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Given a word I need to find the decimal values of each letter in that word and store it in an array. I used strtoi function to achieve this. But later found out below two functions which are supposed to give same output are giving different result. Can anyone explain why?
1st attempt

> strtoi("d",16L)
[1] 13

2nd attempt

> strtoi(charToRaw("d"),16L)
[1] 100

And what does 16L in the base of srtoi mean? I am fairly new to Dec, Hex, Oct representation of ASCII characters. So please share some information about it.

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    For a base greater than 10, letters a to z (or A to Z) are used to represent 10 to 35. - from ?strtoi. And charToRaw("d") evaluates to 64, so in the second you would be doing strtoi(64, 16L). Not sure why you think they would be the same. Dec 18, 2016 at 17:32

1 Answer 1

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For illustration purposes only:

library(purrr)
library(tibble)

input_str <- "Alphabet."

charToRaw(input_str) %>%
  map_df(~data_frame(letter=rawToChar(.),
                     hex_value=toString(.),
                     decimal_value=as.numeric(.)))
## # A tibble: 9 × 3
##   letter hex_value decimal_value
##    <chr>     <chr>         <dbl>
## 1      A        41            65
## 2      l        6c           108
## 3      p        70           112
## 4      h        68           104
## 5      a        61            97
## 6      b        62            98
## 7      e        65           101
## 8      t        74           116
## 9      .        2e            46

Since what you need to do can be done all in base R:

as.numeric(charToRaw(input_str))
## [1]  65 108 112 104  97  98 101 116  46

You can also do as.integer() vs as.numeric() if you just need/want integers.

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