130

In a UNIX shell script, what can I use to convert decimal numbers into hexadecimal? I thought od would do the trick, but it's not realizing I'm feeding it ASCII representations of numbers.

printf? Gross! Using it for now, but what else is available?

2
  • 10
    I have to ask, what's gross about printf? Many common programming languages support printf-like formatting, so the printf solutions below would surely be the easiest for developers to understand. Nov 29, 2013 at 0:30
  • 5
    Boy, I don't know - that was five years ago! I think maybe I thought it wasn't true shell or something.
    – skiphoppy
    Dec 6, 2013 at 3:36

13 Answers 13

219

Tried printf(1)?

printf "%x\n" 34
22

There are probably ways of doing that with builtin functions in all shells but it would be less portable. I've not checked the POSIX sh specs to see whether it has such capabilities.

7
  • 7
    It's doesn't get much more POSIX than printf. This even works in "sh". May 11, 2012 at 22:50
  • 5
    printf isn't aribtrary precision. bc is. for example, taking 238862874857408875879219909679752457540 as input, printf gives us "Result too large". the BC method works great for things larger than a standard int/long/bigint
    – Andrew
    Sep 1, 2014 at 6:52
  • 6
    And, if you want uppercase letters in hex, use printf "%X" with uppercase X.
    – andrybak
    Sep 30, 2015 at 11:34
  • 7
    And to force an output like "0x00", you can use printf "0x%02X"
    – gbetous
    Dec 18, 2017 at 7:02
  • 3
    And don't forget the -v VAR as in printf -v VAR "%x" 34 && echo $VAR
    – Matthieu
    Aug 17, 2018 at 16:38
121
echo "obase=16; 34" | bc

If you want to filter a whole file of integers, one per line:

( echo "obase=16" ; cat file_of_integers ) | bc
9
  • 3
    @skiphoppy: If you write: echo "obase=16; 12 34 56" | bc you get 1E240, just the same as if you wrote: echo "obase=16; 123456" | bc. So the way to deal with arbitrary numbers of integers all on one line is to put each number on its own line: tr ' ' '\015' <input | bc (map blanks to newlines). Dec 25, 2008 at 20:40
  • 3
    This is great if you happen to have 'bc', but 'printf' is part of bash itself
    – fuzzyTew
    Jul 12, 2013 at 10:29
  • 2
    @Bill Karwin, or zsh, or busybox, but maybe not some shell I haven't tried? I don't keep plain sh installed anymore but clearly skiphoppy is looking for what other options there are
    – fuzzyTew
    Jul 13, 2013 at 21:48
  • 2
    @Sridhar-Sarnobat, this is decimal to hexadecimal. I assume you mean convert hex to dec. To do that, set ibase=16. You might like to read the manual on bc for more details. May 28, 2015 at 1:58
  • 2
    you would like to add that bc is case sensitive. meaning echo "ibase=16; dead" | bc will not work, you need to do echo "ibase=16; DEAD" | bc, I was bit surprised by this
    – graywolf
    Aug 18, 2016 at 11:18
79

Hexidecimal to decimal:

$ echo $((0xfee10000))
4276158464

Decimal to hexadecimal:

$ printf '%x\n' 26
1a
0
18
bash-4.2$ printf '%x\n' 4294967295
ffffffff

bash-4.2$ printf -v hex '%x' 4294967295
bash-4.2$ echo $hex
ffffffff
3
  • 2
    -v VAR is a bash extension. Not mentioned in the man page, revealed only if one calls printf without arguments
    – Adrian W
    Oct 24, 2018 at 10:19
  • 3
    @AdrianW it's in the manual: gnu.org/software/bash/manual/bash.html#Bash-Builtins
    – Roland
    Jul 20, 2021 at 12:34
  • @AdrianW There's no dedicated man page for it because it's a bash builtin. Those are documented in man bash. Or, as with any builtin, you can do help printf. (man printf shows documentation for the separate, standalone program printf.)
    – B Layer
    Aug 25, 2023 at 0:09
7

Sorry my fault, try this...

#!/bin/bash
:

declare -r HEX_DIGITS="0123456789ABCDEF"

dec_value=$1
hex_value=""

until [ $dec_value == 0 ]; do

    rem_value=$((dec_value % 16))
    dec_value=$((dec_value / 16))

    hex_digit=${HEX_DIGITS:$rem_value:1}

    hex_value="${hex_digit}${hex_value}"

done

echo -e "${hex_value}"

Example:

$ ./dtoh 1024
400
2
  • 2
    Thanks this helped a lot for env. where printf and hex commands are not available.
    – benchuk
    Jan 4, 2015 at 7:16
  • 4
    @benchuk where is printf not available?
    – Matthieu
    Aug 17, 2018 at 16:52
5

Try:

printf "%X\n" ${MY_NUMBER}
2
  • 1
    What is the difference between $MY_NUMBER and ${MY_NUMBER} ?
    – SasQ
    Sep 5, 2020 at 4:43
  • 1
    @SasQ using brackets forces interpretation of the symbol that you intended to be used, i.e. just MY_NUMBER. Using brackets allows you to do things like ${MY_TEXT_FRAG_${MY_NUMBER}} to concatenate variable names.
    – Rob Wells
    Sep 7, 2020 at 16:08
3

In my case, I stumbled upon one issue with using printf solution:

$ printf "%x" 008 bash: printf: 008: invalid octal number

The easiest way was to use solution with bc, suggested in post higher:

$ bc <<< "obase=16; 008" 8

2
  • What does your solution add to the ones written years before?
    – Matthieu
    Aug 17, 2018 at 16:53
  • 1
    @Matthieu It mentions the issue of numbers with leading zeros, which Bash printf unhelpfully interprets as octal, and demonstrates a solution that avoids the problem.
    – mwfearnley
    Oct 21, 2019 at 14:56
3

In zsh you can do this sort of thing:

% typeset -i 16 y
% print $(( [#8] x = 32, y = 32 ))
8#40
% print $x $y
8#40 16#20
% setopt c_bases
% print $y
0x20

Example taken from zsh docs page about Arithmetic Evaluation.

I believe Bash has similar capabilities.

2
xd() {
    printf "hex> "
    while read i
    do
        printf "dec  $(( 0x${i} ))\n\nhex> "
    done
}
dx() {
    printf "dec> "
    while read i
    do
        printf 'hex  %x\n\ndec> ' $i
    done
}
1
# number conversion.

while `test $ans='y'`
do
    echo "Menu"
    echo "1.Decimal to Hexadecimal"
    echo "2.Decimal to Octal"
    echo "3.Hexadecimal to Binary"
    echo "4.Octal to Binary"
    echo "5.Hexadecimal to  Octal"
    echo "6.Octal to Hexadecimal"
    echo "7.Exit"

    read choice
    case $choice in

        1) echo "Enter the decimal no."
           read n
           hex=`echo "ibase=10;obase=16;$n"|bc`
           echo "The hexadecimal no. is $hex"
           ;;

        2) echo "Enter the decimal no."
           read n
           oct=`echo "ibase=10;obase=8;$n"|bc`
           echo "The octal no. is $oct"
           ;;

        3) echo "Enter the hexadecimal no."
           read n
           binary=`echo "ibase=16;obase=2;$n"|bc`
           echo "The binary no. is $binary"
           ;;

        4) echo "Enter the octal no."
           read n
           binary=`echo "ibase=8;obase=2;$n"|bc`
           echo "The binary no. is $binary"
           ;;

        5) echo "Enter the hexadecimal no."
           read n
           oct=`echo "ibase=16;obase=8;$n"|bc`
           echo "The octal no. is $oct"
           ;;

        6) echo "Enter the octal no."
           read n
           hex=`echo "ibase=8;obase=16;$n"|bc`
           echo "The hexadecimal no. is $hex"
           ;;

        7) exit 
        ;;
        *) echo "invalid no." 
        ;;

    esac
done
1

This is not a shell script, but it is the cli tool I'm using to convert numbers among bin/oct/dec/hex:

    #!/usr/bin/perl

    if (@ARGV < 2) {
      printf("Convert numbers among bin/oct/dec/hex\n");
      printf("\nUsage: base b/o/d/x num num2 ... \n");
      exit;
    }

    for ($i=1; $i<@ARGV; $i++) {
      if ($ARGV[0] eq "b") {
                    $num = oct("0b$ARGV[$i]");
      } elsif ($ARGV[0] eq "o") {
                    $num = oct($ARGV[$i]);
      } elsif ($ARGV[0] eq "d") {
                    $num = $ARGV[$i];
      } elsif ($ARGV[0] eq "h") {
                    $num = hex($ARGV[$i]);
      } else {
                    printf("Usage: base b/o/d/x num num2 ... \n");
                    exit;
      }
      printf("0x%x = 0d%d = 0%o = 0b%b\n", $num, $num, $num, $num);
    }
1

For those who would like to use variables, first export it by running:

export NUM=100

Then run:

printf "%x\n" $NUM

Else, you can you can ignore the use case of the variables and run it directly as shown below:

printf "%x\n" 100

NB:Substitute NUM with the variable name of your choice.

Exporting makes it an environmental variable(global).

-2

Wow, I didn't realize that printf was available at the shell!

With that said, I'm surprised no-one commented about putting the printf into a shell script (which then you could put in your personal bin directory if you wanted).

echo "printf "0x%x\n" $1" > hex chmod +x hex

Now just run: ./hex 123

It returns: 0x7b

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