I have an character array (say char charr[5]) which contains 0/1 (char array of boolean number). Now, I want to convert the character array to 64 bit integer number (if array is {0, 0, 0, 1 , 0}, it will give 2 ). How to do that ? Is there any library functions ?
3 Answers
No, there's no standard function for that. But it's pretty trivial:
uint64_t pack(const uint8_t *bits, size_t n)
{
uint64_t x = 0, value = 1 << (n - 1);
while(n > 0)
{
x += value * *bits++;
n--;
value /= 2;
}
return x;
}
Unwind has the basic idea right, but a complex implementation. This also works:
uint64_t pack(const uint8_t *bits, size_t n)
{
uint64 x = 0;
for(;n > 0; n--) // For all input bits.
{
x <<= 1; // make room for next bit.
assert(*bits <= 1); // It better be a 0 or 1.
x += *bits++; // Add new bit on the end.
}
return x;
}
Try strtoll with base 2:
int val = strtoll(input, NULL, 2);
-
Uh no, that will expect
'0'
and'1'
, i.e. digits, which is not what the input has.– unwindFeb 5, 2013 at 13:46 -
@unwind: But that's fixable. Just add
'0'
to all digits. (Works if you have achar[]
, not if you have aconst char*
, in which case you'd need to make a copy first)– MSaltersFeb 5, 2013 at 16:54