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I'm in a situation where I need the ASCII value of a character (for Project Euler question #22, if you want to get specific) and I'm running into an issue. Being new to ruby, I googled it, and found that ? was the way to go - ?A or whatever. But when I incorporate it into my code, the result of that statement is the string "A" - no character code. Same issue with [0] and slice(0), both of which should theoretically return the ASCII code.

The only thing I can think of is that this is a ruby version issue. I'm using 1.9.1 p0, upgraded from 1.8.6 this afternoon. I cheated a little - going from a working version of ruby, in the same directory, I figured I probably already had the files that don't come bundled with the .zip file, so I didn't download them.

So why exactly are all my ASCII codes being turned into actual characters? any ideas?

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Ruby before 1.9 treated characters somewhat inconsistently. ?a and "a"[0] would return an integer representing the character's ASCII value (which was usually not the behavior people were looking for), but in practical use characters would normally be represented by a one-character string. In Ruby 1.9, characters are never mysteriously turned into integers. If you want to get a character's ASCII value, you can use the ord method, like ?a.ord (which returns 97).

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Found the solution. "string".ord returns the ascii code of s. Looks like the methods I had found are broken in the 1.9 series of ruby.

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It's better to edit your original post instead of posting a separated reply to your own question. – pierr Aug 13 at 6:41
@pierr - But this is an answer to the question, not just an update of the question – rampion Aug 13 at 8:44
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The methods aren't broken. Ruby 1.9 defines their behavior differently, as Chuck explained. – Telemachus Aug 13 at 9:39
Yeah, broken was the wrong word. They no longer work as I expected based on previous versions. The new usage was what I originally expected them to do, and makes a lot more sense. – dorr Aug 13 at 20:23

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