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All I really know is PHP and I used the decbin function etc, It was fairly easy to do. In this C++ program I want to do the same thing, just a simple number or string how would I do this?

7 Answers 7

3

A simple function could be defined such as this:

void binary(int decimal) {
   int remainder;

   if(decimal <= 1) {
       std::cout << decimal;
       return;
   }
   remainder = decimal % 2;
   binary(decimal >> 1);    
   std::cout << remainder;
}

Although there are many other resources on the web on how to do this..

A noteworthy question for efficiency of it here, as you may want more than just that: Efficiently convert between Hex, Binary, and Decimal in C/C++

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    @oni-kun, C++ has a lot more to offer if you look into it, decbin isn't all that different from these solutions.
    – Nullw0rm
    May 10, 2010 at 10:35
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    The parameter name int decimal makes no sense. Numbers aren't inherently decimal, they are just numbers. (In fact, they are always stored in binary form internally.) May 10, 2010 at 10:46
  • @Fred, It is decimal into binary, hence the param. He didn't specify any other data type.
    – Nullw0rm
    May 10, 2010 at 10:51
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    @Null But int is NOT a decimal type! It just so happens that the common output routines will print an int as a decimal number. The calls binary(37) and binary(0x25) are completely equivalent -- the arguments are neither decimal nor hexadecimal, they are just integral numbers -- ints. May 10, 2010 at 11:24
  • @Fred the integer represents a decimal, I can make it a float or double for all it matters, the name of the int was decimal as that was the suggested input.
    – Nullw0rm
    May 12, 2010 at 13:29
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you can do this non-recursively using something like this:

std::string Dec2Bin(int nValue, bool bReverse = false)
{
    std::string sBin;  
    while(nValue != 0)
    {
       sBin += (nValue & 1) ? '1' : '0';
       nValue >>= 1;
    }

    if(!bReverse)        
        std::reverse(sBin.begin(),sBin.end());

    return sBin;
}

of course this isn't too architucture friendly, but it avoids cout, just incase your not using a console. it also outputs in any bit ordering.

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  • Maybe add replace last line with something like return sBin.size() ? sBin : "0", so as to display 0 as well.
    – tshepang
    Dec 10, 2012 at 14:58
1

You can use itoa if it's available on your compiler. Just remember it's not standard and if you need a standard method you're better off using the other solutions posted.

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If you want to print it, just use this code here. If you want to return a string, instead of using cout, append to a C++ string instead.

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offering the iterative approach (pardon the #defines (but i'm quite sure they will be compiled to the expression's value), i don't quite remember predefined macro/constants in C):

#define INT_ARCH 32
#define ARCH_SHIFTABLE (INT_ARCH - 1)
#define ARCH_MAX_INT 1 << ARCH_SHIFTABLE

void dec_to_bin(int decimal)
{                
    int shifter = ARCH_MAX_INT;

    for(; shifter > 0; shifter >>= 1)
        cout << (decimal & shifter);        
}
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Similar to @Necrolis answer without the need for an if, and the reversal of the string.

string decimalToBinary(int decimal) {
  string binary;
  while(decimal)  {
      binary.insert(0, 1, (decimal & 1) + '0');
      decimal >>= 1;
  }
  return binary;
}
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Do with simple way in c++

#include <iostream>
using namespace std;
int main()
{
long n, rem, binary=0, i=1;
cout<<"Enter a int: ";
cin>>n;

 while(n != 0) 
   {
        rem = n%2;      
        n = n/2;        
        binary= binary + (rem*i); 
        i = i*10;
    }
cout<< "\nAns:   "<<binary <<endl;

return 0;
}

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