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Math::BaseCalc(3) |
User Contributed Perl Documentation |
Math::BaseCalc(3) |
Math::BaseCalc - Convert numbers between various bases
use Math::BaseCalc;
my $calc = new Math::BaseCalc(digits => [0,1]); #Binary
my $bin_string = $calc->to_base(465); # Convert 465 to binary
$calc->digits('oct'); # Octal
my $number = $calc->from_base('1574'); # Convert octal 1574 to decimal
This module facilitates the conversion of numbers between various number bases.
You may define your own digit sets, or use any of several predefined digit
sets.
The to_base() and from_base() methods convert
between Perl numbers and strings which represent these numbers in other
bases. For instance, if you're using the binary digit set [0,1],
$calc->to_base(5) will return the string
"101".
$calc->from_base("101") will return the
number 5.
To convert between, say, base 7 and base 36, use the 2-step
process of first converting to a Perl number, then to the desired base for
the result:
$calc7 = new Math::BaseCalc(digits=>[0..6]);
$calc36 = new Math::BaseCalc(digits=>[0..9,'a'..'z']);
$in_base_36 = $calc36->to_base( $calc7->from_base('3506') );
If you just need to handle regular octal & hexdecimal strings,
you probably don't need this module. See the sprintf(), oct(),
and hex() Perl functions.
- new Math::BaseCalc
- new Math::BaseCalc(digits=>...)
Create a new base calculator. You may specify the digit set to
use, by either giving the digits in a list reference (in increasing
order, with the 'zero' character first in the list) or by specifying the
name of one of the predefined digit sets (see the digit() method
below).
If your digit set includes the character
"-", then a dash at the beginning of a
number will no longer signify a negative number.
- $calc->to_base(NUMBER)
Converts a number to a string representing that number in the
associated base.
If "NUMBER" is a
"Math::BigInt" object,
"to_base()" will still work fine and
give you an exact result string.
- $calc->from_base(STRING)
Converts a string representing a number in the associated base
to a Perl integer. The behavior when fed strings with characters not in
$calc's digit set is currently undefined.
If "STRING" converts to a
number too large for perl's integer representation, beware that the
result may be auto-converted to a floating-point representation and thus
only be an approximation.
- $calc->digits
- $calc->digits(...)
Get/set the current digit set of the calculator. With no
arguments, simply returns a list of the characters that make up the
current digit set. To change the current digit set, pass a list
reference containing the new digits, or the name of a predefined digit
set. Currently the predefined digit sets are:
bin => [0,1],
hex => [0..9,'a'..'f'],
HEX => [0..9,'A'..'F'],
oct => [0..7],
64 => ['A'..'Z','a'..'z',0..9,'+','/'],
62 => [0..9,'a'..'z','A'..'Z'],
Examples:
$calc->digits('bin');
$calc->digits([0..7]);
$calc->digits([qw(w a l d o)]);
If any of your "digits" has more than one character,
the behavior is currently undefined.
Ken Williams, kwilliams@cpan.org
This is free software in the colloquial nice-guy sense of the word. Copyright
(c) 1999, Ken Williams. You may redistribute and/or modify it under the same
terms as Perl itself.
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