I need to convert an unsigned 64-bit integer into a string. That is in Base 36, or characters 0-Z. ulltoa does not exist in the Linux manpages. But sprintf DOES. How do I use sprintf to achieve t开发者_开发知识库he desired result? i.e. what formatting % stuff?
Or if snprintf does not work, then how do I do this?
You can always just write your own conversion function. The following idea is stolen from heavily inspired by this fine answer:
char * int2base36(unsigned int n, char * buf, size_t buflen)
{
static const char digits[] = "0123456789ABCDEFGHI...";
if (buflen < 1) return NULL; // buffer too small!
char * b = buf + buflen;
*--b = 0;
do {
if (b == buf) return NULL; // buffer too small!
*--b = digits[n % 36];
n /= 36;
} while(n);
return b;
}
This will return a pointer to a null-terminated string containing the base36-representation of n
, placed in a buffer that you provide. Usage:
char buf[100];
std::cout << int2base36(37, buf, 100);
If you want and you're single-threaded, you can also make the char buffer static -- I guess you can figure out a suitable maximal length:
char * int2base36_not_threadsafe(unsigned int n)
{
static char buf[128];
static const size_t buflen = 128;
// rest as above
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