (which will generate a warning).
#'
#' The supported formats are the *broken timestamp* format from the UDUNITS
#' library and ISO8601 *extended*, both with minor changes, as suggested by the
#' CF Metadata Conventions. In general, the format is `YYYY-MM-DD hh:mm:ss.sss
#' hh:mm`. The year can be from 1 to 4 digits and is interpreted literally, so
#' `79-10-24` is the day Mount Vesuvius erupted and destroyed Pompeii, not
#' `1979-10-24`. The year and month are mandatory, all other fields are
#' optional. There are defaults for all missing values, following the UDUNITS
#' and CF Metadata Conventions. Leading zeros can be omitted in the UDUNITS
#' format, but not in the ISO8601 format. The optional fractional part can have
#' as many digits as the precision calls for and will be applied to the smallest
#' specified time unit. In the result of this function, if the fraction is
#' associated with the minute or the hour, it is converted into a regular
#' `hh:mm:ss.sss` format, i.e. any fraction in the result is always associated
#' with the second, rounded down to milli-second accuracy. The separator between
#' the date and the time can be a single whitespace character or a `T`.
#'
#' The time zone is optional and should have at least the hour or `Z` if
#' present, the minute is optional. The time zone hour can have an optional
#' sign. In the UDUNITS format the separator between the time and the time zone
#' must be a single whitespace character, in ISO8601 there is no separation
#' between the time and the timezone. Time zone names are not supported (as
#' neither UDUNITS nor ISO8601 support them) and will cause parsing to fail when
#' supplied, with one exception: the designator "UTC" is silently dropped (i.e.
#' interpreted as "00:00").
#'
#' Currently only the extended formats (with separators between the elements)
#' are supported. The vector of timestamps may have any combination of ISO8601
#' and UDUNITS formats.
#'
#' @param t An instance of `CFTime` to use when parsing the date.
#' @param x Vector of character strings representing timestamps in
#'   ISO8601 extended or UDUNITS broken format.
#' @returns A `data.frame` with constituent elements of the parsed timestamps in
#'   numeric format. The columns are year, month, day, hour, minute, second
#'   (with an optional fraction), time zone (character string), and the
#'   corresponding offset value from the origin. Invalid input data will appear
#'   as `NA` - if this is the case, a warning message will be displayed - other
#'   missing information on input will use default values.
#' @importFrom stats na.omit
#' @export
#' @examples
#' t <- CFtime("days since 0001-01-01", "proleptic_gregorian")
#'
#' # This will have `NA`s on output and generate a warning
#' timestamps <- c("2012-01-01T12:21:34Z", "12-1-23", "today",
#'                 "2022-08-16T11:07:34.45-10", "2022-08-16 10.5+04")
#' parse_timestamps(t, timestamps)
parse_timestamps <- function(t, x) {
  stopifnot(is.character(x), inherits(t, "CFTime"))
  if (t$cal$unit > 4) stop("Parsing of timestamps on a 'month' or 'year' time unit is not supported.", call. = FALSE)

  out <- t$cal$parse(x)
  if (anyNA(out$year))
    warning("Some dates could not be parsed. Result contains `NA` values.") # nocov
  if (length(unique(na.omit(out$tz))) > 1)
    warning("Timestamps have multiple time zones. Some or all may be different from the calendar time zone.") # nocov
  else if (out$tz[1] != t$cal$timezone)
    warning("Timestamps have time zone that is different from the calendar.") # nocov
  out
}