1.1 KiB
Description
encoding.binary
contains utility functions for converting between an array of bytes ([]u8
)
and unsigned integers of various widths (u16
, u32
, and u64
).
There are two ways in which bytes can be encoded:
- Little endian: The least significant bytes are stored first, followed by the most significant bytes.
- Big endian: The most significant bytes are stored first, opposite to the little endian convention.
For example, let us take the number 0x12345678
. In little endian, the bytes are extracted as
0x78
, 0x56
, 0x34
, and 0x12
. In big endian, the bytes are 0x12
, 0x34
, 0x56
,
and 0x78
.
We follow a similar procedure when we want to go the other way around. Consider the second
sequence of bytes in the previous example: 0x12
, 0x34
, 0x56
, and 0x78
. If we encode
this sequence in little endian format, we get the integer 0x78563412
. If we encode this
sequence in big endian, we get 0x12345678
.
Note
The functions in this module assume appropriately sized u8 arrays. If the sizes are not valid, the functions will panic.