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Dashycode
Dashycode is a code for arbitrary strings into a restricted lowercase-alphanumeric-with-dashes character set.
For instance:
> Dashycode.encode("What IS Dashycode, really? π€")
'what-is-dashycode-really--3x2awuinvx5eznar3'
> Dashycode.decode('what-is-dashycode-really--3x2awuinvx5eznar3')
'What IS Dashycode, really? π€'
Its intended use is to reversibly store arbitrary strings in URLs or domain-names as human-readably as possible.
Dashycode is similar to other ways of encoding strings into restricted character sets, like urlencoding, punycode, or Base64. It's more human-readable than urlencoding or Base64, and can handle strings punycode can't handle.
Features
Dashycode's output is guaranteed to be a valid domain name (ignoring length considerations). In addition to containing only lowercase alphanumeric characters and dashes, it is guaranteed to be non-empty, and to never start nor end with a dash.
> Dashycode.encode("")
'0--0'
> Dashycode.encode(" ")
'0--05'
> Dashycode.encode("ζ₯ζ¬θͺ")
'0--0htdqm79vxb74'
As an encoding, Dashycode is reversible: any string will always encode to a unique output which decodes to that exact original string. Everything is preserved: capitalization, whitespace, etc.
> Dashycode.decode("0--0")
''
> Dashycode.decode("0--05")
' '
> Dashycode.decode("0--0htdqm79vxb74")
'ζ₯ζ¬θͺ'
Dashycode is designed for human-readable text, but any data you can stuff into a JavaScript string can be encoded. However, if you primarily want to encode binary data, you should probably be using Base32. (Dashycode is ~20% less efficient than Base32 for max-entropy binary data.)
Readability
Dashycode tries to be maximally readable. Strings containing only lowercase alphanumeric characters are returned unmodified:
> Dashycode.encode("lettersandnumb3rsonly")
'lettersandnumb3rsonly'
Strings containing spaces are returned with dashes:
> Dashycode.encode("this is a lowercase sentence")
'this-is-a-lowercase-sentence'
Only strings with other characters (or with multiple spaces in a row) will have an additional code tacked onto the end, in a way that maximizes readability:
> Dashycode.encode("This is a regular sentence.")
'this-is-a-regular-sentence--32e5'
Also for readability, the code part will not contain 0
, o
, l
, or 1
.
Compared to other encodings
Dashycode encodes/decodes text, like urlencoding or Punycode.
Of these, Dashycode is most similar to Punycode, in terms of readability as well as being a valid domain name. The main difference is that Punycode is not designed to encode all text, and cannot create a valid domain name if the input contains ASCII symbols.
> punycode.encode("This is *&@^$&")
'This is *&@^$&-'
> Dashycode.encode("This is *&@^$&")
'this-is--3mbqscmxi7'
Compared to urlencoding, Dashycode is much more readable.
> encodeURIComponent("100% of sentences should be readable")
'100%25%20of%20sentences%20should%20be%20readable'
> Dashycode.encode("100% of sentences should be readable")
'100-of-sentences-should-be-readable--ke'
Dashycode is only ~20% less efficient than Punycode on pure non-ASCII text:
> punycode.encode("ζ₯ζ¬θͺγ―γγθ¨θͺγ¨ζγγΎγγ")
'r6j3gaa9hwd0b0h4388bzcm1md968luxbea'
> Dashycode.encode("ζ₯ζ¬θͺγ―γγθ¨θͺγ¨ζγγΎγγ")
'0--0htdqm79vxb7yh5eg4389j2m52cwxb7ya5eyg2e9j2mvhitm7sw42e'
The reason for the slightly lower efficiency on non-ASCII text is to make common ASCII text very efficient:
> Dashycode.encode("Add dash dash three to capitalize")
'add-dash-dash-three-to-capitalize--3'
> Dashycode.encode("CamelCase")
'camelcase--fa'
License
MIT license