chartr {base} | R Documentation |
Translate characters in character vectors, in particular from upper to lower case or vice versa.
chartr(old, new, x) tolower(x) toupper(x) casefold(x, upper = FALSE)
x |
a character vector, or an object that can be coerced to
character by |
old |
a character string specifying the characters to be translated. If a character vector of length 2 or more is supplied, the first element is used with a warning. |
new |
a character string specifying the translations. If a character vector of length 2 or more is supplied, the first element is used with a warning. |
upper |
logical: translate to upper or lower case?. |
chartr
translates each character in x
that is specified
in old
to the corresponding character specified in new
.
Ranges are supported in the specifications, but character classes and
repeated characters are not. If old
contains more characters
than new, an error is signaled; if it contains fewer characters, the
extra characters at the end of new
are ignored.
tolower
and toupper
convert upper-case characters in a
character vector to lower-case, or vice versa. Non-alphabetic
characters are left unchanged.
casefold
is a wrapper for tolower
and toupper
provided for compatibility with S-PLUS.
A character vector of the same length and with the same attributes as
x
(after possible coercion).
Elements of the result will be have the encoding declared as that of
the current locale (see Encoding
if the corresponding
input had a declared encoding and the current locale is either Latin-1
or UTF-8. The result will be in the current locale's encoding unless
the corresponding input was in UTF-8, when it will be in UTF-8 when
the system has Unicode wide characters.
sub
and gsub
for other
substitutions in strings.
x <- "MiXeD cAsE 123" chartr("iXs", "why", x) chartr("a-cX", "D-Fw", x) tolower(x) toupper(x) ## "Mixed Case" Capitalizing - toupper( every first letter of a word ) : .simpleCap <- function(x) { s <- strsplit(x, " ")[[1]] paste(toupper(substring(s, 1,1)), substring(s, 2), sep="", collapse=" ") } .simpleCap("the quick red fox jumps over the lazy brown dog") ## -> [1] "The Quick Red Fox Jumps Over The Lazy Brown Dog" ## and the better, more sophisticated version: capwords <- function(s, strict = FALSE) { cap <- function(s) paste(toupper(substring(s,1,1)), {s <- substring(s,2); if(strict) tolower(s) else s}, sep = "", collapse = " " ) sapply(strsplit(s, split = " "), cap, USE.NAMES = !is.null(names(s))) } capwords(c("using AIC for model selection")) ## -> [1] "Using AIC For Model Selection" capwords(c("using AIC", "for MODEL selection"), strict=TRUE) ## -> [1] "Using Aic" "For Model Selection" ## ^^^ ^^^^^ ## 'bad' 'good' ## -- Very simple insecure crypto -- rot <- function(ch, k = 13) { p0 <- function(...) paste(c(...), collapse="") A <- c(letters, LETTERS, " '") I <- seq_len(k); chartr(p0(A), p0(c(A[-I], A[I])), ch) } pw <- "my secret pass phrase" (crypw <- rot(pw, 13)) #-> you can send this off ## now ``decrypt'' : rot(crypw, 54 - 13)# -> the original: stopifnot(identical(pw, rot(crypw, 54 - 13)))