binary - Insert and extract fields from binary strings
binary decode format ?-option value ...?
data
binary encode format ?-option value ...? data
binary format formatString ?arg arg ...?
binary scan string formatString ?varName varName ...?
This command provides facilities for manipulating binary data. The
subcommand binary format creates a binary string from normal Tcl
values. For example, given the values 16 and 22, on a 32-bit architecture,
it might produce an 8-byte binary string consisting of two 4-byte integers,
one for each of the numbers. The subcommand binary scan, does the
opposite: it extracts data from a binary string and returns it as ordinary
Tcl string values. The binary encode and binary decode
subcommands convert binary data to or from string encodings such as base64
(used in MIME messages for example).
Note that other operations on binary data, such as taking a
subsequence of it, getting its length, or reinterpreting it as a string in
some encoding, are done by other Tcl commands (respectively string
range, string length and encoding convertfrom in the
example cases). A binary string in Tcl is merely one where all the
characters it contains are in the range \u0000-\u00FF.
When encoding binary data as a readable string, the starting
binary data is passed to the binary encode command, together with the
name of the encoding to use and any encoding-specific options desired. Data
which has been encoded can be converted back to binary form using binary
decode. The following formats and options are supported.
- base64
- The base64 binary encoding is commonly used in mail messages and
XML documents, and uses mostly upper and lower case letters and digits. It
has the distinction of being able to be rewrapped arbitrarily without
losing information.
During encoding, the following options are supported:
- -maxlen
length
- Indicates that the output should be split into lines of no more than
length characters. By default, lines are not split.
- -wrapchar
character
- Indicates that, when lines are split because of the -maxlen option,
character should be used to separate lines. By default, this is a
newline character, “\n”.
During decoding, the following options are supported:
- -strict
- Instructs the decoder to throw an error if it encounters any characters
that are not strictly part of the encoding itself. Otherwise it ignores
them. RFC 2045 calls for base64 decoders to be non-strict.
- hex
- The hex binary encoding converts each byte to a pair of hexadecimal
digits that represent the byte value as a hexadecimal integer. When
encoding, lower characters are used. When decoding, upper and lower
characters are accepted.
No options are supported during encoding. During decoding, the
following options are supported:
- -strict
- Instructs the decoder to throw an error if it encounters whitespace
characters. Otherwise it ignores them.
- uuencode
- The uuencode binary encoding used to be common for transfer of data
between Unix systems and on USENET, but is less common these days, having
been largely superseded by the base64 binary encoding.
During encoding, the following options are supported (though
changing them may produce files that other implementations of decoders
cannot process):
- -maxlen
length
- Indicates the maximum number of characters to produce for each encoded
line. The valid range is 5 to 85. Line lengths outside that range cannot
be accommodated by the encoding format. The default value is 61.
- -wrapchar
character
- Indicates the character(s) to use to mark the end of each encoded line.
Acceptable values are a sequence of zero or more characters from the set {
\x09 (TAB), \x0B (VT), \x0C (FF), \x0D (CR) } followed by zero or one
newline \x0A (LF). Any other values are rejected because they would
generate encoded text that could not be decoded. The default value is a
single newline.
During decoding, the following options are supported:
- -strict
- Instructs the decoder to throw an error if it encounters anything outside
of the standard encoding format. Without this option, the decoder
tolerates some deviations, mostly to forgive reflows of lines between the
encoder and decoder.
Note that neither the encoder nor the decoder handle the header
and footer of the uuencode format.
The binary format command generates a binary string whose
layout is specified by the formatString and whose contents come from
the additional arguments. The resulting binary value is returned.
The formatString consists of a sequence of zero or more
field specifiers separated by zero or more spaces. Each field specifier is a
single type character followed by an optional flag character followed by an
optional numeric count. Most field specifiers consume one argument to
obtain the value to be formatted. The type character specifies how the value
is to be formatted. The count typically indicates how many items of
the specified type are taken from the value. If present, the count is
a non-negative decimal integer or *, which normally indicates that
all of the items in the value are to be used. If the number of arguments
does not match the number of fields in the format string that consume
arguments, then an error is generated. The flag character is ignored for
binary format.
Here is a small example to clarify the relation between the field
specifiers and the arguments:
binary format d3d {1.0 2.0 3.0 4.0} 0.1
The first argument is a list of four numbers, but because of the
count of 3 for the associated field specifier, only the first three will be
used. The second argument is associated with the second field specifier. The
resulting binary string contains the four numbers 1.0, 2.0, 3.0 and 0.1.
Each type-count pair moves an imaginary cursor through the binary
data, storing bytes at the current position and advancing the cursor to just
after the last byte stored. The cursor is initially at position 0 at the
beginning of the data. The type may be any one of the following
characters:
- a
- Stores a byte string of length count in the output string. Every
character is taken as modulo 256 (i.e. the low byte of every character is
used, and the high byte discarded) so when storing character strings not
wholly expressible using the characters \u0000-\u00ff, the encoding
convertto command should be used first to change the string into an
external representation if this truncation is not desired (i.e. if the
characters are not part of the ISO 8859-1 character set.) If arg
has fewer than count bytes, then additional zero bytes are used to
pad out the field. If arg is longer than the specified length, the
extra characters will be ignored. If count is *, then all of
the bytes in arg will be formatted. If count is omitted,
then one character will be formatted. For example,
binary format a7a*a alpha bravo charlie
will return a string equivalent to
alpha\000\000bravoc,
binary format a* [encoding convertto utf-8 \u20ac]
will return a string equivalent to
\342\202\254 (which is the UTF-8 byte
sequence for a Euro-currency character) and
binary format a* [encoding convertto iso8859-15 \u20ac]
will return a string equivalent to
\244 (which is the ISO 8859-15 byte
sequence for a Euro-currency character). Contrast these last two with:
which returns a string equivalent to
\254 (i.e.
\xac) by
truncating the high-bits of the character, and which is probably not what is
desired.
- A
- This form is the same as a except that spaces are used for padding
instead of nulls. For example,
binary format A6A*A alpha bravo charlie
will return
alpha bravoc.
- b
- Stores a string of count binary digits in low-to-high order within
each byte in the output string. Arg must contain a sequence of
1 and 0 characters. The resulting bytes are emitted in first
to last order with the bits being formatted in low-to-high order within
each byte. If arg has fewer than count digits, then zeros
will be used for the remaining bits. If arg has more than the
specified number of digits, the extra digits will be ignored. If
count is *, then all of the digits in arg will be
formatted. If count is omitted, then one digit will be formatted.
If the number of bits formatted does not end at a byte boundary, the
remaining bits of the last byte will be zeros. For example,
binary format b5b* 11100 111000011010
will return a string equivalent to
\x07\x87\x05.
- B
- This form is the same as b except that the bits are stored in
high-to-low order within each byte. For example,
binary format B5B* 11100 111000011010
will return a string equivalent to
\xe0\xe1\xa0.
- H
- Stores a string of count hexadecimal digits in high-to-low within
each byte in the output string. Arg must contain a sequence of
characters in the set “0123456789abcdefABCDEF”. The
resulting bytes are emitted in first to last order with the hex digits
being formatted in high-to-low order within each byte. If arg has
fewer than count digits, then zeros will be used for the remaining
digits. If arg has more than the specified number of digits, the
extra digits will be ignored. If count is *, then all of the
digits in arg will be formatted. If count is omitted, then
one digit will be formatted. If the number of digits formatted does not
end at a byte boundary, the remaining bits of the last byte will be zeros.
For example,
binary format H3H*H2 ab DEF 987
will return a string equivalent to
\xab\x00\xde\xf0\x98.
- h
- This form is the same as H except that the digits are stored in
low-to-high order within each byte. This is seldom required. For
example,
binary format h3h*h2 AB def 987
will return a string equivalent to
\xba\x00\xed\x0f\x89.
- c
- Stores one or more 8-bit integer values in the output string. If no
count is specified, then arg must consist of an integer
value. If count is specified, arg must consist of a list
containing at least that many integers. The low-order 8 bits of each
integer are stored as a one-byte value at the cursor position. If
count is *, then all of the integers in the list are
formatted. If the number of elements in the list is greater than
count, then the extra elements are ignored. For example,
binary format c3cc* {3 -3 128 1} 260 {2 5}
will return a string equivalent to
\x03\xfd\x80\x04\x02\x05, whereas
will generate an error.
- s
- This form is the same as c except that it stores one or more 16-bit
integers in little-endian byte order in the output string. The low-order
16-bits of each integer are stored as a two-byte value at the cursor
position with the least significant byte stored first. For example,
binary format s3 {3 -3 258 1}
will return a string equivalent to
\x03\x00\xfd\xff\x02\x01.
- S
- This form is the same as s except that it stores one or more 16-bit
integers in big-endian byte order in the output string. For example,
binary format S3 {3 -3 258 1}
will return a string equivalent to
\x00\x03\xff\xfd\x01\x02.
- t
- This form (mnemonically tiny) is the same as s and S
except that it stores the 16-bit integers in the output string in the
native byte order of the machine where the Tcl script is running. To
determine what the native byte order of the machine is, refer to the
byteOrder element of the tcl_platform array.
- i
- This form is the same as c except that it stores one or more 32-bit
integers in little-endian byte order in the output string. The low-order
32-bits of each integer are stored as a four-byte value at the cursor
position with the least significant byte stored first. For example,
binary format i3 {3 -3 65536 1}
will return a string equivalent to
\x03\x00\x00\x00\xfd\xff\xff\xff\x00\x00\x01\x00
- I
- This form is the same as i except that it stores one or more one or
more 32-bit integers in big-endian byte order in the output string. For
example,
binary format I3 {3 -3 65536 1}
will return a string equivalent to
\x00\x00\x00\x03\xff\xff\xff\xfd\x00\x01\x00\x00
- n
- This form (mnemonically number or normal) is the same as
i and I except that it stores the 32-bit integers in the
output string in the native byte order of the machine where the Tcl script
is running. To determine what the native byte order of the machine is,
refer to the byteOrder element of the tcl_platform
array.
- w
- This form is the same as c except that it stores one or more 64-bit
integers in little-endian byte order in the output string. The low-order
64-bits of each integer are stored as an eight-byte value at the cursor
position with the least significant byte stored first. For example,
binary format w 7810179016327718216
will return the string
HelloTcl
- W
- This form is the same as w except that it stores one or more one or
more 64-bit integers in big-endian byte order in the output string. For
example,
binary format Wc 4785469626960341345 110
will return the string
BigEndian
- m
- This form (mnemonically the mirror of w) is the same as w
and W except that it stores the 64-bit integers in the output
string in the native byte order of the machine where the Tcl script is
running. To determine what the native byte order of the machine is, refer
to the byteOrder element of the tcl_platform array.
- f
- This form is the same as c except that it stores one or more one or
more single-precision floating point numbers in the machine's native
representation in the output string. This representation is not portable
across architectures, so it should not be used to communicate floating
point numbers across the network. The size of a floating point number may
vary across architectures, so the number of bytes that are generated may
vary. If the value overflows the machine's native representation, then the
value of FLT_MAX as defined by the system will be used instead. Because
Tcl uses double-precision floating point numbers internally, there may be
some loss of precision in the conversion to single-precision. For example,
on a Windows system running on an Intel Pentium processor,
binary format f2 {1.6 3.4}
will return a string equivalent to
\xcd\xcc\xcc\x3f\x9a\x99\x59\x40.
- r
- This form (mnemonically real) is the same as f except that
it stores the single-precision floating point numbers in little-endian
order. This conversion only produces meaningful output when used on
machines which use the IEEE floating point representation (very common,
but not universal.)
- R
- This form is the same as r except that it stores the
single-precision floating point numbers in big-endian order.
- d
- This form is the same as f except that it stores one or more one or
more double-precision floating point numbers in the machine's native
representation in the output string. For example, on a Windows system
running on an Intel Pentium processor,
will return a string equivalent to
\x9a\x99\x99\x99\x99\x99\xf9\x3f.
- q
- This form (mnemonically the mirror of d) is the same as d
except that it stores the double-precision floating point numbers in
little-endian order. This conversion only produces meaningful output when
used on machines which use the IEEE floating point representation (very
common, but not universal.)
- Q
- This form is the same as q except that it stores the
double-precision floating point numbers in big-endian order.
- x
- Stores count null bytes in the output string. If count is
not specified, stores one null byte. If count is *,
generates an error. This type does not consume an argument. For
example,
binary format a3xa3x2a3 abc def ghi
will return a string equivalent to
abc\000def\000\000ghi.
- X
- Moves the cursor back count bytes in the output string. If
count is * or is larger than the current cursor position,
then the cursor is positioned at location 0 so that the next byte stored
will be the first byte in the result string. If count is omitted
then the cursor is moved back one byte. This type does not consume an
argument. For example,
binary format a3X*a3X2a3 abc def ghi
will return
dghi.
- @
- Moves the cursor to the absolute location in the output string specified
by count. Position 0 refers to the first byte in the output string.
If count refers to a position beyond the last byte stored so far,
then null bytes will be placed in the uninitialized locations and the
cursor will be placed at the specified location. If count is
*, then the cursor is moved to the current end of the output
string. If count is omitted, then an error will be generated. This
type does not consume an argument. For example,
binary format a5@2a1@*a3@10a1 abcde f ghi j
will return
abfdeghi\000\000j.
The binary scan command parses fields from a binary string,
returning the number of conversions performed. String gives the input
bytes to be parsed (one byte per character, and characters not representable
as a byte have their high bits chopped) and formatString indicates
how to parse it. Each varName gives the name of a variable; when a
field is scanned from string the result is assigned to the
corresponding variable.
As with binary format, the formatString consists of
a sequence of zero or more field specifiers separated by zero or more
spaces. Each field specifier is a single type character followed by an
optional flag character followed by an optional numeric count. Most
field specifiers consume one argument to obtain the variable into which the
scanned values should be placed. The type character specifies how the binary
data is to be interpreted. The count typically indicates how many
items of the specified type are taken from the data. If present, the
count is a non-negative decimal integer or *, which normally
indicates that all of the remaining items in the data are to be used. If
there are not enough bytes left after the current cursor position to satisfy
the current field specifier, then the corresponding variable is left
untouched and binary scan returns immediately with the number of
variables that were set. If there are not enough arguments for all of the
fields in the format string that consume arguments, then an error is
generated. The flag character “u” may be given to cause some
types to be read as unsigned values. The flag is accepted for all field
types but is ignored for non-integer fields.
A similar example as with binary format should explain the
relation between field specifiers and arguments in case of the binary scan
subcommand:
binary scan $bytes s3s first second
This command (provided the binary string in the variable
bytes is long enough) assigns a list of three integers to the
variable first and assigns a single value to the variable
second. If bytes contains fewer than 8 bytes (i.e. four 2-byte
integers), no assignment to second will be made, and if bytes
contains fewer than 6 bytes (i.e. three 2-byte integers), no assignment to
first will be made. Hence:
puts [binary scan abcdefg s3s first second]
puts $first
puts $second
will print (assuming neither variable is set previously):
1
25185 25699 26213
can't read "second": no such variable
It is important to note that the c, s, and
S (and i and I on 64bit systems) will be scanned into
long data size values. In doing this, values that have their high bit set
(0x80 for chars, 0x8000 for shorts, 0x80000000 for ints), will be sign
extended. Thus the following will occur:
set signShort [binary format s1 0x8000]
binary scan $signShort s1 val; # val == 0xFFFF8000
If you require unsigned values you can include the “u” flag
character following the field type. For example, to read an unsigned short
value:
set signShort [binary format s1 0x8000]
binary scan $signShort su1 val; # val == 0x00008000
Each type-count pair moves an imaginary cursor through the binary
data, reading bytes from the current position. The cursor is initially at
position 0 at the beginning of the data. The type may be any one of the
following characters:
- a
- The data is a byte string of length count. If count is
*, then all of the remaining bytes in string will be scanned
into the variable. If count is omitted, then one byte will be
scanned. All bytes scanned will be interpreted as being characters in the
range \u0000-\u00ff so the encoding convertfrom command will be
needed if the string is not a binary string or a string encoded in ISO
8859-1. For example,
binary scan abcde\000fghi a6a10 var1 var2
will return
1 with the string equivalent to
abcde\000 stored in
var1 and
var2 left unmodified, and
binary scan \342\202\254 a* var1
set var2 [encoding convertfrom utf-8 $var1]
will store a Euro-currency character in
var2.
- A
- This form is the same as a, except trailing blanks and nulls are
stripped from the scanned value before it is stored in the variable. For
example,
binary scan "abc efghi \000" A* var1
will return
1 with
abc efghi stored in
var1.
- b
- The data is turned into a string of count binary digits in
low-to-high order represented as a sequence of “1” and
“0” characters. The data bytes are scanned in first to last
order with the bits being taken in low-to-high order within each byte. Any
extra bits in the last byte are ignored. If count is *, then
all of the remaining bits in string will be scanned. If
count is omitted, then one bit will be scanned. For example,
binary scan \x07\x87\x05 b5b* var1 var2
will return
2 with
11100 stored in
var1 and
1110000110100000 stored in
var2.
- B
- This form is the same as b, except the bits are taken in
high-to-low order within each byte. For example,
binary scan \x70\x87\x05 B5B* var1 var2
will return
2 with
01110 stored in
var1 and
1000011100000101 stored in
var2.
- H
- The data is turned into a string of count hexadecimal digits in
high-to-low order represented as a sequence of characters in the set
“0123456789abcdef”. The data bytes are scanned in first to
last order with the hex digits being taken in high-to-low order within
each byte. Any extra bits in the last byte are ignored. If count is
*, then all of the remaining hex digits in string will be
scanned. If count is omitted, then one hex digit will be scanned.
For example,
binary scan \x07\xC6\x05\x1f\x34 H3H* var1 var2
will return
2 with
07c stored in
var1 and
051f34
stored in
var2.
- h
- This form is the same as H, except the digits are taken in reverse
(low-to-high) order within each byte. For example,
binary scan \x07\x86\x05\x12\x34 h3h* var1 var2
will return
2 with
706 stored in
var1 and
502143
stored in
var2.
Note that most code that wishes to parse the hexadecimal digits
from multiple bytes in order should use the H format.
- c
- The data is turned into count 8-bit signed integers and stored in
the corresponding variable as a list. If count is *, then
all of the remaining bytes in string will be scanned. If
count is omitted, then one 8-bit integer will be scanned. For
example,
binary scan \x07\x86\x05 c2c* var1 var2
will return
2 with
7 -122 stored in
var1 and
5
stored in
var2. Note that the integers returned are signed, but they
can be converted to unsigned 8-bit quantities using an expression like:
set num [expr { $num & 0xFF }]
- s
- The data is interpreted as count 16-bit signed integers represented
in little-endian byte order. The integers are stored in the corresponding
variable as a list. If count is *, then all of the remaining
bytes in string will be scanned. If count is omitted, then
one 16-bit integer will be scanned. For example,
binary scan \x05\x00\x07\x00\xf0\xff s2s* var1 var2
will return
2 with
5 7 stored in
var1 and
-16 stored
in
var2. Note that the integers returned are signed, but they can be
converted to unsigned 16-bit quantities using an expression like:
set num [expr { $num & 0xFFFF }]
- S
- This form is the same as s except that the data is interpreted as
count 16-bit signed integers represented in big-endian byte order.
For example,
binary scan \x00\x05\x00\x07\xff\xf0 S2S* var1 var2
will return
2 with
5 7 stored in
var1 and
-16 stored
in
var2.
- t
- The data is interpreted as count 16-bit signed integers represented
in the native byte order of the machine running the Tcl script. It is
otherwise identical to s and S. To determine what the native
byte order of the machine is, refer to the byteOrder element of the
tcl_platform array.
- i
- The data is interpreted as count 32-bit signed integers represented
in little-endian byte order. The integers are stored in the corresponding
variable as a list. If count is *, then all of the remaining
bytes in string will be scanned. If count is omitted, then
one 32-bit integer will be scanned. For example,
set str \x05\x00\x00\x00\x07\x00\x00\x00\xf0\xff\xff\xff
binary scan $str i2i* var1 var2
will return
2 with
5 7 stored in
var1 and
-16 stored
in
var2. Note that the integers returned are signed, but they can be
converted to unsigned 32-bit quantities using an expression like:
set num [expr { $num & 0xFFFFFFFF }]
- I
- This form is the same as I except that the data is interpreted as
count 32-bit signed integers represented in big-endian byte order.
For example,
set str \x00\x00\x00\x05\x00\x00\x00\x07\xff\xff\xff\xf0
binary scan $str I2I* var1 var2
will return
2 with
5 7 stored in
var1 and
-16 stored
in
var2.
- n
- The data is interpreted as count 32-bit signed integers represented
in the native byte order of the machine running the Tcl script. It is
otherwise identical to i and I. To determine what the native
byte order of the machine is, refer to the byteOrder element of the
tcl_platform array.
- w
- The data is interpreted as count 64-bit signed integers represented
in little-endian byte order. The integers are stored in the corresponding
variable as a list. If count is *, then all of the remaining
bytes in string will be scanned. If count is omitted, then
one 64-bit integer will be scanned. For example,
set str \x05\x00\x00\x00\x07\x00\x00\x00\xf0\xff\xff\xff
binary scan $str wi* var1 var2
will return
2 with
30064771077 stored in
var1 and
-16 stored in
var2. Note that the integers returned are signed
and cannot be represented by Tcl as unsigned values.
- W
- This form is the same as w except that the data is interpreted as
count 64-bit signed integers represented in big-endian byte order.
For example,
set str \x00\x00\x00\x05\x00\x00\x00\x07\xff\xff\xff\xf0
binary scan $str WI* var1 var2
will return
2 with
21474836487 stored in
var1 and
-16 stored in
var2.
- m
- The data is interpreted as count 64-bit signed integers represented
in the native byte order of the machine running the Tcl script. It is
otherwise identical to w and W. To determine what the native
byte order of the machine is, refer to the byteOrder element of the
tcl_platform array.
- f
- The data is interpreted as count single-precision floating point
numbers in the machine's native representation. The floating point numbers
are stored in the corresponding variable as a list. If count is
*, then all of the remaining bytes in string will be
scanned. If count is omitted, then one single-precision floating
point number will be scanned. The size of a floating point number may vary
across architectures, so the number of bytes that are scanned may vary. If
the data does not represent a valid floating point number, the resulting
value is undefined and compiler dependent. For example, on a Windows
system running on an Intel Pentium processor,
binary scan \x3f\xcc\xcc\xcd f var1
will return
1 with
1.6000000238418579 stored in
var1.
- r
- This form is the same as f except that the data is interpreted as
count single-precision floating point number in little-endian
order. This conversion is not portable to the minority of systems not
using IEEE floating point representations.
- R
- This form is the same as f except that the data is interpreted as
count single-precision floating point number in big-endian order.
This conversion is not portable to the minority of systems not using IEEE
floating point representations.
- d
- This form is the same as f except that the data is interpreted as
count double-precision floating point numbers in the machine's
native representation. For example, on a Windows system running on an
Intel Pentium processor,
binary scan \x9a\x99\x99\x99\x99\x99\xf9\x3f d var1
will return
1 with
1.6000000000000001 stored in
var1.
- q
- This form is the same as d except that the data is interpreted as
count double-precision floating point number in little-endian
order. This conversion is not portable to the minority of systems not
using IEEE floating point representations.
- Q
- This form is the same as d except that the data is interpreted as
count double-precision floating point number in big-endian order.
This conversion is not portable to the minority of systems not using IEEE
floating point representations.
- x
- Moves the cursor forward count bytes in string. If
count is * or is larger than the number of bytes after the
current cursor position, then the cursor is positioned after the last byte
in string. If count is omitted, then the cursor is moved
forward one byte. Note that this type does not consume an argument. For
example,
binary scan \x01\x02\x03\x04 x2H* var1
will return
1 with
0304 stored in
var1.
- X
- Moves the cursor back count bytes in string. If count
is * or is larger than the current cursor position, then the cursor
is positioned at location 0 so that the next byte scanned will be the
first byte in string. If count is omitted then the cursor is
moved back one byte. Note that this type does not consume an argument. For
example,
binary scan \x01\x02\x03\x04 c2XH* var1 var2
will return
2 with
1 2 stored in
var1 and
020304
stored in
var2.
- @
- Moves the cursor to the absolute location in the data string specified by
count. Note that position 0 refers to the first byte in
string. If count refers to a position beyond the end of
string, then the cursor is positioned after the last byte. If
count is omitted, then an error will be generated. For
example,
binary scan \x01\x02\x03\x04 c2@1H* var1 var2
will return
2 with
1 2 stored in
var1 and
020304
stored in
var2.
The r, R, q and Q conversions will
only work reliably for transferring data between computers which are all
using IEEE floating point representations. This is very common, but not
universal. To transfer floating-point numbers portably between all
architectures, use their textual representation (as produced by
format) instead.
This is a procedure to write a Tcl string to a binary-encoded
channel as UTF-8 data preceded by a length word:
proc writeString {channel string} {
set data [encoding convertto utf-8 $string]
puts -nonewline [binary format Ia* \
[string length $data] $data]
}
This procedure reads a string from a channel that was written by
the previously presented writeString procedure:
proc readString {channel} {
if {![binary scan [read $channel 4] I length]} {
error "missing length"
}
set data [read $channel $length]
return [encoding convertfrom utf-8 $data]
}
This converts the contents of a file (named in the variable
filename) to base64 and prints them:
set f [open $filename rb]
set data [read $f]
close $f
puts [binary encode base64 -maxlen 64 $data]