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Ben Nadel at cf.Objective() 2014 (Bloomington, MN) with: Matthew Orstad
Ben Nadel at cf.Objective() 2014 (Bloomington, MN) with: Matthew Orstad ( @rocketmidwest )

Exploring ColdFusion InputBaseN() And FormatBaseN() Functions

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As part of my ColdFusion calendar system, I got into fooling around with some colors. I didn't end up going in that particular direction, but it got me messing around with both the ColdFusion functions, InputBaseN() and FormatBaseN(), neither of which I had ever used before. They do very simple but very powerful calculations for you.

InputBaseN( strValue, intRadix ) - This takes a numeric value and the radix that defines the numeric value and converts it to our standard base 10 format.

FormatBaseN( strValue, intRadix ) - This takes a base 10 value (what we use all the time) and converts it to a number with the given radix.

Using the ColdFusion InputBaseN() function, we can easily do things like convert HEX (hexadecimal) color values to RGB (red-green-blue) decimal values:

<!--- Start out with a base HEX web color. --->
<cfset strHEX = "FFCC00" />

<!---
	Get the red, green, and blue parts (each two
	characters of the given HEX value).
--->
<cfset strRed = Mid( strHEX, 1, 2 ) />
<cfset strGreen = Mid( strHEX, 3, 2 ) />
<cfset strBlue = Mid( strHEX, 5, 2 ) />

<!---
	Convert the HEX colors to RGB decimal colors
	where 0x00 = 00 and 0xFF = 255. HEX is base
	16 and we want to convert to base 10 (our
	standard number system).
--->
Red : #strRed# : #InputBaseN( strRed, 16 )#<br />
Green : #strGreen# : #InputBaseN( strGreen, 16 )#<br />
Blue : #strBlue# : #InputBaseN( strBlue, 16 )#<br />

Running the above code, we get the following output:

Red : FF : 255
Green : CC : 204
Blue : 00 : 0

We can also easily convert bit/binary values to decimal:

<!--- Loop over BIT values. --->
<cfloop
	index="strBits"
	list="0:1:10:11:100:110:111:1000:1100:1110:1111"
	delimiters=":">

	<!---
		Convert the bits to integers. Bits are in
		base 2 and we are converting to base 10 (our
		standard number system).
	--->
	#strBits# : #InputBaseN( strBits, 2 )#<br />

</cfloop>

Running the above code, we get the following output:

0 : 0
1 : 1
10 : 2
11 : 3
100 : 4
110 : 6
111 : 7
1000 : 8
1100 : 12
1110 : 14
1111 : 15

Pretty easy stuff! And, as easy as that is, ColdFusion's FormatBaseN() function makes it just as easy to go the other way, such as converting RGB values to HEX values. The only thing that complicates this conversion is that we need a 6-digit HEX value (at least if you are cool, you do), and there is nothing about FormatBaseN() that enforces this. So, in addition to actually changing the base radix, we also need to check the value lengths:

<!--- Set up our basic Red/Green/Blue color values. --->
<cfset intRed = 255 />
<cfset intGreen = 14 />
<cfset intBlue = 128 />

<!---
	Now, we can create HEX numbers using RGB values. When
	creating the colors, things are little more complicated
	because we need a 6 digit value, but simply converting
	base 10 to hex might not give us two digit values for
	each color.
--->
<cfset strRed = FormatBaseN( intRed, 16 ) />
<cfset strGreen = FormatBaseN( intGreen, 16 ) />
<cfset strBlue = FormatBaseN( intBlue, 16 ) />

<!--- Now, make sure they have two digits. --->
<cfif (Len( strRed ) EQ 1)>
	<cfset strRed = ("0" & strRed) />
</cfif>
<cfif (Len( strGreen ) EQ 1)>
	<cfset strGreen = ("0" & strGreen) />
</cfif>
<cfif (Len( strBlue ) EQ 1)>
	<cfset strBlue = ("0" & strBlue) />
</cfif>

<!--- Combine the RGB HEX values to get the color HEX. --->
<cfset strHEX = UCase(
	strRed &
	strGreen &
	strBlue
	) />

<!--- Output HEX value. --->
#strHEX#

Running the above code, we get the following output:

FF0E80

So anyway, I didn't end up using these yet, but it's great to know that this functionality exists. If it didn't, I would probably have to end up doing manual multiplication and division and stuff - certainly not something we should be wasting our times on.

Want to use code from this post? Check out the license.

Reader Comments

4 Comments

Very nice! This will help me when converting colors in some server-side font and image manipulation tools I use that require decimal color values. I know a lot of hex color values by heart, but not many equivalent decimal values.

2 Comments

I am using InputBaseN to convert IP addresses to decimal (dotted-decimal to binary to decimal); it works for lower-numbered addresses (such as 10.0.0.0), but returns a negative number for higher-numbered addresses (such as 192.0.0.0). It seems its treating the variable like a signed int? Any ideas?

2 Comments

It's for an application that maps a specific user login to one or a range of network addresses. This permits assignment of a "default account" to workstations per the logical/physical network on which they reside (e.g. different campus locations). I convert to decimal to make the comparison to configured network address ranges mathematically simple. All dotted-decimal IP addresses are fundamentally decimal numbers; dotted decimal is a rather arbitrary notation, but it makes network classification, routing, subnet and supernet masking possible.

The process is convert each portion of the dotted-decimal IP address (from CGI variable) to binary, pad the binary to 8 chars where needed (the second, third and forth values need to be 8 chars), concatenate the result (creating the binary equivalent of the dotted-decimal) then convert to decimal.

When the first decimal is small e.g. 10.x.x.x (usually used for internal private networks), InputBaseN works fine - when the first decimal number is large e.g. 192.x.x.x (also used for internal private networks) or 169.x.x.x (Microsoft private assigned in absence of DHCP) the decimal value returned is negative.

15,688 Comments

@Tom,

Ok, I see what you are trying to do. I would check with Michael Dinowitz over on www.blogoffusion.com. He often converts IP addresses to integers for database storage (I believe). I think he will be able to give you better advice than I can.

2 Comments

Dave, I know this is now 2010, but in case you or anyone else is still wondering, the MaxMind database you're talking about stores its IP address in decimal format to support faster lookups.

The way they do it is this:

Take an IP address - e.g. 1.2.3.4

The numerical representation for the IP is:

(1 * 256 * 256 * 256) + (2 * 256 * 256) + (3 * 256) + 4

This will give you a maximum of a 10-digit number.

This makes it easier to match an IP address against a range, just by using BETWEEN in SQL.

15,688 Comments

@Dave, @Erich,

I'm still not great on bit-wise manipulation; but, is the multiples of 256 basically a mathematical way to perform bit-shifting?

3 Comments

@Ben: yes, however coldfusion bit shifting operate on signed integer, which is not good for this operation.

@Tom: Personnally i use the following to convert from dotted decimal to decimal:

<cfset ipdec = 0>
<cfloop list="#ip_source#" delimiters="." index="i">
<cfset ipdec=ipdec*256 + i>
</cfloop>

3 Comments

I found this to be very interesting and quite useful for some IP stuff I need to work on, but forgive me for asking...

In the example by Silmaril, using 216.201.6.99 as an example IP, how do I convert 3637053027 backwards to the original IP?

3 Comments

@Dave,

I have a few old isp e-mails that I can throw out that are generally safe if you want to share the code, or you're welcome to toss me a link to a "hidden" page with the code displayed if that's your choice. Either works.

Feel free to try phobos[at]bright[dot]net

I'd be appreciative!

8 Comments

I'm using formatbaseN with radix 36 to convert Social Security Numbers of our employees into badge barcodes :) Pretty neat way to generate unique nice looking badges:)

15,688 Comments

@Dmitry,

This sounds cool, but I am not sure I understand the mechanics. Does base36 help you create bar codes (I've never worked with bar codes before).

8 Comments

Base 36 generates 6 characters-long string from 9 digit SSN. This way badge barcodes are way easier to remember :)
Anyway, this was the only time I ever used these functions but they seem to be really useful for hardcore developers.

15,688 Comments

@Dmitry,

Yeah, these are some sweet functions. It's not all the time you need to convert bases, but when you do - these are great! Base conversion and bit-shifting are like two things you read in documentation and think, pfff, I'll never need that; then one day, blam! they rock your world :)

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Ben Nadel