This vignette is dedicated to the auxiliary functions exported by the ichimoku package.
Note that these auxiliary functions are programmed for performance and hence stripped of superfluous validation and error-checking code. If they are used outside of their intended scopes then errors may be expected. In particular, input types must match exactly.
Used to subset a vector of dates to trading days. Note: if the
argument ‘holidays’ is passed to ichimoku()
, this is passed
through to this function when calculating the dates for the future
cloud.
Takes the following arguments:
x
a vector of POSIXct dates.holidays
(optional) a vector, or function which outputs
a vector, of dates defined as holidays. Set to NULL for a
continuously-traded market. If not specified, New Year’s and Christmas
day are defined as holidays by default....
other arguments not used by this function.dates <- seq(from = as.POSIXct("2020-01-01"), by = "1 day", length.out = 7)
dates
#> [1] "2020-01-01 UTC" "2020-01-02 UTC" "2020-01-03 UTC" "2020-01-04 UTC"
#> [5] "2020-01-05 UTC" "2020-01-06 UTC" "2020-01-07 UTC"
tradingDays(dates)
#> [1] FALSE TRUE TRUE FALSE FALSE TRUE TRUE
tradingDays(dates, holidays = c("2020-01-02", "2020-01-03"))
#> [1] TRUE FALSE FALSE FALSE FALSE TRUE TRUE
tradingDays(dates, holidays = NULL)
#> [1] TRUE TRUE TRUE TRUE TRUE TRUE TRUE
Can be used to inspect the informational attributes of R objects.
Takes an object as an optional argument. Called without an argument,
.Last.value
will be used instead.
For objects created by the ichimoku package, a list of attributes specific to that data type is returned.
For other objects, a list of attributes that are non-standard for matrix / data.frame / xts objects is returned, or else invisible NULL if none are present.
cloud <- ichimoku(sample_ohlc_data, ticker = "TKR")
look(cloud)
#> $periods
#> [1] 9 26 52
#>
#> $periodicity
#> [1] 86400
#>
#> $ticker
#> [1] "TKR"
strat <- strat(cloud)
look(strat)
#> $periods
#> [1] 9 26 52
#>
#> $periodicity
#> [1] 86400
#>
#> $ticker
#> [1] "TKR"
#>
#> $strat
#> [,1]
#> Strategy "close > tenkan"
#> --------------------- "----------"
#> Strategy cuml return % 8.57
#> Per period mean ret % 0.0334
#> Periods in market 138
#> Total trades 20
#> Average trade length 6.9
#> Trade success % 35
#> Worst trade ret % -2.54
#> --------------------- "----------"
#> Benchmark cuml ret % 9
#> Per period mean ret % 0.035
#> Periods in market 246
#> --------------------- "----------"
#> Direction "long"
#> Start 2020-01-15
#> End 2020-12-23
#> Ticker "TKR"
grid <- mlgrid(cloud)
look(grid)
#> $y
#> [1] "logret"
#>
#> $k
#> [1] 1
#>
#> $direction
#> [1] "long"
#>
#> $type
#> [1] "boolean"
#>
#> $ticker
#> [1] "TKR"
#>
#> $means
#> [1] NA
#>
#> $sdevs
#> [1] NA
Convert an ‘xts’ object to ‘data.frame’. This function can be an
order of magnitude faster than as.data.frame()
for an ‘xts’
object.
Note that for ichimoku objects, a slightly faster, more specific
version has been implemented as the S3 method for
as.data.frame()
. Hence using this utility on an ichimoku
object is not necessary.
Takes the following arguments:
x
the ‘xts’ object to convert to ‘data.frame’.keep.attrs
(optional) if set to TRUE, will preserve any
custom attributes set on the original object.cloud <- ichimoku(sample_ohlc_data)
df <- xts_df(cloud)
str(df)
#> 'data.frame': 281 obs. of 13 variables:
#> $ index : POSIXct, format: "2020-01-02 00:00:00" "2020-01-03 00:00:00" ...
#> $ open : num 123 123 123 123 124 ...
#> $ high : num 123 123 123 124 125 ...
#> $ low : num 122 123 122 123 124 ...
#> $ close : num 123 123 123 124 125 ...
#> $ cd : num -1 1 1 1 1 1 -1 0 -1 -1 ...
#> $ tenkan : num NA NA NA NA NA ...
#> $ kijun : num NA NA NA NA NA NA NA NA NA NA ...
#> $ senkouA: num NA NA NA NA NA NA NA NA NA NA ...
#> $ senkouB: num NA NA NA NA NA NA NA NA NA NA ...
#> $ chikou : num 123 123 123 124 124 ...
#> $ cloudT : num NA NA NA NA NA NA NA NA NA NA ...
#> $ cloudB : num NA NA NA NA NA NA NA NA NA NA ...
# Preserving custom attributes:
df2 <- xts_df(cloud, keep.attrs = TRUE)
str(df2)
#> 'data.frame': 281 obs. of 13 variables:
#> $ index : POSIXct, format: "2020-01-02 00:00:00" "2020-01-03 00:00:00" ...
#> $ open : num 123 123 123 123 124 ...
#> $ high : num 123 123 123 124 125 ...
#> $ low : num 122 123 122 123 124 ...
#> $ close : num 123 123 123 124 125 ...
#> $ cd : num -1 1 1 1 1 1 -1 0 -1 -1 ...
#> $ tenkan : num NA NA NA NA NA ...
#> $ kijun : num NA NA NA NA NA NA NA NA NA NA ...
#> $ senkouA: num NA NA NA NA NA NA NA NA NA NA ...
#> $ senkouB: num NA NA NA NA NA NA NA NA NA NA ...
#> $ chikou : num 123 123 123 124 124 ...
#> $ cloudT : num NA NA NA NA NA NA NA NA NA NA ...
#> $ cloudB : num NA NA NA NA NA NA NA NA NA NA ...
#> - attr(*, "periods")= int [1:3] 9 26 52
#> - attr(*, "periodicity")= num 86400
#> - attr(*, "ticker")= chr "sample_ohlc_data"
Convert a matrix to ‘data.frame’. This function can be twice as fast
as as.data.frame()
for a matrix.
Takes the following arguments:
x
the matrix to convert to ‘data.frame’.keep.attrs
(optional) if set to TRUE, will preserve any
custom attributes set on the original object.cloud <- ichimoku(sample_ohlc_data)
mcloud <- as.matrix(cloud)
df <- matrix_df(mcloud)
str(df)
#> 'data.frame': 281 obs. of 12 variables:
#> $ open : num 123 123 123 123 124 ...
#> $ high : num 123 123 123 124 125 ...
#> $ low : num 122 123 122 123 124 ...
#> $ close : num 123 123 123 124 125 ...
#> $ cd : num -1 1 1 1 1 1 -1 0 -1 -1 ...
#> $ tenkan : num NA NA NA NA NA ...
#> $ kijun : num NA NA NA NA NA NA NA NA NA NA ...
#> $ senkouA: num NA NA NA NA NA NA NA NA NA NA ...
#> $ senkouB: num NA NA NA NA NA NA NA NA NA NA ...
#> $ chikou : num 123 123 123 124 124 ...
#> $ cloudT : num NA NA NA NA NA NA NA NA NA NA ...
#> $ cloudB : num NA NA NA NA NA NA NA NA NA NA ...
str(row.names(df))
#> chr [1:281] "2020-01-02" "2020-01-03" "2020-01-06" "2020-01-07" ...
Full join on an arbitrary number of ‘data.frame’ objects passed as arguments, preserving all unique entries. Can be used to combine historical time series data where each observation is indexed by a unique timestamp and all periods are complete.
Takes an arbitrary number of arguments:
...
data.frame objects to combine.Can be used to join price dataframes retrieved by
oanda()
. The function is designed to join complete
historical data. If the data to be merged contains data with incomplete
periods, all entries are preserved rather than updated. If incomplete
periods are detected within the data, a warning is issued, and the
resulting dataframe should be manually inspected in case it contains
unwanted duplicates. Use df_append()
for updating
dataframes with new values.
data1 <- sample_ohlc_data[1:6, ]
data1
#> time open high low close volume
#> 1 2020-01-02 123.0 123.1 122.5 122.7 1875
#> 2 2020-01-03 122.7 122.8 122.6 122.8 1479
#> 3 2020-01-06 122.8 123.4 122.4 123.3 1792
#> 4 2020-01-07 123.3 124.3 123.3 124.1 1977
#> 5 2020-01-08 124.1 124.8 124.0 124.8 2239
#> 6 2020-01-09 124.8 125.4 124.5 125.3 1842
data2 <- sample_ohlc_data[4:10, ]
data2
#> time open high low close volume
#> 4 2020-01-07 123.3 124.3 123.3 124.1 1977
#> 5 2020-01-08 124.1 124.8 124.0 124.8 2239
#> 6 2020-01-09 124.8 125.4 124.5 125.3 1842
#> 7 2020-01-10 125.3 125.3 124.8 125.2 2548
#> 8 2020-01-13 125.2 125.3 125.1 125.2 2946
#> 9 2020-01-14 125.2 125.2 124.3 124.4 2796
#> 10 2020-01-15 124.4 124.5 123.7 123.9 2879
df_merge(data1, data2)
#> time open high low close volume
#> 1 2020-01-02 123.0 123.1 122.5 122.7 1875
#> 2 2020-01-03 122.7 122.8 122.6 122.8 1479
#> 3 2020-01-06 122.8 123.4 122.4 123.3 1792
#> 4 2020-01-07 123.3 124.3 123.3 124.1 1977
#> 5 2020-01-08 124.1 124.8 124.0 124.8 2239
#> 6 2020-01-09 124.8 125.4 124.5 125.3 1842
#> 7 2020-01-10 125.3 125.3 124.8 125.2 2548
#> 8 2020-01-13 125.2 125.3 125.1 125.2 2946
#> 9 2020-01-14 125.2 125.2 124.3 124.4 2796
#> 10 2020-01-15 124.4 124.5 123.7 123.9 2879
Update a ‘data.frame’ object with new data. Can be used to append new updated time series data to an existing dataframe, where each observation is indexed by a unique timestamp/identifier in a key column.
Takes 4 arguments:
old
data.frame object containing existing data.new
data.frame object containing new data.key
[default ‘time’] column name used as key provided
as a character string.keep.attr
[default ‘timestamp’] name of an attribute in
‘new’ to retain, if present, provided as a character string.Can be used to update price dataframes retrieved by
oanda()
. The function is designed to update existing data
with new values as they become available. As opposed to
df_merge()
, the data in ‘new’ will overwrite the data in
‘old’ rather than create duplicates.
If the attribute specified by ‘keep.attr’ is present in ‘new’, for
example the ‘timestamp’ in pricing data returned by
oanda()
, this is retained. If the attribute is not found in
‘new’, the argument has no effect. All other custom attributes are
dropped.
data1 <- sample_ohlc_data[1:8, ]
data1
#> time open high low close volume
#> 1 2020-01-02 123.0 123.1 122.5 122.7 1875
#> 2 2020-01-03 122.7 122.8 122.6 122.8 1479
#> 3 2020-01-06 122.8 123.4 122.4 123.3 1792
#> 4 2020-01-07 123.3 124.3 123.3 124.1 1977
#> 5 2020-01-08 124.1 124.8 124.0 124.8 2239
#> 6 2020-01-09 124.8 125.4 124.5 125.3 1842
#> 7 2020-01-10 125.3 125.3 124.8 125.2 2548
#> 8 2020-01-13 125.2 125.3 125.1 125.2 2946
data2 <- sample_ohlc_data[7:10, ]
data2
#> time open high low close volume
#> 7 2020-01-10 125.3 125.3 124.8 125.2 2548
#> 8 2020-01-13 125.2 125.3 125.1 125.2 2946
#> 9 2020-01-14 125.2 125.2 124.3 124.4 2796
#> 10 2020-01-15 124.4 124.5 123.7 123.9 2879
df_append(data1, data2)
#> time open high low close volume
#> 1 2020-01-02 123.0 123.1 122.5 122.7 1875
#> 2 2020-01-03 122.7 122.8 122.6 122.8 1479
#> 3 2020-01-06 122.8 123.4 122.4 123.3 1792
#> 4 2020-01-07 123.3 124.3 123.3 124.1 1977
#> 5 2020-01-08 124.1 124.8 124.0 124.8 2239
#> 6 2020-01-09 124.8 125.4 124.5 125.3 1842
#> 7 2020-01-10 125.3 125.3 124.8 125.2 2548
#> 8 2020-01-13 125.2 125.3 125.1 125.2 2946
#> 9 2020-01-14 125.2 125.2 124.3 124.4 2796
#> 10 2020-01-15 124.4 124.5 123.7 123.9 2879