Dimitri
Dimitri

Reputation: 8280

Hexadecimal to Integer in Java

I am trying to convert a String hexadecimal to an integer. The string hexadecimal was calculated from a hash function (sha-1). I get this error : java.lang.NumberFormatException. I guess it doesn't like the String representation of the hexadecimal. How can I achieve that. Here is my code :

public Integer calculateHash(String uuid) {

    try {
        MessageDigest digest = MessageDigest.getInstance("SHA1");
        digest.update(uuid.getBytes());
        byte[] output = digest.digest();

        String hex = hexToString(output);
        Integer i = Integer.parseInt(hex,16);
        return i;           

    } catch (NoSuchAlgorithmException e) {
        System.out.println("SHA1 not implemented in this system");
    }

    return null;
}   

private String hexToString(byte[] output) {
    char hexDigit[] = { '0', '1', '2', '3', '4', '5', '6', '7', '8', '9',
            'A', 'B', 'C', 'D', 'E', 'F' };
    StringBuffer buf = new StringBuffer();
    for (int j = 0; j < output.length; j++) {
        buf.append(hexDigit[(output[j] >> 4) & 0x0f]);
        buf.append(hexDigit[output[j] & 0x0f]);
    }
    return buf.toString();

}

For example, when I pass this string : _DTOWsHJbEeC6VuzWPawcLA, his hash his : 0xC934E5D372B2AB6D0A50B9F0341A00ED029BDC15

But i get : java.lang.NumberFormatException: For input string: "0xC934E5D372B2AB6D0A50B9F0341A00ED029BDC15"

I really need to do this. I have a collection of elements identified by their UUID which are string. I will have to store those elements but my restrictions is to use an integer as their id. It is why I calculate the hash of the parameter given and then I convert to an int. Maybe I am doing this wrong but can someone gives me an advice to achieve that correctly!!

Thanks for your help !!

Upvotes: 39

Views: 143099

Answers (6)

wahid
wahid

Reputation: 51

Try this

public static long Hextonumber(String hexval)
    {
        hexval="0x"+hexval;
//      String decimal="0x00000bb9";
        Long number = Long.decode(hexval);
//.......       System.out.println("String [" + hexval + "] = " + number);
        return number;
        //3001
    }

Upvotes: 4

Dimitri
Dimitri

Reputation: 8280

I finally find answers to my question based on all of your comments. Thanks, I tried this :

public Integer calculateHash(String uuid) {

    try {
        //....
        String hex = hexToString(output);
        //Integer i = Integer.valueOf(hex, 16).intValue();
        //Instead of using Integer, I used BigInteger and I returned the int value.
        BigInteger bi = new BigInteger(hex, 16);
        return bi.intValue();`
    } catch (NoSuchAlgorithmException e) {
        System.out.println("SHA1 not implemented in this system");
    }
    //....
}

This solution is not optimal but I can continue with my project. Thanks again for your help

Upvotes: 1

Fakher
Fakher

Reputation: 2128

you can use this method : https://stackoverflow.com/a/31804061/3343174 it's converting perfectly any hexadecimal number (presented as a string) to a decimal number

Upvotes: 0

Ralph
Ralph

Reputation: 120791

Why do you not use the java functionality for that:

If your numbers are small (smaller than yours) you could use: Integer.parseInt(hex, 16) to convert a Hex - String into an integer.

  String hex = "ff"
  int value = Integer.parseInt(hex, 16);  

For big numbers like yours, use public BigInteger(String val, int radix)

  BigInteger value = new BigInteger(hex, 16);

@See JavaDoc:

Upvotes: 108

OscarRyz
OscarRyz

Reputation: 199225

That's because the byte[] output is well, and array of bytes, you may think on it as an array of bytes representing each one an integer, but when you add them all into a single string you get something that is NOT an integer, that's why. You may either have it as an array of integers or try to create an instance of BigInteger.

Upvotes: -2

Michael Brewer-Davis
Michael Brewer-Davis

Reputation: 14276

SHA-1 produces a 160-bit message (20 bytes), too large to be stored in an int or long value. As Ralph suggests, you could use BigInteger.

To get a (less-secure) int hash, you could return the hash code of the returned byte array.

Alternatively, if you don't really need SHA at all, you could just use the UUID's String hash code.

Upvotes: 0

Related Questions