string {rlang} | R Documentation |
These base-type constructors allow more control over the creation of strings in R. They take character vectors or string-like objects (integerish or raw vectors), and optionally set the encoding. The string version checks that the input contains a scalar string.
string(x, encoding = NULL)
x |
A character vector or a vector or list of string-like objects. |
encoding |
If non-null, passed to |
set_chr_encoding()
for more information
about encodings in R.
# As everywhere in R, you can specify a string with Unicode # escapes. The characters corresponding to Unicode codepoints will # be encoded in UTF-8, and the string will be marked as UTF-8 # automatically: cafe <- string("caf\uE9") str_encoding(cafe) as_bytes(cafe) # In addition, string() provides useful conversions to let # programmers control how the string is represented in memory. For # encodings other than UTF-8, you'll need to supply the bytes in # hexadecimal form. If it is a latin1 encoding, you can mark the # string explicitly: cafe_latin1 <- string(c(0x63, 0x61, 0x66, 0xE9), "latin1") str_encoding(cafe_latin1) as_bytes(cafe_latin1)