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Tristan Hume edited this page Apr 23, 2012 · 3 revisions

#strint

##Syntax strint ( s : string [ , base : int ] ) : int

##Description The strint function is used to convert a string to an integer. The integer is equivalent to string s. The number base parameter is optional, for example, strint ("47") = 47. In Turing proper, the base is not allowed and is assumed to be 10.

String s must consist of a possibly null sequence of blanks, then an optional plus or minus sign, and finally a sequence of one or more digits. For number bases larger than 10, the digits can include a, b, c � (alternately A, B, C �) which represent the digit values 10, 11, 12 � The base, if given, must be in the range 2 to 36 (36 because there are 10 base ten digits and 26 letters). For example, strint ("FF", 16) = 255.

The intstr function is the inverse of strint, so for any integer i,

    strint ( intstr ( i ) ) = i.

##See also chr.html, ord.html, intstr.html and strnat.html functions.

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