show/hide this revision's text 2 Fix little-endian issue; deleted 1 characters in body; added 4 characters in body
// Swapping is necessary because x86 is little-endian.
function BytesToHex(const Swap32(value: Integer): Integer;
asm
  bswap eax
end;

function FourBytesToHex(const bytes: TBytes): string;
var
  IntBytes: PInteger;
  FullResult: string;
begin
  Assert(Length(bytes) = SizeOf(IntBytes^));
  IntBytes := PInteger(bytes);
  FullResult := IntToHex(IntBytes^IntToHex(Swap32(IntBytes^), 8);
  Result := FullResult[2] + FullResult[4] + FullResult[6] + FullResult[8];
end;

If that last line looks a little strange, it's because you requested a four-byte array be turned into a four-character string, whereas in the general case, eight hexadecimal digits are required to represent a four-byte value. I'm simply assumed that your byte values are all below 16, so only one hexadecimal digit is needed. If your example was a typo, then simply replace the last two lines with this one:

Result := IntToHex(IntBytes^IntToHex(Swap32(IntBytes^), 8);

By the way, your requirement forbidding loops will not be met. IntToHex uses a loop internally.

show/hide this revision's text 1
function BytesToHex(const bytes: TBytes): string;
var
  IntBytes: PInteger;
  FullResult: string;
begin
  Assert(Length(bytes) = SizeOf(IntBytes^));
  IntBytes := PInteger(bytes);
  FullResult := IntToHex(IntBytes^, 8);
  Result := FullResult[2] + FullResult[4] + FullResult[6] + FullResult[8];
end;

If that last line looks a little strange, it's because you requested a four-byte array be turned into a four-character string, whereas in the general case, eight hexadecimal digits are required to represent a four-byte value. I'm simply assumed that your byte values are all below 16, so only one hexadecimal digit is needed. If your example was a typo, then simply replace the last two lines with this one:

Result := IntToHex(IntBytes^, 8);

By the way, your requirement forbidding loops will not be met. IntToHex uses a loop internally.