9

Example

NOTE: that i am only concerned about letters. so bitset 000001 would be a or A.

I have a string named s with the value "abc". I take each char of the string and convert it to binary value through the use of bitset.

e.g

bitset <6> b1 = s[0];   //a
bitset <6> b2 = s[1];   //b
bitset <6> b3 = s[2];   //c

then i want to put the results into an array of strings. The name of the array is arr (and each string of the array will represent the binary value of each char)

e.g

arr[0]   //will hold the value of char 'a' in binary form which is 000001
arr[1]   //will hold the value of char 'b' in binary form which is 000010
arr[2]   //will hold the value of char 'c' in binary form which is 000011

and the way i convert each char from the string to binary is

arr[0] = b1.to_string();    //arr[0] is now 000001
arr[1] = b2.to_string();    //arr[1] is now 000010
arr[2] = b3.to_string();    //arr[2] is now 000011

Now here lies my problem. How do i convert them back to char?

e.g.

//I want each char to take back the each corresponding letter from the binary values

char c1;   //How do i make the arr[0] value of 000001 to become 'a' again?
char c2;   //Same here
char c3;   //And here
5
  • A common question, sure you could not find it?
    – 2785528
    Jun 1, 2015 at 22:42
  • If you already have a string representation of the binary value and want to go back to char, why not just remove the bitset middleman and do something like static_cast<char>(std::stoi(arr[i]) + 64) ? Then again, I don't know if you need the bitset for further operations later in your code
    – Alejandro
    Jun 1, 2015 at 23:06
  • Thanks. No i don't need it for anything further. Would that work then without bitset like you said ( i cant try it t this time but i will try it later when i get home).
    – George
    Jun 1, 2015 at 23:11
  • Just tested , it is working, but I forgot something on my previous comment which I can no longer edit. Here is a live demo.
    – Alejandro
    Jun 1, 2015 at 23:15
  • thanks @ Alejandro. Can you explain the 0,2 part in the code? Thanks again :).
    – George
    Jun 1, 2015 at 23:18

3 Answers 3

5

Assuming you want to start at ASCII code 64, and that 'a' (or 'A') is simply 000001 in that case, then you can simply do

c1 = static_cast<char>(std::bitset<6>(arr[0]).to_ulong() + 64); // 

'A' in decimal is 65, in binary is 0b01000001. 'a' in decimal is 97, in binary is 0b01100001. In your code, you use a bitset<6> to store 'a' (or 'A'). A bitset<6> can only represent 2^6 symbols, i.e. 64, so you will encounter cutting. Basically the 2 most significant bits will be cut. In this case, bitset<6>('A') becomes 0b000001, i.e. 1 in decimal, and bitset<6>('a') becomes 0b1000001, i.e. 33 in decimal. You can now convince yourself that adding back 64 produces the right result.

EDIT

Note that you can also use std::stoi (C++11 only) to convert the bit string from base 2 to decimal, as mentioned in the other answers:

char c1 = static_cast<char>(std::stoi(arr[0], nullptr, 2) + 64);
6
  • Thanks mate can you explain a bit your code and then i will choose it best answer.
    – George
    Jun 1, 2015 at 22:54
  • @George added, see if it makes sense.
    – vsoftco
    Jun 1, 2015 at 23:07
  • Thanks @vsoftco can you explain the last line a bit more?
    – George
    Jun 1, 2015 at 23:19
  • @George the one with adding 64 (XOR) was a bit unnecessary, I deleted it. What I wanted to say is that 64 in binary is 0b01000000, and adding it to the 6-bit representation of a or A produces the right result. Although it's easier to do it in decimal, as I did in the main answer.
    – vsoftco
    Jun 1, 2015 at 23:24
  • Why don't you use a std::bitset<8> instead? In that case, it will have the same amount of bits as a char, so you won't have any truncation, and you won't need all this mumbo-jumbo with adding stuff like 64. In fact, even 7 bits are enough to represent all ASCII characters.
    – vsoftco
    Jun 1, 2015 at 23:26
1

Since you stated you no longer need the std::bitset after you convert from binary back to your char representation, you can avoid using it for the conversion.

static_cast<char>(std::stoi(arr[i],0,2) + 64);

Interprets the original binary representation as a base 2 (binary) number and adds 64. Since you have the original chars stored in a binary format in the arr array, you can pass them to std::stoi and specify that the values are base 2, in the 3rd parameter. std::stoi requires 3 parameters: the string you're trying to convert, a pointer to an int that will store the index of the first unconverted character (unneeded here,so can be left as 0), and the base of the string argument. Here's more info on that. The result of the std::stoi call is the base 10 (decimal) equivalent of the binary values. vsoftco's answer explains why adding 64 is the appropriate operation to do here after getting a decimal representation. The result of this is given back as a char.

If you can afford to use a larger std::bitset you can even scrap adding 64.

Here's a live demo:

Demo

1
  • Can you explain this part? (arr[i],0,2) Also thanks for the code :)
    – George
    Jun 1, 2015 at 23:23
1

consider the following:

 std::cout << "abc" << std::endl;

 std::cout << 'a' << 'b' << 'c' << std::endl;

 std::cout << std::dec
           << static_cast<int>('a') << " "
           << static_cast<int>('b') << " "
           << static_cast<int>('c')  << " "<< std::endl;

 std::cout << std::hex
           << static_cast<int>('a') << " "
           << static_cast<int>('b') << " "
           << static_cast<int>('c')  << " "<< std::endl;

with output

abc

abc

97 98 99

61 62 63

This shows that each char is binary, and 97 dec is 0x61 hex.

Conversion (to / from binary via bitset) is not necessary.

(or perhaps I am not understanding why you want to do nothing in a somewhat complicated fashion).

Note that static_cast<> causes no code gen. Note that std::dec and std::hex do no change to the data, just to the radix.

edit --- For only 8 bits, you might consider this ... no endian issues.

 std::cout << ((('a' >> 7) & 1) ? '1' : '0')
           << ((('a' >> 6) & 1) ? '1' : '0')
           << ((('a' >> 5) & 1) ? '1' : '0')
           << ((('a' >> 4) & 1) ? '1' : '0')
           << ((('a' >> 3) & 1) ? '1' : '0')
           << ((('a' >> 2) & 1) ? '1' : '0')
           << ((('a' >> 1) & 1) ? '1' : '0')
           << ((('a' >> 0) & 1) ? '1' : '0') << "  "
           << ((('b' >> 7) & 1) ? '1' : '0')
           << ((('b' >> 6) & 1) ? '1' : '0')
           << ((('b' >> 5) & 1) ? '1' : '0')
           << ((('b' >> 4) & 1) ? '1' : '0')
           << ((('b' >> 3) & 1) ? '1' : '0')
           << ((('b' >> 2) & 1) ? '1' : '0')
           << ((('b' >> 1) & 1) ? '1' : '0')
           << ((('b' >> 0) & 1) ? '1' : '0') << "  "
           << ((('c' >> 7) & 1) ? '1' : '0')
           << ((('c' >> 6) & 1) ? '1' : '0')
           << ((('c' >> 5) & 1) ? '1' : '0')
           << ((('c' >> 4) & 1) ? '1' : '0')
           << ((('c' >> 3) & 1) ? '1' : '0')
           << ((('c' >> 2) & 1) ? '1' : '0')
           << ((('c' >> 1) & 1) ? '1' : '0')
           << ((('c' >> 0) & 1) ? '1' : '0') << "  "
           << std::endl;


 std::cout << std::dec << std::endl;


 // with variable
 char zulu = 'A';

 std::cout << std::dec
           << "NOTE: in this cout, every use of zulu is a 'read' \n"
           << "   zulu: " << zulu                               << "  \n"

           << "   dec : " << std::dec << static_cast<int>(zulu) << "  \n"
           << "   --- : " << zulu                               << "  \n" // zulu not changed

           << "   hex : " << std::hex << static_cast<int>(zulu) << "  \n"
           << "   --- : " << zulu                               << "  \n" // zulu not changed

           << "   bin : "
           << (((zulu >> 7) & 1) ? '1' : '0')
           << (((zulu >> 6) & 1) ? '1' : '0')
           << (((zulu >> 5) & 1) ? '1' : '0')
           << (((zulu >> 4) & 1) ? '1' : '0')
           << (((zulu >> 3) & 1) ? '1' : '0')
           << (((zulu >> 2) & 1) ? '1' : '0')
           << (((zulu >> 1) & 1) ? '1' : '0')
           << (((zulu >> 0) & 1) ? '1' : '0')    << "  \n"
           << "   --- : " << zulu                               << "  \n" // zulu not changed

           << " bitset: " << std::bitset<8>(zulu)               << "  \n"
           << "   zulu: " << zulu                               << "  \n\nzulu not changed!" // zulu not changed

           << std::endl;
1
  • I need the binary values for some outputs i need to show. I am bit lost with your example :P i will try to understand it better when i get home. Thanks.
    – George
    Jun 1, 2015 at 23:12

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