If you're wanting to get the numeric value of each character in a string in JavaScript, that can be done like so:
var someString = "blarg";
for(var i=0;i<someString.length;i++) {
var char = someString.charCodeAt(i);
}
String.charCodeAt(index)
returns the Unicode code-point value of the specified character in the string. It does not behave like PHP or C where it returns the numeric value of a fixed 8-bit encoding (i.e. ASCII). Assuming your string is a human-readable string (as opposed to raw binary data) then using charCodeAt
is perfectly fine. If you're working with raw binary data then don't use a JavaScript string.
If your strings contain characters that have Unicode code-points below 128 then charCodeAt
behaves the same as ord
in PHP or C's char
type, however the example you've provided contains non-ASCII characters, so Unicode's (sometimes complicated) rules will come into play.
See the documentation on charCodeAt
here: https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/JavaScript/Reference/Global_Objects/String/charCodeAt