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Turn dates into age

As Jim has noted, if the dates you have below are an 'end date', you  
need to define the time0 or start date for each to calculate the  
intervals. On the other hand, are the dates you have below the start  
dates and you need to calculate the time to today? In the latter case,  
see ?Sys.Date to get the current system date from your computer.

Generically speaking you can use the following:

(EndDate - StartDate) / 365.25

where EndDate and StartDate are of class Date. This will give you the  
time interval in years plus any fraction.

You can then use round() which will give you a whole year with typical  
rounding up or down to the nearest whole integer. You can use floor(),  
which will give you the nearest whole integer less than the result or  
basically a round down result. Keep in mind that the above calculation  
does not honor a calendar year, but is an approximation.

If you want to calculate age in years as we typically think of it  
using the calendar, you can use the following, where DOB is the Date  
of Birth (Start Date) and Date2 is the End Date:

# Calculate Age in Years
# DOB: Class Date
# Date2: Class Date

Calc_Age <- function(DOB, Date2)
{
   if (length(DOB) != length(Date2))
     stop("length(DOB) != length(Date2)")

   if (!inherits(DOB, "Date") | !inherits(Date2, "Date"))
     stop("Both DOB and Date2 must be Date class objects")

   start <- as.POSIXlt(DOB)
   end <- as.POSIXlt(Date2)

   Age <- end$year - start$year

   ifelse((end$mon < start$mon) |
          ((end$mon == start$mon) & (end$mday < start$mday)),
          Age - 1, Age)
}


HTH,

Marc Schwartz
On Nov 8, 2009, at 1:30 PM, jim holtman wrote: