Why are there dashes in a .NET GUID? Are there dashes in most implementations of a GUID, or is it just a Microsoft thing?
Signed,
741ecf77-9c92-4435-8e6b-85975bd13452
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Technically, there are no "dashes" in a GUID. A GUID is a 128-bit value which is usually stored in the following manner (using C# here to represent the structure):
The dashes are in the string representation of a GUID. The dashes are optional and are not required in a string representation of a GUID. That said, there are historical reasons as to where the placement of the dashes are, related to how the GUIDs were generated, but that historical semantic no longer applies. |
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In the original incarnation of the UUID (Universally Unique Identifier) specification each of the data elements had a meaning: time_low - time_mid - time_high_and_version - clock_seq_and_reserved clock_seq_low - node_id (MAC Address) These elements were meant originally to provide temporal and spatial uniqueness. In the latest versions of the UUID spec these data elements no longer have any specific meaning, for various reasons (security, privacy), except for the version bits and the reserved bits. Version 3 UUIDs are derived from an MD5 hash of a URI or other Distinguished Name, Version 4 is generated with random data and Version 5 is derived from a SHA1 hash. So these hyphens are part of the historical data format of the original UUID spec. and are not necessary to provide entropy in any of the versions. However, these hyphens are still specified for use in the string representation of UUIDs today in order to produce a URN (Uniform Resource Name). UUIDs are sometimes stored as a base64 or ascii85 encoded string to save space when adherence to the RFC is not required (though binary storage is most space efficient): Ascii: 3F2504E0-4F89-11D3-9A0C-0305E82C3301 Base64: 7QDBkvCA1+B9K/U0vrQx1A Ascii85: 5:$Hj:Pf\4RLB9%kU\Lj References: |
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Hyphens denote the byte structure of a Guid.
For:
You can probably strip them before saving. At least in .NET the constructor of the Guid type will initialize a Guid variable from its string representation regardless of whether the hyphens are still there or removed. |
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It's just a convenience. |
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You can get your guid in various formats. Assuming you're using c#:
63be6f7e4e564f0580229f958f492077
63be6f7e-4e56-4f05-8022-9f958f492077
{63be6f7e-4e56-4f05-8022-9f958f492077}
(63be6f7e-4e56-4f05-8022-9f958f492077) |
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This is an example of chunking, just like phone numbers, credit card numbers, etc. |
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Just about every visual represenation of a guid that I've seen uses the dashed format. It's much easier on the eyes. |
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The |
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The hyphens are used to separate each number E93416C5-9377-4A1D-8390-7E57D439C9E7
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That's just for convenience. GUID consists of 16 bytes which makes up 32 characters in hex text representation. Without hyphens GUIDs are harder to perceive by humans and harder to be recognized as GUIDs and not some random nature 16-byte numbers. |
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If you want to store a guid somewhere, then store it as an array of 16 bytes, not as its textual representation. You will save a lot of space, and the question of hyphens will not arise. |
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The GUID is really just a number. The hyphens show you how the various components are broken down but aren't really part of the number. It's like an IP address - you can store a 32-bit number, or you can store a string with dots in it, they are equivalent. |
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The hypens have avsolutely no effect on the uniqueness or randomness of the value. They are merely a holdover from the definition of a GUID and visually separate the four distinct parts of data that make up the GUID. |
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