rot13.RdCompute generalized ‘rot13’ character translations or “rotations”
In the distant past, considered as poor man's encryption, such rotations are way too poor nowadays and provided mainly for didactical reasons.
rotn(ch, n = 13)a character vector; often a string (of length 1).
an integer in \(\{1\dots26\}\); the default is particularly useful.
a character as ch, but with each character (which
belongs to letters or LETTERS
“rotated” by n (positions in the alphabet).
Note that the default n = 13 makes rotn into
a function that is its own inverse.
Written after having searched for it and found
seqinr::rot13() which was generalized and rendered more
transparently to my eyes.
rot2, a completely different rotation (namely in the
plane aka \(R^2\)).
rotn(c("ABC", "a","b","c"), 1)
#> [1] "BCD" "b" "c" "d"
rotn(c("ABC", "a","b","c"), 2)
#> [1] "CDE" "c" "d" "e"
rotn(c("ABC", "a","b","c"), 26) # rotation by 26 does not change much
#> [1] "ABC" "a" "b" "c"
(ch <- paste("Hello", c("World!", "you too")))
#> [1] "Hello World!" "Hello you too"
rotn(ch)
#> [1] "Uryyb Jbeyq!" "Uryyb lbh gbb"
rotn( rotn(ch ) ) # rotn(*, 13) is its own inverse
#> [1] "Hello World!" "Hello you too"