426

In Javascript, window.atob() method decodes a base64 string and window.btoa() method encodes a string into base64.

Then why weren't they named like base64Decode() and base64Encode()? atob() and btoa() don't make sense because they're not semantic at all.

I want to know the reason.

4
  • I too was convinced that atob and btoa were named backwards, being A the original string and B the encoded string, it was an unfortunate conicidence Base64 shared the initial with the encoded string B. Piling up on the confusion is the fact that I started using Linux only during the last decade, Linux provided the base64 program so I never had to know that btoa did the same. I hardly question naming choices, but after many years I just had to know.
    – Minkiele
    Dec 12, 2019 at 11:32
  • You could go function abes46neoced(a){return swab(swab(atob(a)))); but you would need to write your own swab function. Jul 10, 2020 at 1:39
  • 2
    It's because the 'b' in a atob stands for binary, not base64. ASCII is base64 encoded, and strings are binary. Jun 27, 2021 at 18:00
  • @janac ASCII is NOT base64, if anything, one could maybe argue base64 is a subset of ASCII. But that's not really true either, it just gets represented by alphanumeric symbols we all recognize. ASCII was originally designed with 7 bits aka base128 and the newer utf-8 format and now utf-16 are the most common. Base256 and base65536. But no one calls them that. Base64 was "created" and used to ensure older incompatible devices could talk, since some used 7bits and some used 6bits for network communication. Base64 is 6 bits so it worked on both. Sep 23, 2021 at 3:56

5 Answers 5

237

I asked Brendan Eich (the creator of JavaScript) if he picked those names on Twitter and he responded:

Old Unix names, hard to find man pages rn but see https://www.unix.com/man-page/minix/1/btoa/ …. The names carried over from Unix into the Netscape codebase. I reflected them into JS in a big hurry in 1995 (after the ten days in May but soon).

In case the Minix link breaks, here's the man page content:

BTOA(1)                                           BTOA(1)

NAME
       btoa - binary to ascii conversion

SYNOPSIS
       btoa [-adhor] [infile] [outfile]

OPTIONS
       -a     Decode, rather than encode, the file

       -d     Extracts repair file from diagnosis file

       -h     Help menu is displayed giving the options

       -o     The obsolete algorithm is used for backward compatibility

       -r     Repair a damaged file

EXAMPLES
       btoa <a.out >a.btoa # Convert a.out to ASCII

       btoa -a <a.btoa >a.out
               # Reverse the above

DESCRIPTION
       Btoa  is  a  filter that converts a binary file to ascii for transmission over a telephone
       line.  If two file names are provided, the first in used for input and the second for out-
       put.   If  only one is provided, it is used as the input file.  The program is a function-
       ally similar alternative to uue/uud, but the encoding is completely different.  Since both
       of  these are widely used, both have been provided with MINIX.  The file is expanded about
       25 percent in the process.

SEE ALSO
       uue(1), uud(1).
2
  • 50
    Well, this is the actual answer to OP's question.
    – Ivan Filho
    Aug 22, 2019 at 21:07
  • In my head, I always expanded the functions to asciiToBase64 and base64ToAscii, which always confuses me, since they actually do the exact opposite of that. That answer finally provides a good explanation that even makes some sense. Hope my brain will be able to pick that up :) Sep 28 at 9:25
218

The atob() and btoa() methods allow authors to transform content to and from the base64 encoding.

In these APIs, for mnemonic purposes, the "b" can be considered to stand for "binary", and the "a" for "ASCII". In practice, though, for primarily historical reasons, both the input and output of these functions are Unicode strings.

From : http://www.w3.org/TR/html/webappapis.html#atob

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  • 127
    But it's backward. atob() converts binary to ASCII, and btoa() converts ASCII to binary.
    – 2540625
    Feb 29, 2016 at 21:58
  • 82
    ascii is base64, and atob is ascii to binary. they kind of left this out of both answers. so it isn't reversed
    – AKnox
    Aug 5, 2016 at 13:00
  • 21
    So the String is Binary?! And I thought all the time, binary was something like 0 and 1. This is SO CONFUSING! Nov 1, 2016 at 12:05
  • 12
    @StefanRein I agree with your opinion. window.btoa read its argument as binary data and split it into 6 bits of chunks in order to encode it; it's true, so the naming makes sense in a point of view. However, also, window.btoa only takes a string as its argument! :( Nov 16, 2016 at 10:24
  • 9
    @K._ > "However, also, window.btoa only takes a string as its argument!" < That's true but the string here is only a representation of the data. Like if you try to open an image in a notepad it'll display as a string but it's still binary data. btoa's main advantage is that it doesn't care what format the string is in, it just treats it as binary. It's only incidental that in most cases that string happens to be a regular string. Dec 9, 2016 at 14:18
185

To sum up the already given answers:

  • atob stands for ASCII to binary
    • e.g.: atob("ZXhhbXBsZSELCg==") == "example!^K"
  • btoa stands for binary to ASCII
    • e.g.: btoa("\x01\x02\xfe\xff") == "AQL+/w=="

Why ASCII and binary:

  • ASCII (the a) is the result of base64 encoding. A safe text composed only of a subset of ascii characters(*) that can be correctly represented and transported (e.g. email's body),
  • binary (the b) is any stream of 0s and 1s (in javascript it must be represented with a string type).

(*) in base64 these are limited to: A-Z, a-z, 0-9, +, / and = (padding, only at the end) https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Base64

P.S. I must admit I myself was initially confused by the naming and thought the names were swapped. I thought that b stand for "base64 encoded string" and a for "any string" :D.

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  • 15
    I think you basically just proved everyone's point: base64 is a subset of ASCII, therefore while you might argue that the output of btoa is still technically ASCII, there's no justification for the name atob which only accepts base64 as input.
    – devios1
    May 25, 2018 at 14:53
  • 4
    It helps to think and remember 'a'(ascii) as base64 output and 'b'(binary) as stream of 0 and 1 which is string. May 25, 2019 at 9:48
85
+50

The names come from a unix function with similar functionality, but you can already read that in other answers here.


Here is my mnemonic to remember which one to use. This doesn't really answer the question itself, but might help people figure which one of the functions to use without keeping a tab open on this question on stack overflow all day long.

Beautiful to Awful btoa

Take something Beautiful (aka, beautiful content that would make sense to your application: json, xml, text, binary data) and transform it to something Awful, that cannot be understood as is (aka: encoded).

Awful to Beautiful atob

The exact opposite of btoa

Note

Some may say that binary is not beautiful, but hey, this is only a trick to help you.

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  • 1
    This mnemonic seems far more confusing than just remembering what the name is actually meant to stand for, which is "Binary to ASCII". It's pretty unintuitive that in your mnemonic, binary content that may literally not even contain printable characters is meant to be "beautiful" while the ASCII content is "awful".
    – Mark Amery
    Sep 25 at 10:55
8

I can't locate a source at the moment, but it is common knowledge that in this case, the b stands for 'binary', and the a for 'ASCII'.

Therefore, the functions are actually named:

ASCII to Binary for atob(), and Binary to ASCII for btoa().

Note this is browser implementation, and was left for legacy / backwards-compatibility purposes. In Node.js for example, these don't exist.

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  • 4
    In Node you use Buffer.from("Hello World").toString('base64') & Buffer.from("SGVsbG8gV29ybGQ=", 'base64').toString('ascii')
    – Nanoo
    Jun 8, 2020 at 4:07

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