Reputation: 3048
I have a function in a small application that I'm writing to break a recycled one-time pad cypher. Having used VB.NET for most of my career I thought it would be interesting to implement the app in C#. However, I have encountered a problem due to my present unfamiliarity with C#.
The function takes in two strings (of binary digits), converts these strings to char arrays, and then performs an XOR on them and places the result in a third char array.
This is fine until I try to convert the third char array to a string. Instead of the string looking like "11001101" etc, I get the following result: " \0\0 \0 " i.e. the "1"s are being represented by spaces and the "0"s by "\0".
My code is as follows:
public string calcXor(string a, string b)
{
char[] charAArray = a.ToCharArray();
char[] charBArray = b.ToCharArray();
int len = 0;
// Set length to be the length of the shorter string
if (a.Length > b.Length)
len = b.Length - 1;
else
len = a.Length - 1;
char[] result = new char[len];
for (int i = 0; i < len; i++)
{
result[i] = (char)(charAArray[i] ^ charBArray[i]);
}
return new string(result);
}
Upvotes: 1
Views: 1011
Reputation: 3048
I just wanted to add that the solution I eventually chose is as follows:
//Parameter binary is a bit string
public void someroutine(String binary)
{
var data = GetBytesFromBinaryString(binary);
var text = Encoding.ASCII.GetString(data);
}
public Byte[] GetBytesFromBinaryString(String binary)
{
var list = new List<Byte>();
for (int i = 0; i < binary.Length; i += 8)
{
String t = binary.Substring(i, 8);
list.Add(Convert.ToByte(t, 2));
}
return list.ToArray();
}
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 186728
Your problem is in the line
result[i] = (char)(charAArray[i] ^ charBArray[i]);
that should be
// (Char) 1 is not '1'!
result[i] = (char)((charAArray[i] ^ charBArray[i]) + '0');
More compact solution is to use StringBuilder
, not arrays:
public string calcXor(String a, String b) {
int len = (a.Length < b.Length) ? a.Length : b.Length;
StringBuilder Sb = new StringBuilder();
for (int i = 0; i < len; ++i)
// Sb.Append(CharToBinary(a[i] ^ b[i])); // <- If you want 0's and 1's
Sb.Append(a[i] ^ b[i]); // <- Just int, not in binary format as in your solution
return Sb.ToString();
}
public static String CharToBinary(int value, Boolean useUnicode = false) {
int size = useUnicode ? 16 : 8;
StringBuilder Sb = new StringBuilder(size);
Sb.Length = size;
for (int i = size - 1; i >= 0; --i) {
Sb[i] = value % 2 == 0 ? '0' : '1';
value /= 2;
}
return Sb.ToString();
}
Your solution just computes xor's (e.g. "65") and put them into line (e.g. 65728...); if you want 0's and 1's representation, you should use formatting
Upvotes: 2
Reputation: 659
Have you tried using binary / byte[]? It seems like the fastest way to me.
public string calcXor(string a, string b)
{
//String to binary
byte[] ab = ConvertToBinary(a);
byte[] bb = ConvertToBinary(b);
//(XOR)
byte[] cb = a^b
return cb.ToString();
}
public static byte[] ConvertToBinary(string str)
{
System.Text.ASCIIEncoding encoding = new System.Text.ASCIIEncoding();
return encoding.GetBytes(str);
}
Upvotes: 0