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= Radix

* http://rubyworks.github.com/radix
* http://github.com/rubyworks/radix


== DESCRIPTION

Radix provides the means of converting to and from any base.

In addition, representational notations need not be in
ASCII order --any user-defined notation can be used up to
base 62.


== FEATURES/ISSUES

* Convert to and from any base.
* User-definable character set upto base 62.
* Defaults to standard base 62.
* Can be used to encode strings.


== RELEASE NOTES

Please see HISTORY file.


== SYNOPSIS

Base conversions with ASCII ordered notations are easy in Ruby.

  255.to_s(16)   #=> "FF"
  "FF".to_i(16)  #=> 255

But Ruby reaches it's limit at base 36.

  255.to_s(37)   #=> Error

Radix provides the means of converting to and from any base. For example,
a number in base 256, represented by the array [100, 10] (ie. 100 * 256 + 10 * 1),
can be converted to base 10 as follows:

  Radix.convert_base([100, 10], 256, 10)
  #=> [2,5,6,1,0]

And it can handle any string notation up to base 62.

  Radix.convert("10", 62, 10)  #=> "62"

The string notation need not be in ASCII order --odd notations
can be used.

  b10 = Radix.new([:Q, :W, :E, :R, :T, :Y, :U, :I, :O, :U])
  b10.convert("FF", 16) #=> "EYY"


== HOW TO INSTALL

To install with RubyGems simply open a console and type:

  gem install radix

Site installation requires Setup.rb (gem install setup),
then download the tarball package and type:

  tar -xvzf radix-1.0.0.tgz
  cd radix-1.0.0
  sudo setup.rb all

Windows users use 'ruby setup.rb all'.


== LINCENSE/COPYRIGHT

Copyright (c) 2009 Thomas Sawyer

This program is ditributed unser the terms of the LGPLv3 license.

See LICENSE file for details.

Version data entries

1 entries across 1 versions & 1 rubygems

Version Path
radix-1.1.0 README.rdoc