I'm trying to convert a hex number to a character in C++.
I looked it up but I can't find an answer that works for me.
Here is my code:
char mod_tostring(int state, int index, int size) {
int stringAddress = lua_tolstring(state, index, 0);
const char* const Base = (const char* const)stringAddress;
return Base[0];
};
Base[0] would return a hex number like:
0000005B
If you go here http://string-functions.com/hex-string.aspx and put 0000005B as the input it outputs the character "[". How would I also output [?
To print a number as a character, you can either assign it to a char variable or cast it to a char type:
unsigned int value = 0x5B;
char c = static_cast<char>(value);
cout << "The character of 0x5B is '" << c << "` and '" << static_cast<char>(value) << "'\n";
You could also use snprintf:
char text_buffer[128];
unsigned int value = 0x5B;
snprintf(&text_buffer[0], sizeof(text_buffer),
"%c\n", value);
puts(text_buffer);
Example program:
#include <iostream>
#include <cstdlib>
int main()
{
unsigned int value = 0x5B;
char c = static_cast<char>(value);
std::cout << "The character of 0x5B is '" << c << "` and '" << static_cast<char>(value) << "'\n";
std::cout << "\n"
<< "Paused. Press Enter to continue.\n";
std::cin.ignore(1000000, '\n');
return EXIT_SUCCESS;
}
Output:
$ ./main.exe
The character of 0x5B is '[` and '['
Paused. Press Enter to continue.
Try this:
std::cout << "0x%02hX" << Base[0] << std::endl;
Output should be: 0x5B assuming Base[0] is 0000005B.
Related
I wanto to use sscanf to extrat the 2 first integer (5 and 10) in a string
rssi = 5
ber = 10
like this :
#include <stdio.h>
#include <iostream>
#include <string>
using namespace std;
int main() {
std::string str = "\r\n+CSQ: 5,10\r\n\r\nOK\r\n7556\r\n";
unsigned char lBufRX[100];
char *rssi, *ber;
if((sscanf(str.c_str(), "%*[^:]: %s,%s[^\n]", rssi, ber)) != 2) {
std::cout <<"[" << rssi << "]" << "[" << ber << "]" << std::endl;
}
return 0;
}
The result is bad. Can anyone help me ?
My output is : "[5,10][" with " %*[^:]: " i read until the first integer so "5" with ",%s[^\n]" i read the second integer so "10" until \r\n
Thanks
You have several errors. You're using char* although you want to read two ints. But then you don't allocate memory for them. Also, you're expecting two successful parses but check with != 2. Here is some code that works:
int main() {
std::string str = "\r\n+CSQ: 5,10\r\n\r\nOK\r\n7556\r\n";
int rssi, ber;
if((sscanf(str.c_str(), "%*[^:]: %d,%d", &rssi, &ber)) == 2) {
std::cout <<"[" << rssi << "]" << "[" << ber << "]" << std::endl;
}
return 0;
}
Below code takes a hex string(every byte is represented as its corresponidng hex value)
converts it to unsigned char * buffer and then converts back to hex string.
This code is testing the conversion from unsigned char* buffer to hex string
which I need to send over the network to a receiver process.
I chose hex string as unsigned char can be in range of 0 to 255 and there is no printable character after 127.
The below code just tells the portion that bugs me. Its in the comment.
#include <iostream>
#include <sstream>
#include <iomanip>
using namespace std;
// converts a hexstring to corresponding integer. i.e "c0" - > 192
int convertHexStringToInt(const string & hexString)
{
stringstream geek;
int x=0;
geek << std::hex << hexString;
geek >> x;
return x;
}
// converts a complete hexstring to unsigned char * buffer
void convertHexStringToUnsignedCharBuffer(string hexString, unsigned char*
hexBuffer)
{
int i=0;
while(hexString.length())
{
string hexStringPart = hexString.substr(0,2);
hexString = hexString.substr(2);
int hexStringOneByte = convertHexStringToInt (hexStringPart);
hexBuffer[i] = static_cast<unsigned char>((hexStringOneByte & 0xFF)) ;
i++;
}
}
int main()
{
//below hex string is a hex representation of a unsigned char * buffer.
//this is generated by an excryption algorithm in unsigned char* format
//I am converting it to hex string to make it printable for verification pupose.
//and takes the hexstring as inpuit here to test the conversion logic.
string inputHexString = "552027e33844dd7b71676b963c0b8e20";
string outputHexString;
stringstream geek;
unsigned char * hexBuffer = new unsigned char[inputHexString.length()/2];
convertHexStringToUnsignedCharBuffer(inputHexString, hexBuffer);
for (int i=0;i<inputHexString.length()/2;i++)
{
geek <<std::hex << std::setw(2) << std::setfill('0')<<(0xFF&hexBuffer[i]); // this works
//geek <<std::hex << std::setw(2) << std::setfill('0')<<(hexBuffer[i]); -- > this does not work
// I am not able to figure out why I need to do the bit wise and operation with unsigned char "0xFF&hexBuffer[i]"
// without this the conversion does not work for individual bytes having ascii values more than 127.
}
geek >> outputHexString;
cout << "input hex string: " << inputHexString<<endl;
cout << "output hex string: " << outputHexString<<endl;
if(0 == inputHexString.compare(outputHexString))
cout<<"hex encoding successful"<<endl;
else
cout<<"hex encoding failed"<<endl;
if(NULL != hexBuffer)
delete[] hexBuffer;
return 0;
}
// output
// can some one explain ? I am sure its something silly that I am missing.
the C++20 way:
unsigned char* data = new unsigned char[]{ "Hello world\n\t\r\0" };
std::size_t data_size = sizeof("Hello world\n\t\r\0") - 1;
auto sp = std::span(data, data_size );
std::transform( sp.begin(), sp.end(),
std::ostream_iterator<std::string>(std::cout),
[](unsigned char c) -> std::string {
return std::format("{:02X}", int(c));
});
or if you want to store result into string:
std::string result{};
result.reserve(size * 2 + 1);
std::transform( sp.begin(), sp.end(),
std::back_inserter(result),
[](unsigned char c) -> std::string {
return std::format("{:02X}", int(c));
});
Output:
48656C6C6F20776F726C640A090D00
The output of an unsigned char is like the output of a char which obviously does not what the OP expects.
I tested the following on coliru:
#include <iomanip>
#include <iostream>
int main()
{
std::cout << "Output of (unsigned char)0xc0: "
<< std::hex << std::setw(2) << std::setfill('0') << (unsigned char)0xc0 << '\n';
return 0;
}
and got:
Output of (unsigned char)0xc0: 0�
This is caused by the std::ostream::operator<<() which is chosen out of the available operators. I looked on cppreference
operator<<(std::basic_ostream) and
std::basic_ostream::operator<<
and found
template< class Traits >
basic_ostream<char,Traits>& operator<<( basic_ostream<char,Traits>& os,
unsigned char ch );
in the former (with a little bit help from M.M).
The OP suggested a fix: bit-wise And with 0xff which seemed to work. Checking this in coliru.com:
#include <iomanip>
#include <iostream>
int main()
{
std::cout << "Output of (unsigned char)0xc0: "
<< std::hex << std::setw(2) << std::setfill('0') << (0xff & (unsigned char)0xc0) << '\n';
return 0;
}
Output:
Output of (unsigned char)0xc0: c0
Really, this seems to work. Why?
0xff is an int constant (stricly speaking: an integer literal) and has type int. Hence, the bit-wise And promotes (unsigned char)0xc0 to int as well, yields the result of type int, and hence, the std::ostream::operator<< for int is applied.
This is an option to solve this. I can provide another one – just converting the unsigned char to unsigned.
Where the promotion of unsigned char to int introduces a possible sign-bit extension (which is undesired in this case), this doesn't happen when unsigned char is converted to unsigned. The output stream operator for unsigned provides the intended output as well:
#include <iomanip>
#include <iostream>
int main()
{
std::cout << "Output of (unsigned char)0xc0: "
<< std::hex << std::setw(2) << std::setfill('0') << (unsigned)(unsigned char)0xc0 << '\n';
const unsigned char c = 0xc0;
std::cout << "Output of unsigned char c = 0xc0: "
<< std::hex << std::setw(2) << std::setfill('0') << (unsigned)c << '\n';
return 0;
}
Output:
Output of (unsigned char)0xc0: c0
Output of unsigned char c = 0xc0: c0
Live Demo on coliru
#include <iostream>
#include <string>
#include <bitset>
int main()
{
char c = 128;
unsigned int shift2 = (unsigned int)c;
std::string shift2bin = std::bitset<8>(shift2).to_string(); //to binary
std::cout << " shift2bin: " << shift2bin << std::endl;
unsigned int shift3 = shift2 >> 1;
std::string shift3bin = std::bitset<8>(shift3).to_string(); //to binary
std::cout << " shift3bin: " << shift3bin << std::endl;
}
Output:
shift2bin: 10000000
shift3bin: 11000000
I expect the result to be as follows:
shift2bin: 10000000
shift3bin: 01000000
Question> Why unsigned int right shift uses 1 as the filler?
As seen in this answer, unsigned right shifts always zero-fill. However, try this to print out all the bits in the unsigned int:
std::string shift2bin = std::bitset<sizeof(shift2)*8>(shift2).to_string(); //to binary
std::cout << " shift2bin: " << shift2bin << std::endl;
You will see something like (as you appear to have char signed by default):
shift2bin: 11111111111111111111111110000000
^^^^^^^^
If you do the same for shift3bin, you will see:
shift3bin: 01111111111111111111111111000000
^^^^^^^^
So, you can see how you appear to get a "1" fill.
#include <iostream>
using namespace std;
int main()
{
char c1 = 0xab;
signed char c2 = 0xcd;
unsigned char c3 = 0xef;
cout << hex;
cout << c1 << endl;
cout << c2 << endl;
cout << c3 << endl;
}
I expected the output are as follows:
ab
cd
ef
Yet, I got nothing.
I guess this is because cout always treats 'char', 'signed char', and 'unsigned char' as characters rather than 8-bit integers. However, 'char', 'signed char', and 'unsigned char' are all integral types.
So my question is: How to output a character as an integer through cout?
PS: static_cast(...) is ugly and needs more work to trim extra bits.
char a = 0xab;
cout << +a; // promotes a to a type printable as a number, regardless of type.
This works as long as the type provides a unary + operator with ordinary semantics. If you are defining a class that represents a number, to provide a unary + operator with canonical semantics, create an operator+() that simply returns *this either by value or by reference-to-const.
source: Parashift.com - How can I print a char as a number? How can I print a char* so the output shows the pointer's numeric value?
Cast them to an integer type, (and bitmask appropriately!) i.e.:
#include <iostream>
using namespace std;
int main()
{
char c1 = 0xab;
signed char c2 = 0xcd;
unsigned char c3 = 0xef;
cout << hex;
cout << (static_cast<int>(c1) & 0xFF) << endl;
cout << (static_cast<int>(c2) & 0xFF) << endl;
cout << (static_cast<unsigned int>(c3) & 0xFF) << endl;
}
Maybe this:
char c = 0xab;
std::cout << (int)c;
Hope it helps.
Another way is to overload the << operator:
#include <iostream>
using namespace std;
typedef basic_ostream<char, char_traits<char>> basicOstream;
/*inline*/ basicOstream &operator<<(basicOstream &stream, char c) {
return stream.operator<<(+c);
}
/*inline*/ basicOstream &operator<<(basicOstream &stream, signed char c) {
return stream.operator<<(+c);
}
/*inline*/ basicOstream &operator<<(basicOstream &stream, unsigned char c) {
return stream.operator<<(+c);
}
int main() {
char var1 = 10;
signed char var2 = 11;
unsigned char var3 = 12;
cout << var1 << endl;
cout << var2 << endl;
cout << var3 << endl;
return 0;
}
which prints the following output:
10
11
12
Process finished with exit code 0
I think it's very neat and useful. hope it hepls!
And Also if you want it to print a hex value you can do like this:
basicOstream &operator<<(basicOstream &stream, char c) {
return stream.operator<<(hex).operator<<(c);
} // and so on...
What about:
char c1 = 0xab;
std::cout << int{ c1 } << std::endl;
It's concise and safe, and produces the same machine code as other methods.
Another way to do it is with std::hex apart from casting (int):
std::cout << std::hex << (int)myVar << std::endl;
I hope it helps.
I have a question regarding following code. When I run it, it prints always just "g" instead of a hex code. Why? How can I output the hex code? Fiddle: http://ideone.com/FjYr2M
#include <iostream>
using namespace std;
void prepareAndSend() {
char Command[50];
sprintf(Command,"%04XT1000A", "076");
unsigned char checksum = 0x02;
char* p = Command;
while(*p) {
checksum ^= *p++;
}
checksum ^= 0x03;
std::cout << std::hex << checksum << std::endl;
}
int main() {
prepareAndSend();
return 0;
}
sprintf(Command,"%04XT1000A", "076");
Undefined behavior, turn your compiler warnings on.
sprintf(Command,"%04XT1000A", 0x76);
You also need to cast checksum to avoid using the unsigned char version of operator<<
std::cout << std::hex << static_cast<int>(checksum) << std::endl;
Cast checksum to int
std::cout << std::hex << static_cast<int>(checksum) << std::endl;
Since checksum is unsigned char, the operator<< tries to print it as a character