Files
FrenoCorp/node_modules/base-x
Michael Freno 7c684a42cc FRE-600: Fix code review blockers
- Consolidated duplicate UndoManagers to single instance
- Fixed connection promise to only resolve on 'connected' status
- Fixed WebSocketProvider import (WebsocketProvider)
- Added proper doc.destroy() cleanup
- Renamed isPresenceInitialized property to avoid conflict

Co-Authored-By: Paperclip <noreply@paperclip.ing>
2026-04-25 00:08:01 -04:00
..
2026-04-25 00:08:01 -04:00
2026-04-25 00:08:01 -04:00
2026-04-25 00:08:01 -04:00
2026-04-25 00:08:01 -04:00

base-x

NPM Package Build Status

js-standard-style

Fast base encoding / decoding of any given alphabet using bitcoin style leading zero compression.

WARNING: This module is NOT RFC3548 compliant, it cannot be used for base16 (hex), base32, or base64 encoding in a standards compliant manner.

Example

Base58

var BASE58 = '123456789ABCDEFGHJKLMNPQRSTUVWXYZabcdefghijkmnopqrstuvwxyz'
import basex from 'base-x'
var bs58 = basex(BASE58)

var decoded = bs58.decode('5Kd3NBUAdUnhyzenEwVLy9pBKxSwXvE9FMPyR4UKZvpe6E3AgLr')

console.log(decoded)
// => Uint8Array(33) [
//   128, 237, 219, 220,  17, 104, 241, 218,
//   234, 219, 211, 228,  76,  30,  63, 143,
//    90,  40,  76,  32,  41, 247, 138, 210,
//   106, 249, 133, 131, 164, 153, 222,  91,
//    25
// ]

console.log(bs58.encode(decoded))
// => 5Kd3NBUAdUnhyzenEwVLy9pBKxSwXvE9FMPyR4UKZvpe6E3AgLr

Alphabets

See below for a list of commonly recognized alphabets, and their respective base.

Base Alphabet
2 01
8 01234567
11 0123456789a
16 0123456789abcdef
32 0123456789ABCDEFGHJKMNPQRSTVWXYZ
32 ybndrfg8ejkmcpqxot1uwisza345h769 (z-base-32)
36 0123456789abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz
58 123456789ABCDEFGHJKLMNPQRSTUVWXYZabcdefghijkmnopqrstuvwxyz
62 0123456789abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyzABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ
64 ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZabcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz0123456789+/
67 ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZabcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz0123456789-_.!~

How it works

It encodes octet arrays by doing long divisions on all significant digits in the array, creating a representation of that number in the new base. Then for every leading zero in the input (not significant as a number) it will encode as a single leader character. This is the first in the alphabet and will decode as 8 bits. The other characters depend upon the base. For example, a base58 alphabet packs roughly 5.858 bits per character.

This means the encoded string 000f (using a base16, 0-f alphabet) will actually decode to 4 bytes unlike a canonical hex encoding which uniformly packs 4 bits into each character.

While unusual, this does mean that no padding is required and it works for bases like 43.

LICENSE MIT

A direct derivation of the base58 implementation from bitcoin/bitcoin, generalized for variable length alphabets.