I want to create a short GUID. Is there any way to create a short unique code like short GUID? I want to create a ticket tracking number.
-
3The shorter it is, the less unique it is (noting that Guid is not truly "unique"). How short? and could it come from, say, a database identity key?– Marc GravellNov 14, 2011 at 6:58
-
Is there a reason a GUID wont work?– Ritch MeltonNov 14, 2011 at 6:58
-
1@Lasse Parts of Guids aren't guaranteed to be unique.– Michael StumNov 14, 2011 at 6:59
-
2@Marc: you have more chance of winning the lottery 1000 times in a row than generating 2 equal GUIDs! ;)– Mitch WheatNov 14, 2011 at 7:02
-
2@Mitch exactly! there is a chance! the point I was trying to make is that the size is related to uniqueness, and that technically - technically even with a large number you aren't absolutely guaranteed unique. Understanding the context of the question is therefore key, hence the prompts here for more info.– Marc GravellNov 14, 2011 at 7:04
6 Answers
The length of GUID is 128bits(16bytes), so if you want to create a short GUID , you have to change GUID's encoding.
For instance, you can use base64 or ASCII85.
/// <summary>
/// Creates a GUID which is guaranteed not to equal the empty GUID
/// </summary>
/// <returns>A 24 character long string</returns>
public static string CreateGuid()
{
Guid guid = Guid.Empty;
while (Guid.Empty == guid)
{
guid = Guid.NewGuid();
}
// Uses base64 encoding the guid.(Or ASCII85 encoded)
// But not recommend using Hex, as it is less efficient.
return Convert.ToBase64String(guid.ToByteArray());
}
Jeff Atwood has an article on his blog how to shorten a GUID to 20 characters without losing information:
Coding Horror: Equipping our ASCII Armor
-
3Really good resource, but it would be helpful if you included enough information from the article to make a 20 character guid in case this article is ever removed from the internet. Feb 4, 2019 at 11:50
-
unique within one year, visibly 'random'
string UniqueID()
{
var t = DateTime.UtcNow;
long dgit = t.Millisecond * 1000000000L +
t.DayOfYear * 1000000L +
t.Hour * 10000L +
t.Minute * 100L +
t.Second;
return Convert.ToBase64String(BitConverter.GetBytes(dgit).Take(5).ToArray()).TrimEnd('=');
}
here's one with a customizable character set
string UniqueID(string CharList = "0123456789ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ")
{
var t = DateTime.UtcNow;
char[] charArray = CharList.ToCharArray();
var result = new Stack<char>();
var length = charArray.Length;
long dgit = 1000000000000L +
t.Millisecond * 1000000000L +
t.DayOfYear * 1000000L +
t.Hour * 10000L +
t.Minute * 100L +
t.Second;
while (dgit != 0)
{
result.Push(charArray[dgit % length]);
dgit /= length;
}
return new string(result.ToArray());
}
-
1Be aware that when using this method in a loop for example, it would generate the same ID over and over again untill a millisecond has passed. Sep 24, 2021 at 13:51
Really depends on your usage.
For example, if you were generating them at a pace less than 1 per second, you could just increment a 32bit int (1/4 the size of a 128bit GUID). That would last you a little over 68 years at the rate of 1 per second.
If you work out your usage, it should be pretty simple to work out the minimum size you can get away with. It will also depend if you want to be able to generate them anywhere, or if they will be generated by a single server or piece of software.
Try Base 36, to get unique number all you have to do is use an auto number, and save it as Base36. However in order for them to be random, you will need something else.
What I will do is, hash or encrypt the ticket number as ticket tracking code. Like,
code = Base36(MD5(ticketID+"my secrete"));
If you want tracking code to be unique then I will encrypt with some keys.
There is also am alternative library to convert Guid to a shorter 26-char text representation. Instead of Base64 encoding it uses Base32 dictionary, which is URL-safe and case-insensitive.
var guid = Guid.NewGuid(); // b392ebf5-88d3-49b9-9ad8-1d4a73431787
var shorterGuid = guid.ToShorterString(); // yrpt5gynl2wonaqs3p5baksrkw
NuGet link: https://www.nuget.org/packages/SourceExpress.ShorterGuid/
GitHub link: https://github.com/SourceExpress/shorter-guid