You want to convert a string (e.g., "
0x55
" or "
0755
") containing an octal or hexadecimal number to the correct number.
Perl only understands octal and hexadecimal numbers when they occur as literals in your programs. If they are obtained by reading from files or supplied as command-line arguments, no automatic conversion takes place.
Use Perl's
oct
and
hex
functions:
$number = hex($hexadecimal); # hexadecimal $number = oct($octal); # octal
The
oct
function converts octal numbers with or without the leading "
0
": "
0350
" or "
350
". In fact, it even converts hexadecimal ("
0x350
") numbers if they have a leading "
0x
". The
hex
function only converts hexadecimal numbers, with or without a leading "
0x
": "
0x255
", "
3A
", "
ff
", or "
deadbeef
". (Letters may be in upper- or lowercase.)
Here's an example that accepts a number in either decimal, octal, or hex, and prints that number in all three bases. It uses the
oct
function to convert from octal and hexadecimal if the input began with a 0. It then uses
printf
to convert back into hex, octal, and decimal as needed.
print "Gimme a number in decimal, octal, or hex: "; $num = <STDIN>; chomp $num; exit unless defined $num; $num = oct($num) if $num =~ /^0/; # does both oct and hex printf "%d %x %o\n", $num, $num, $num;
The following code converts Unix file permissions. They're always given in octal, so we use
oct
instead of
hex
.
print "Enter file permission in octal: "; $permissions = <STDIN>; die "Exiting ...\n" unless defined $permissions; chomp $permissions; $permissions = oct($permissions); # permissions always octal print "The decimal value is $permissions\n";
The "Scalar Value Constructors" section in
perldata
(1) and the
"Numeric Literals"
section of
Chapter 2
of
Programming Perl
; the
oct
and
hex
functions in
perlfunc
(1) and
Chapter 3
of
Programming Perl
.
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