Another alternative is to use capturing sub-expressions with the regular expression functions regmatches and regexec.
# the original example
x <- 'hello stackoverflow'
# grab the substrings
myStrings <- regmatches(x, regexec('(^.)(.*)', x))
This returns the entire string, the first character, and the "popped" result in a list of length 1.
myStrings
[[1]]
[1] "hello stackoverflow" "h" "ello stackoverflow"
which is equivalent to list(c(x, substr(x, 1, 1), substr(x, 2, nchar(x)))). That is, it contains the super set of the desired elements as well as the full string.
Adding sapply will allow this method to work for a character vector of length > 1.
# a slightly more interesting example
xx <- c('hello stackoverflow', 'right back', 'at yah')
# grab the substrings
myStrings <- regmatches(x, regexec('(^.)(.*)', xx))
This returns a list with the matched full string as the first element and the matching subexpressions captured by () as the following elements. So in the regular expression '(^.)(.*)', (^.) matches the first character and (.*) matches the remaining characters.
myStrings
[[1]]
[1] "hello stackoverflow" "h" "ello stackoverflow"
[[2]]
[1] "right back" "r" "ight back"
[[3]]
[1] "at yah" "a" "t yah"
Now, we can use the trusty sapply + [ method to pull out the desired substrings.
myFirstStrings <- sapply(myStrings, "[", 2)
myFirstStrings
[1] "h" "r" "a"
mySecondStrings <- sapply(myStrings, "[", 3)
mySecondStrings
[1] "ello stackoverflow" "ight back" "t yah"