R has little support for physical measurement units. The exception is formed by time differences: time differences objects of class difftime have a units attribute that can be modified:

t1 = Sys.time() 
t2 = t1 + 3600 
d = t2 - t1
class(d)
## [1] "difftime"
units(d)
## [1] "hours"
d
## Time difference of 1 hours
units(d) = "secs"
d
## Time difference of 3600 secs

We see here that the units method is used to retrieve and modify the unit of time differences.

The units package generalizes this idea to other physical units, building upon the udunits2 C library. The udunits2 library provides the following operations:

The units R package uses the udunits2 C library to extend R with functionality for manipulating numeric vectors that have physical measurement units associated with them, in a similar way as difftime objects behave.

Setting units, unit conversion

We can set units to numerical values by set_units:

library(units)
(a <- set_units(runif(10),  m/s))
## Units: [m/s]
##  [1] 0.72216090 0.35816655 0.33542226 0.02875154 0.35939223 0.72995965
##  [7] 0.78064038 0.05969824 0.80640516 0.60190325

the result, e.g. 

set_units(10, m/s)
## 10 [m/s]

literally means “10 times 1 m divided by 1 s”. In writing, the “1” values are omitted, and the multiplication is implicit.

Unit conversion

When conversion is meaningful, such as hours to seconds or meters to kilometers, conversion can be done explicitly by setting the units of a vector

b = a
units(b) <- make_units(km/h)
b
## Units: [km/h]
##  [1] 2.5997792 1.2893996 1.2075201 0.1035055 1.2938120 2.6278548 2.8103054
##  [8] 0.2149137 2.9030586 2.1668517

Basic manipulations

Arithmetic operations

Arithmetic operations verify units, and create new ones

a + a
## Units: [m/s]
##  [1] 1.44432180 0.71633311 0.67084453 0.05750307 0.71878446 1.45991931
##  [7] 1.56128075 0.11939648 1.61281032 1.20380650
a * a
## Units: [m^2/s^2]
##  [1] 0.5215163682 0.1282832809 0.1125080944 0.0008266509 0.1291627736
##  [6] 0.5328410977 0.6093993963 0.0035638802 0.6502892856 0.3622875237
a ^ 2
## Units: [m^2/s^2]
##  [1] 0.5215163682 0.1282832809 0.1125080944 0.0008266509 0.1291627736
##  [6] 0.5328410977 0.6093993963 0.0035638802 0.6502892856 0.3622875237
a ** -2
## Units: [s^2/m^2]
##  [1]    1.917485    7.795248    8.888249 1209.700484    7.742169    1.876732
##  [7]    1.640960  280.593049    1.537777    2.760239

and convert to the units of the first argument if necessary:

a + b # m/s + km/h -> m/s
## Units: [m/s]
##  [1] 1.44432180 0.71633311 0.67084453 0.05750307 0.71878446 1.45991931
##  [7] 1.56128075 0.11939648 1.61281032 1.20380650

Currently, powers are only supported for integer powers, so using a ** 2.5 would result in an error.

Unit simplification

There are some basic simplification of units:

t <- make_units(s)
a * t
## Units: [m]
##  [1] 0.72216090 0.35816655 0.33542226 0.02875154 0.35939223 0.72995965
##  [7] 0.78064038 0.05969824 0.80640516 0.60190325

which also work when units need to be converted before they can be simplified:

t <- make_units(min)
a * t
## Units: [m]
##  [1] 43.329654 21.489993 20.125336  1.725092 21.563534 43.797579 46.838423
##  [8]  3.581895 48.384310 36.114195

Simplification to unit-less values gives the “1” as unit:

m <- make_units(m)
a * t / m
## Units: [1]
##  [1] 43.329654 21.489993 20.125336  1.725092 21.563534 43.797579 46.838423
##  [8]  3.581895 48.384310 36.114195

Allowed operations that require convertible units are +, -, ==, !=, <, >, <=, >=. Operations that lead to new units are *, /, and the power operations ** and ^.

Mathematical functions

Mathematical operations allowed are: abs, sign, floor, ceiling, trunc, round, signif, log, cumsum, cummax, cummin.

signif(a ** 2 / 3, 3)
## Units: [m^2/s^2]
##  [1] 0.174000 0.042800 0.037500 0.000276 0.043100 0.178000 0.203000 0.001190
##  [9] 0.217000 0.121000
cumsum(a)
## Units: [m/s]
##  [1] 0.7221609 1.0803275 1.4157497 1.4445013 1.8038935 2.5338531 3.3144935
##  [8] 3.3741918 4.1805969 4.7825002
log(a) # base defaults to exp(1)
## Units: [(ln(re 1 m.s-1))]
##  [1] -0.3255073 -1.0267572 -1.0923651 -3.5490640 -1.0233409 -0.3147660
##  [7] -0.2476407 -2.8184527 -0.2151690 -0.5076586
log(a, base = 10)
## Units: [(lg(re 1 m.s-1))]
##  [1] -0.1413660 -0.4459150 -0.4744081 -1.5413389 -0.4444313 -0.1367011
##  [7] -0.1075490 -1.2240385 -0.0934467 -0.2204733
log(a, base = 2)
## Units: [(lb(re 1 m.s-1))]
##  [1] -0.4696078 -1.4812975 -1.5759496 -5.1202171 -1.4763689 -0.4541114
##  [7] -0.3572700 -4.0661677 -0.3104232 -0.7323965

Summary functions

Summary functions sum, min, max, and range are allowed:

sum(a)
## 4.7825 [m/s]
min(a)
## 0.02875154 [m/s]
max(a)
## 0.8064052 [m/s]
range(a)
## Units: [m/s]
## [1] 0.02875154 0.80640516
make_units(min(m/s, km/h)) # converts to first unit:
## 0.2777778 [m/s]

Printing

Following difftime, printing behaves differently for length-one vectors:

a
## Units: [m/s]
##  [1] 0.72216090 0.35816655 0.33542226 0.02875154 0.35939223 0.72995965
##  [7] 0.78064038 0.05969824 0.80640516 0.60190325
a[1]
## 0.7221609 [m/s]

Subsetting

The usual subsetting rules work:

a[2:5]
## Units: [m/s]
## [1] 0.35816655 0.33542226 0.02875154 0.35939223
a[-(1:9)]
## 0.6019033 [m/s]

Concatenation

c(a,a)
## Units: [m/s]
##  [1] 0.72216090 0.35816655 0.33542226 0.02875154 0.35939223 0.72995965
##  [7] 0.78064038 0.05969824 0.80640516 0.60190325 0.72216090 0.35816655
## [13] 0.33542226 0.02875154 0.35939223 0.72995965 0.78064038 0.05969824
## [19] 0.80640516 0.60190325

concatenation converts to the units of the first argument, if necessary:

c(a,b) # m/s, km/h -> m/s
## Units: [m/s]
##  [1] 0.72216090 0.35816655 0.33542226 0.02875154 0.35939223 0.72995965
##  [7] 0.78064038 0.05969824 0.80640516 0.60190325 0.72216090 0.35816655
## [13] 0.33542226 0.02875154 0.35939223 0.72995965 0.78064038 0.05969824
## [19] 0.80640516 0.60190325
c(b,a) # km/h, m/s -> km/h
## Units: [km/h]
##  [1] 2.5997792 1.2893996 1.2075201 0.1035055 1.2938120 2.6278548 2.8103054
##  [8] 0.2149137 2.9030586 2.1668517 2.5997792 1.2893996 1.2075201 0.1035055
## [15] 1.2938120 2.6278548 2.8103054 0.2149137 2.9030586 2.1668517

Conversion to/from difftime

From difftime to units:

t1 = Sys.time() 
t2 = t1 + 3600 
d = t2 - t1
(du = as_units(d))
## 1 [h]

vice versa:

(dt = as_difftime(du))
## Time difference of 1 hours
class(dt)
## [1] "difftime"

units in matrix objects

set_units(matrix(1:4,2,2), m/s)
## Units: [m/s]
##      [,1] [,2]
## [1,]    1    3
## [2,]    2    4
set_units(matrix(1:4,2,2), m/s * m/s)
## Units: [m^2/s^2]
##      [,1] [,2]
## [1,]    1    3
## [2,]    2    4

but

set_units(matrix(1:4,2,2), m/s) %*% set_units(4:3, m/s)
##      [,1]
## [1,]   13
## [2,]   20

strips units.

units objects in data.frames

units in data.frame objects are printed, but do not appear in summary:.

set.seed(131)
d <- data.frame(x = runif(4), 
                    y = set_units(runif(4), s), 
                    z = set_units(1:4, m/s))
d
##           x             y       z
## 1 0.2064370 0.8463468 [s] 1 [m/s]
## 2 0.1249422 0.5292048 [s] 2 [m/s]
## 3 0.2932732 0.5186254 [s] 3 [m/s]
## 4 0.3757797 0.2378545 [s] 4 [m/s]
summary(d)
##        x                y                z       
##  Min.   :0.1249   Min.   :0.2379   Min.   :1.00  
##  1st Qu.:0.1861   1st Qu.:0.4484   1st Qu.:1.75  
##  Median :0.2499   Median :0.5239   Median :2.50  
##  Mean   :0.2501   Mean   :0.5330   Mean   :2.50  
##  3rd Qu.:0.3139   3rd Qu.:0.6085   3rd Qu.:3.25  
##  Max.   :0.3758   Max.   :0.8463   Max.   :4.00
d$yz = with(d, y * z)
d
##           x             y       z            yz
## 1 0.2064370 0.8463468 [s] 1 [m/s] 0.8463468 [m]
## 2 0.1249422 0.5292048 [s] 2 [m/s] 1.0584095 [m]
## 3 0.2932732 0.5186254 [s] 3 [m/s] 1.5558761 [m]
## 4 0.3757797 0.2378545 [s] 4 [m/s] 0.9514180 [m]
d[1, "yz"]
## 0.8463468 [m]

formatting

Units are often written in the form m2 s-1, for square meter per second. This can be defined as unit, and also parsed by as_units:

(x = 1:10 * as_units("m2 s-1"))
## Units: [m^2/s]
##  [1]  1  2  3  4  5  6  7  8  9 10

udunits understands such string, and can convert them

y = 1:10 * make_units(m^2/s)
x + y
## Units: [m^2/s]
##  [1]  2  4  6  8 10 12 14 16 18 20

Printing units in this form is done by

deparse_unit(x)
## [1] "m2 s-1"

plotting

Base scatter plots and histograms support automatic unit placement in axis labels. In the following example we first convert to SI units. (Unit in needs a bit special treatment, because in is a reserved word in R.)

mar = par("mar") + c(0, .3, 0, 0)
displacement = mtcars$disp * as_units("in")^3
units(displacement) = make_units(cm^3)
weight = mtcars$wt * 1000 * make_units(lb)
units(weight) = make_units(kg)
par(mar = mar)
plot(weight, displacement)

We can change grouping symbols from [ ] into ( ):

units_options(group = c("(", ")") )  # parenthesis instead of square brackets
par(mar = mar)
plot(weight, displacement)

We can also remove grouping symbols, increase space between variable name and unit by:

units_options(sep = c("~~~", "~"), group = c("", ""))  # no brackets; extra space
par(mar = mar)
plot(weight, displacement)

More complex units can be plotted either with negative powers, or as divisions, by modifying one of units’s global options using units_options:

gallon = as_units("gallon")
consumption = mtcars$mpg * make_units(mi/gallon)
units(consumption) = make_units(km/l)
par(mar = mar)
plot(displacement, consumption) # division in consumption

units_options(negative_power = TRUE) # division becomes ^-1
plot(displacement, consumption) # division in consumption

As usual, units modify automatically in expressions:

units_options(negative_power = TRUE) # division becomes ^-1
par(mar = mar)
plot(displacement, consumption)

plot(1/displacement, 1/consumption)