In Java, I can encode a BigInteger
as:
java.math.BigInteger bi = new java.math.BigInteger("65537L");
String encoded = Base64.encodeBytes(bi.toByteArray(), Base64.ENCODE|Base64.DONT_GUNZIP);
// result: 65537L encodes as "AQAB" in Base64
byte[] decoded = Base64.decode(encoded, Base64.DECODE|Base64.DONT_GUNZIP);
java.math.BigInteger back = new java.math.BigInteger(decoded);
In C#:
System.Numerics.BigInteger bi = new System.Numerics.BigInteger("65537L");
string encoded = Convert.ToBase64(bi);
byte[] decoded = Convert.FromBase64String(encoded);
System.Numerics.BigInteger back = new System.Numerics.BigInteger(decoded);
How can I encode long integers in Python as Base64-encoded strings? What I've tried so far produces results different from implementations in other languages (so far I've tried in Java and C#), particularly it produces longer-length Base64-encoded strings.
import struct
encoded = struct.pack('I', (1<<16)+1).encode('base64')[:-1]
# produces a longer string, 'AQABAA==' instead of the expected 'AQAB'
When using this Python code to produce a Base64-encoded string, the resulting decoded integer in Java (for example) produces instead 16777472
in place of the expected 65537
. Firstly, what am I missing?
Secondly, I have to figure out by hand what is the length format to use in struct.pack
; and if I'm trying to encode a long number (greater than (1<<64)-1
) the 'Q'
format specification is too short to hold the representation. Does that mean that I have to do the representation by hand, or is there an undocumented format specifier for the struct.pack
function? (I'm not compelled to use struct
, but at first glance it seemed to do what I needed.)
struct.pack
has trailing\x00
characters which yield the extra padding. Does that mean that I have to trim the extra padding manually?<<
the wrong way roundhex(16777472)
is0x1000100
, whilehex(65537)
is0x10001
. Does that help you figure out what's going on?