agnoster / base32-js

Base32 encoding for JavaScript, based (loosely) on Crockford's Base32
https://github.com/agnoster/base32-js
MIT License
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Base 32 encoding/decoding for JavaScript example workflow

Base 32 is between hexadecimal notation and Base 64 encoding. It's intended to be a human-friendly -- you don't have to worry about punctuation, capitalization, or letters/numbers that are easy to confuse, making it easier to transmit in handwriting or over the phone.

One of the primary purposes is to have aesthetically pleasing SHA1 hashes. Compare:

Try giving out the Base 64 hash over the phone! "lowercase 'x', capital 'E', underscore, lowercase 'p', ..." Base 32 will work the same with upper- or lowercase, you can mistake a number for a similar-looking letter, and it will still decode to the same data.

Getting started

In your shell, install with npm:

npm install base32

In your code:

var base32 = require('base32')

// simple api

var encoded = base32.encode('some data to encode')
var decoded = base32.decode(encoded)

// streaming api
this.encoder = new Base32.encoder()
this.dataCallback = function(chunk) {
    this.emit(this.encoder(chunk))
}
this.closeCallback = function(chunk) {
    this.emit(this.finish()) // flush any remaining bits
}

// easy sha1 hash
var hash = base32.sha1(some_data_to_hash) // DONE.

On the command-line (to install system-wide, use npm install -g base32):

base32 -h
#> Usage: base32 [input_file] [-o output_file] [-d|--decode] [-s|--sha]
echo "Hello World" | base32
#> 91jprv3f41bpywkccg50
echo 'axqqeb10d5u20wk5c5p6ry90exqq4uvk44' | base32 -d
#> Wow, it really works!
base32 -s test/*
#> ky2t1raumjn9cghne773petngx3zz3q7  test/base32-test.coffee
#> 6b4bkjaveddmg5jh7hnyw132yht20g6e  test/compare.coffee

Warning: this is a Base 32 implementation, not the Base 32 implementation

There are about (128 choose 32) different specifications of something called "Base 32" - see Wikipedia for some of them.

This is a modified Crockford encoding that should be simple, less error-prone, and streamable (for Node).

Minispec

decimal -> base32 Table

00xxx 01xxx 10xxx 11xxx
0 -> 0 8 -> 8 16 -> g 24 -> r
1 -> 1 9 -> 9 17 -> h 25 -> t
2 -> 2 10 -> a 18 -> j 26 -> u
3 -> 3 11 -> b 19 -> k 27 -> v
4 -> 4 12 -> c 20 -> m 28 -> w
5 -> 5 13 -> d 21 -> n 29 -> x
6 -> 6 14 -> e 22 -> p 30 -> y
7 -> 7 15 -> f 23 -> q 31 -> z

Formalia

Under MIT License.

Fork as much as you like, I'm more than amenable to pull requests. I'm trying to keep it reasonably node-ish, so bear that in mind.