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Does .NET have a native function that is equivalent to PHP's base_convert or will I need to write my own? I want to convert from any base to any other base -- where either the 'to' base or the 'from' base can be any integer 2-36.

Example of the PHP function: base_convert($number_to_convert, $from_base, $to_base)

// convert 101 from binary to decimal
echo base_convert('101', 2, 10);
// 5

As noted by Luke in the comments of Jon Skeet's answer: Convert.ToString can't handle conversion to/from any arbitrary base, only 2, 8, 10 and 16

Update: Apparently, the answer is: no, there is no native way. Below, Erik shows one way to do this. Another implementation is here: http://www.codeproject.com/KB/macros/Convert.aspx

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3 Answers

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Here's some code that'll convert an integer to an arbitrary base up to 36, and convert a string representation of a base x value to an integer (given the base):

class Program {
	static void Main(string[] args) {
		int b10 = 123;
		int targetBase = 5;

		string converted = ConvertToBase(b10, targetBase);
		int convertedBack = ConvertFromBase(converted, targetBase);

		string base3 = "212210";
		string base7 = ConvertFromBaseToBase(base3, 3, 7);

		Console.WriteLine(converted);
		Console.WriteLine(convertedBack);
		Console.WriteLine(base7);
		Console.ReadLine();
	}

	private const string chars = "0123456789ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ";

	private static string ConvertToBase(int b10, int targetBase) {
		if (targetBase < 2) throw new ArgumentException("Target base must be greater than 2.", "targetBase");
		if (targetBase > 36) throw new ArgumentException("Target base must be less than 36.", "targetBase");

		if (targetBase == 10) return b10.ToString();

		StringBuilder result = new StringBuilder();

		while (b10 >= targetBase) {
			int mod = b10 % targetBase;
			result.Append(chars[mod]);
			b10 = b10 / targetBase;
		}

		result.Append(chars[b10]);

		return Reverse(result.ToString());
	}

	private static int ConvertFromBase(string bx, int fromBase) {
		if (fromBase < 2) throw new ArgumentException("Base must be greater than 2.", "fromBase");
		if (fromBase > 36) throw new ArgumentException("Base must be less than 36.", "fromBase");

		if (fromBase == 10) return int.Parse(bx);

		bx = Reverse(bx);
		int acc = 0;

		for (int i = 0; i < bx.Length; i++) {
			int charValue = chars.IndexOf(bx[i]);
			acc += (int)Math.Pow(fromBase, i) * charValue;
		}

		return acc;
	}

	public static string ConvertFromBaseToBase(string bx, int fromBase, int toBase) {
		int b10 = ConvertFromBase(bx, fromBase);
		return ConvertToBase(b10, toBase);
	}

	public static string Reverse(string s) {
		char[] charArray = new char[s.Length];
		int len = s.Length - 1;
		for (int i = 0; i <= len; i++)
			charArray[i] = s[len - i];
		return new string(charArray);
	}
}

If you're unconcerned with displaying these values, you can use extended characters in your chars set - if you stick to plain ascii, you can theoretically have base256 values. Going beyond that I would recommend not using chars, but instead using some other uniquely-identifiable value - though I don't much see the value.

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Nice but this doesn't allow for an arbitrary starting base. It assumes a starting base of 10 – Dinah Mar 26 at 18:48
Okay, updated to include a method that will convert from an arbitrary base to an arbitrary base... – Erik Mar 26 at 18:51
Very nice. Accepted! – Dinah Mar 26 at 18:57
Nice solution. I was about to mention elsewhere about how arbitrary bases is difficult beyond 36 because of running out of symbols to represent the digits. +1 – Jeff Yates Mar 26 at 18:58
Funny - I just addressed that in an edit. =P – Erik Mar 26 at 19:00
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vote up 10 vote down

EDIT: This answer is very convenient, but only works for bases 2, 8, 10 and 16

You can use Convert.ToInt32(text, base) and then Convert.ToString(number, base):

using System;

class Test
{
    static void Main()
    {
        int number = Convert.ToInt32("101", 2);
        string text = Convert.ToString(number, 10);
        Console.WriteLine(text); // Prints 5
    }
}

If you're converting to or from base 10, you don't need to specify that - it's the default.

Note that this only works for bases 2, 8, 10 and 16. If you want anything else, you'll have to write your own parser/formatter.

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6 whole seconds. – Jeff Yates Mar 26 at 17:48
Note that Convert.ToInt32 and Convert.ToString can't handle conversion to/from any arbitrary base, only 2, 8, 10 and 16. – Luke Mar 26 at 18:08
@Luke: you just beat me to it – Dinah Mar 26 at 18:11
@Jeff - if it took Jon only 6 seconds to post this response, then he typed the original response at a rate of ~9 words per second, or ~540 words per minute. @Jon - I want your keyboard. – Erik Mar 26 at 18:11
@Erik: No, he just beat me by 6 seconds to his initial response, which was not yet as complete as it stands now. I have now deleted my lesser and slower response, carrying over any portion of value to this one. He wrote the first draft in 20 seconds or so whereas mine took 26. Sigh. – Jeff Yates Mar 26 at 18:14
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vote up 1 vote down

In ConvertToBase, the following line:

while (b10 > targetBase)

...should be:

while (b10 >= targetBase)

Which takes care of the base number popping up in the converted number (e.g. converting "3" into base 3 yields "3" instead of "10").

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