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@root/encoding

Leightweight, Zero-dependency, translation between Unicode, Buffers, Base64, Hex, Binary Strings, UCS-2, UTF-8, etc.

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@root/encoding

Lightweight, Zero-dependency, translation between Unicode Strings, Binary Strings, Buffers, Base64, Hex, UCS-2, UTF-8, etc.

Works identically on all platforms:

  • Web Browsers
    • Chrome
    • Firefox
    • Microsoft Edge
    • Internet Explorer
  • Node.js

Usage

var Enc = require('@root/encoding');

Enc.strToBuf('Hello, 世界!');

Use cases

Typically you want to use this in a browser when you need to convert user input to some sort of Byte Array for hashing or encoding in an ancient format.

For example:

  • Hashing passwords
  • Secure Remote Password
  • JWT and JWS signing and verifying
  • ASN1 parsing and packing
    • DER
    • x509
    • CSR
    • PEM

The purpose of this library is to make it easy to support common string and buffer encoding and decoding in both Browsers and node with minimal code.

Examples

Strings and Byte Arrays

var Enc = require('@root/encoding/bytes');

Enc.binToStr(bin);
Enc.binToBuf(bin);

Enc.bufToBin(buf);
Enc.bufToStr(buf);

Enc.strToBin(str);
Enc.strToBuf(str);

Hex

var Enc = require('@root/encoding/hex');

Enc.hexToBuf(hex);
Enc.hexToStr(hex);

Enc.bufToHex(buf);
Enc.strToHex(str);

Base64

var Enc = require('@root/encoding/base64');

Enc.base64ToBuf(b64);
Enc.base64ToStr(b64);

Enc.bufToBase64(buf);
Enc.strToBase64(str);

URL Safe Base64

(all of base64To*() accept URL Safe Base64)

var Enc = require('@root/encoding/base64');

Enc.base64ToUrlBase64(b64);
Enc.urlBase64ToBase64(u64);

Enc.bufToUrlBase64(buf);
Enc.strToUrlBase64(str);

Base64 and Hex

require('@root/encoding/base64');
require('@root/encoding/hex');

var Enc = require('@root/encoding');

Enc.hexToBase64(hex);
Enc.base64ToHex(b64);

Browser API

(the Node API signatures are the same, but implemented with Buffer)

Conversions between these formats are supported:

  • Strings and Buffers
  • Hex
  • Base64

Strings and Buffers

JavaScript has two types of strings:

  • Binary Strings, which we call bin
  • Unicode Strings, which we call str (USC-2, essentially UTF-16)
    • treated as UTF-8 for the purposes of encodeURIComponent

JavaScript has two (and a half) ways to support Byte Arrays:

  • Array, which we call arr
  • Uint8Array, which we call buf (of the ArrayBuffer family)
  • Buffer (node-only, but implemented as Uint8Array)

The API for the conversions is centered around Uint8Array (Buffer) but, for browser compatibility, sometimes requires the use of Binary Strings.

API

We provide conversions directly to each of the following:

NameTypeDescription
strUnicode StringHandled by split('') as two-byte characters
binBinary StringHandled by split('') as single-byte chars
bufByte ArrayTruncated to single-byte chars

The names and signatures of the functions are as follows:

To Buffer

  • Binary String to Buffer
    • binToBuf(bin)
  • Unicode String (UTF-8) to Buffer
    • strToBuf(str)

To Unicode String

  • Binary String to Unicode String (UTF-8)
    • binToStr(bin)
  • Buffer to Unicode String (UTF-8)
    • bufToStr(buf)

To Binary String

  • Buffer to Binary String
    • bufToBin(buf)
  • Unicode String to Binary String
    • strToBin(str)

It's very easy to convert from Binary Strings to Byte Arrays (Uint8Array.from(bin.split(''))) and from Uint8Array to Binary String (Array.from(buf).join('')).

The real value is converting between Unicode Strings to (UTF-8) Binary Strings, and back:

function toBin(str) {
	var escstr = encodeURIComponent(str);
	return escstr.replace(/%([0-9A-F]{2})/g, function(match, p1) {
		return String.fromCharCode(parseInt(p1, 16));
	});
}
function toStr(bin) {
	var escstr = bin.replace(/(.)/g, function(m, p) {
		var code = p
			.charCodeAt(0)
			.toString(16)
			.toUpperCase();
		if (code.length < 2) {
			code = '0' + code;
		}
		return '%' + code;
	});

	return decodeURIComponent(escstr);
}

Hex

JavaScript does not have a native way to create hex, aside from small numbers:

(12345).toString(16);

The hex functions convert to and from hexidecimal:

NameTypeDescription
hexHex StringHandled by split('') as half-byte characters

To Hex

  • Binary String to Hex
    • Enc.bufToHex(Enc.binToBuf(bin))
  • Byte Array to Hex
    • bufToHex
  • Unicode String (UTF-8) to Hex
    • strToHex

From Hex

  • Hex to Binary String
    • Enc.hexToBuf(Enc.bufToBin(hex))
  • Hex to Byte Array
    • hexToBuf
  • Hex to Unicode String (UTF-8)
    • hexToStr

However, assuming you have a single-byte string, it's very easy to convert back and forth:

function toHex(any) {
	var hex = [];
	var i, h;
	var len = any.byteLength || any.length;

	for (i = 0; i < len; i += 1) {
		h = any[i].toString(16);
		if (h.length % 2) {
			h = '0' + h;
		}
		hex.push(h);
	}

	return hex.join('').toLowerCase();
}
function fromHex(hex) {
	var arr = hex.match(/.{2}/g).map(function(h) {
		return parseInt(h, 16);
	});
	return Uint8Array.from(arr);
}

Base64

Browser JavaScript does have a native way convert between Binary Strings and Base64:

var b64 = btoa('An ASCII string is a Binary String');
// Note: A Unicode String is NOT
var bin = atob('SGVsbG8sIOS4lueVjCE=');

However, it does not have a native way to convert between Unicode Strings and Binary Strings, nor to and from URL Safe Base64.

The base64 module provides simpler conversions to and from Base 64 and URL Safe Base64:

NameTypeDescription
b64Base64Standard Base64 as handled by btoa and atob
u64URL Safe Base64Replaces + with - and / with _, and omits padding

To Base64

  • Unicode String (UTF-8) to Base64
    • strToBase64(str)
  • Binary String to Base64
    • Enc.bufToBase64(Enc.binToBuf(bin))
  • Byte Array to Base64
    • bufToBase64(buf)

From Base64 (and URL Safe Base64)

  • Base64 to Unicode String (UTF-8)
    • base64ToStr(b64)
  • Base64 to Binary String
    • Enc.bufToBin(Enc.base64ToBuf(b64)))
  • Base64 to Byte Array
    • base64ToBuf(b64)

To URL Safe Base64

  • Base64 to URL Safe Base64
    • base64ToUrlBase64(b64);
  • URL Safe Base64 to Base64
    • urlBase64ToBase64(u64);
  • Binary String to URL Safe Base64
    • Enc.bufToUrlBase64(Enc.binToBuf(bin));
  • Byte Array to URL Safe Base64
    • bufToUrlBase64(buf);
  • Unicode String (UTF-8) to URL Safe Base64
    • strToUrlBase64(str);

FAQ

Why yet another encoding library?

We write code that works both in node and in browsers, and we like to keep it small, light, and focused.

By using browser native functions rather than 're-inventing the wheel'

Why not 'browserified' Buffer?

The most common 'browserified' Buffer implementations are quite large - either because they don't use browser-native code or they guarantee perfect compatibility with node's Buffer, which isn't necessary for most people.

On the other hand, Browsers have already been able to translate between Base64, UTF-8, Binary Strings, and Byte Arrays (Buffers) all the way back since before IE6!

Using these browser-native methods eliminates hundreds of lines of code:

  • btoa Binary String to Base64 (ASCII)
  • atob Base64 (ASCII) to Binary String
  • encodeURIComponent Unicode String to Hex-Escaped String
  • decodeURIComponent Hex-Escaped String to Unicode String
  • String.prototype.charCodeAt ASCII to Byte
  • String.fromCharCode Byte to ASCII

The code is typically also much easier to read. In many cases the conversion is only one line long.

Since a node Buffer is actually an ArrayBuffer, node's Buffer really only has the advantage of convenient conversions, so that's really all that needs to be implemented.

In the case of ancient browsers which do not support Uint8Array, the native Array is still the best substitute.

Why use this in node?

Unless you're writing code that's intended to work in the browser, you probably shouldn't - Node's Buffer does the job quite well.

The one function you may still be interested in, which Node's Buffer omits, is this one:

function toUrlSafeBase64(base64) {
	return base64
		.replace(/\+/g, '-')
		.replace(/\//g, '_')
		.replace(/=/g, '');
}

HOWEVER, if you believe that browser users would benefit from your library, this is a much better alternative for simple use cases where you're dealing with small bits of code.

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Package last updated on 08 Oct 2019

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