base64encode encodes a data into base64 encoding. The source
can be a file, binary connection or a raw vector.
base64decode decodes a base64-encoded string into binary
data. The source can be a string or a connection, the output is
either a raw vector (output=NULL) or a binary connection.
data to be encoded/decoded. For base64encode it
can be a raw vector, text connection or file name. For
base64decode it can be a string or a binary connection.
linewidth
if set, the output is split into lines with at most
linewidth characters per line. Zero or NA denotes no
limit and values 1 .. 3 are silently treated as 4 since that is the
shortest valid line.
newline
only applicable if linewidth is set; if set
(string), the result will be a single string with all lines
joined using the newline string
output
if NULL then the output will be a raw vector
with the decoded data, otherwise it must be either a filename
(string) or a binary connection.
file
file name (string) for data to use as input instead of
what. It is essentially just a shorthand for
base64decode(file(name)). Only one of what and
file can be specified.
Value
base64encode: A character vector. If linewith > 0 and
newline is not set then it will consist of as many elements
as there are lines. Otherwise it is a single string.
base64decode: If output = NULL then a raw vector with
the decoded content, otherwise the number of bytes written into the
connection.
Author(s)
Simon Urbanek
Examples
base64encode(1:100)
base64encode(1:100, 70)
base64encode(1:100, 70, "\n")
x <- charToRaw("the decoded content, otherwise the number of bytes")
y <- base64decode(base64encode(x))
stopifnot(identical(x, y))