You're not giving us much to play with here. Reproducible example, please.

(Remember to send it to the list, not me.)

My immediate guess was cbind(), but without knowing the data structure, I can't 
tell for sure.

-pd

> On 16 Mar 2017, at 13:43 , Paul Bernal <[email protected]> wrote:
> 
> Dear all,
> 
> Hope you are doing great. Some R time series functions generate the
> forecasts in an horizontal way, for example:
> 
>                2017     2018     2019    2020
> forecast    12           15        35        75
> 
> but I´d like to have the output as follows:
> 
> 
> Date      forecast
> 2017           12
> 2018           15
> 2019           35
> 2020           75
> 
> I tried using the t() function to get the transpose, but after taking the
> transpose I was not able to turn it into a data frame.
> 
> Any help will be greatly appreciated,
> 
> Cheers,
> 
> Paul
> 
>       [[alternative HTML version deleted]]
> 
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> and provide commented, minimal, self-contained, reproducible code.

-- 
Peter Dalgaard, Professor,
Center for Statistics, Copenhagen Business School
Solbjerg Plads 3, 2000 Frederiksberg, Denmark
Phone: (+45)38153501
Office: A 4.23
Email: [email protected]  Priv: [email protected]

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