SolStation? Not one of the sites I mentioned, but they do list the numbers. For example, in the
Alpha Centauri page, in the first paragraph of the "System Summary" section, there's a set of numbers in parentheses after each star as well as the distance. For instance:
Proxima Centauri (or Alpha Centauri C) is only 4.22 light-years (ly) away (14:29:42.95-62:40:46.14, ICRS 2000.0) but is too dim to be seen with the naked eye.
That means right ascension 14 hours, 29 min, 42.95 sec; declination minus 62 degrees, 40 min, 46.14 sec. ICRS is the
International Celestial Reference System and 2000.0 is the date of the measurement (since the stars move and these coordinates change very gradually over time).
The Internet Stellar Database renders it as:
Right Ascension and Declination: 14h29m42.91s, -62°40'47.2" (epoch 2000.0). And the RECONS page lists it in columns 4 & 5 (RA & DEC) as 14 29 43.0 -62 40 46 H, with the "H" meaning that the measurement comes from the Hipparcos survey. But they all mean the same thing, hours-minutes-seconds and degrees-minutes-seconds. The numbers differ slightly since they're from different measurements and there's always some margin of error. Won't make any difference in ChView. (An hour of right ascension equals 15 degrees, since there are 24 of them in a circle, so the minutes and seconds in the RA measurement are 15 times bigger than the arcminutes and arcseconds in the declination measurement. In either case, they're 1/60 and 1/3600 of the main measurement.)