NAME
Number::Nary - encode and decode numbers as n-ary strings
VERSION
version 1.100310
SYNOPSIS
This module lets you convert numbers into strings that encode the number using the digit set of your choice. For example, you could get routines to convert to and from hex like so:
my ($enc_hex, $dec_hex) = n_codec('0123456789ABCDEF');
my $hex = $enc_hex->(255); # sets $hex to FF
my $num = $dec_hex->('A0'); # sets $num to 160
This would be slow and stupid, since Perl already provides the means to easily and quickly convert between decimal and hex representations of numbers. Number::Nary's utility comes from the fact that it can encode into bases composed of arbitrary digit sets.
my ($enc, $dec) = n_codec('0123'); # base 4 (for working with nybbles?)
# base64
my ($enc, $dec) = n_codec(
join('', 'A' .. 'Z', 'a' .. 'z', 0 .. 9, '+', '/', '=')
);
FUNCTIONS
n_codec
my ($encode_sub, $decode_sub) = n_codec($digit_string, \%arg);
This routine returns a reference to a subroutine which will encode numbers into the given set of digits and a reference which will do the reverse operation.
The digits may be given as a string or an arrayref. This routine will croak if the set of digits contains repeated digits, or if there could be ambiguity in decoding a string of the given digits. (Number::Nary is overly aggressive about weeding out possibly ambiguous digit sets, for the sake of the author's sanity.)
The encode sub will croak if it is given input other than a non-negative integer.
The decode sub will croak if given a string that contains characters not in the digit string, or, for fixed-string digit sets, if the lenth of the string to decode is not a multiple of the length of the component digits.
Valid arguments to be passed in the second parameter are:
predecode - if given, this coderef will be used to preprocess strings
passed to the decoder
postencode - if given, this coderef will be used to postprocess strings
produced by the encoder
n_encode
my $string = n_encode($value, $digit_string);
This encodes the given value into a string using the given digit string. It is written in terms of n_codec
, above, so it's not efficient at all for multiple uses in one process.
n_decode
my $number = n_decode($string, $digit_string);
This is the decoding equivalent to n_encode
, above.
EXPORTS
n_codec
is exported by default. n_encode
and n_decode
are exported.
Pairs of routines to encode and decode may be imported by using the codec_pair
group as follows:
use Number::Nary -codec_pair => { digits => '01234567', -suffix => '8' };
my $encoded = encode8($number);
my $decoded = decode8($encoded);
For more information on this kind of exporting, see Sub::Exporter.
SECRET ORIGINS
I originally used this system to produce unique worksheet names in Excel. I had a large report generating system that used Win32::OLE, and to keep track of what was where I'd Storable-digest the options used to produce each worksheet and then n-ary encode them into the set of characters that were valid in worksheet names. Working out that set of characters was by far the hardest part.
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
Thanks, Jesse Vincent. When I remarked, on IRC, that this would be trivial to do, he said, "Great. Would you mind doing it?" (Well, more or less.) It was a fun little distraction.
Mark Jason Dominus and Michael Peters offered some useful advice on how to weed out ambiguous digit sets, enabling me to allow digit sets made up of varying-length digits.
SEE ALSO
Math::BaseCalc is in the same problem space wth Number::Nary. It provides only an OO interface and does not reliably handle multicharacter digits or recognize ambiguous digit sets.
AUTHOR
Ricardo Signes <rjbs@cpan.org>
COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE
This software is copyright (c) 2010 by Ricardo Signes.
This is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as the Perl 5 programming language system itself.