.TH ENCODE 2 .SH NAME dec64, enc64, dec32, enc32, dec16, enc16, encodefmt \- encoding byte arrays as strings .SH SYNOPSIS .B #include .br .B #include .PP .B int dec64(uchar *out, int lim, char *in, int n) .PP .B int enc64(char *out, int lim, uchar *in, int n) .PP .B int dec32(uchar *out, int lim, char *in, int n) .PP .B int enc32(char *out, int lim, uchar *in, int n) .PP .B int dec16(uchar *out, int lim, char *in, int n) .PP .B int enc16(char *out, int lim, uchar *in, int n) .PP .B int encodefmt(Fmt*) .SH DESCRIPTION .PP .IR Enc16 , .I enc32 and .I enc64 create null terminated strings. They return the size of the encoded string (without the null) or -1 if the encoding fails. The encoding fails if .IR lim , the length of the output buffer (including null), is too small. .PP .IR Dec16 , .I dec32 and .I dec64 return the number of bytes decoded or -1 if the decoding fails. The decoding fails if the output buffer is not large enough or, for base 32, if the input buffer length is not a multiple of 8. .PP .I Encodefmt can be used with .IR fmtinstall (2) and .IR print (2) to print encoded representations of byte arrays. The verbs are .TP .B H base 16 (i.e. hexadecimal). The default encoding is in upper case. The .B l flag forces lower case. .TP .B < base 32 .TP .B [ base 64 (same as MIME) .PD .PP The length of the array is specified as .IR f2 . For example, to display a 15 byte array as hex: .EX char x[15]; fmtinstall('H', encodefmt); print("%.*H\\n", sizeof x, x); .EE .SH SOURCE .B /sys/src/libc/port/u32.c .br .B /sys/src/libc/port/u64.c .br .B /sys/src/libc/port/encodefmt.c