This problem is very straight forward, you will get a string that will represent a sentence in binary code, and you need to translate that into words. There is not direct way to do this so you will have to translate twice.
You should first convert from binary to decimal before translating those values into characters
Things are easier when focusing on smaller parts, divide the input to focus on one letter at the time.
Make sure that each time you transcode a character from binary to decimal, you reset whatever variable you used to keep track of the ones. Also do not forget to turn everything back into one string.
Solution ahead!
function binaryAgent(str) {
biString = str.split(' ');
uniString = [];
/*using the radix (or base) parameter in parseInt, we can convert the binary
number to a decimal number while simultaneously converting to a char*/
for(i=0;i < biString.length;i++){
uniString.push(String.fromCharCode(parseInt(biString[i], 2)));
}
//we then simply join the string
return uniString.join('');
}
- Separate the string into an array of strings separated by whitespace.
- Create some variables that will be needed along the way, the names are self explanatory for the most part.
- Iterate through each binary string in the new array.
- Convert to decimal by using parseInt(binary, 2) (with the second parameter we tell in which base our numbers currently are)
- At the end, we return out converted message.
function binaryAgent(str) {
// Separate the binary code by space.
str = str.split(' ');
var power;
var decValue = 0;
var sentence = '';
// Check each binary number from the array.
for (var s = 0; s < str.length; s++) {
// Check each bit from binary number
for (var t = 0; t < str[s].length; t++) {
// This only takes into consideration the active ones.
if (str[s][t] == 1) {
// This is quivalent to 2 ** position
power = Math.pow(2, +str[s].length - t - 1);
decValue += power;
// Record the decimal value by adding the number to the previous one.
}
}
// After the binary number is converted to decimal, convert it to string and store
sentence += (String.fromCharCode(decValue));
// Reset decimal value for next binary number.
decValue = 0;
}
return sentence;
}
- For each of these binary strings, check for the ones and ignore the zeroes.
- For those that are one or active then convert them to decimal, this takes into account the position and the right power it needs to be raised to.
- Store the power into the power variable by adding it to any previous ones on the variable decValue. This variable will add and add the powers of the active ones until the end of the loop and then return the decimal number.
- Convert the final decimal outside of the inner loop and then convert it to ASCII and saving it to sentence along with any other text string already converted and stored.
- Reset the variable decValue to avoid getting wrong decimals before continuing to the outer loop.
function binaryAgent(str) {
return String.fromCharCode(...str.split(" ").map(function(char){ return parseInt(char, 2); }));
}
- First we use
split()
to be able to work on each character as an Array element - Then use
map()
to process each element from binary to decimal usingpareseInt()
- Last we can use
String.fromCharCode()
to convert each ASCII number into the corresponding character - However
fromCharCode()
expects a series of numbers rather than an Array! We can use ES6 Spread Operator to pass in an Array of numbers as individual numbers. See here for more info; https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/JavaScript/Reference/Operators/Spread_operator
function binaryAgent(str) {
var re = /(\d+)(\s?)/g;
function convertToChar(match,p1,p2){
return String.fromCharCode(parseInt(p1, 2));
}
return str.replace(re, convertToChar);
}
- In this solution we use
String.replace()
to find all the binary numbers and convert them to characters - First we use a regular expression to find all the binary numbers and optional trailing spaces
- Then we define a function that converts the first parenthesized submatch into a number
parseInt()
and then into a characterString.fromCharCode()
. By not using the second parenthisized submatch we leave out all the spaces that where in between the binary numbers. - Lastly we use our defined regex and function in the
String.replace()
function.
If you found this page useful, you can give thanks by copying and pasting this on the main chat: thanks @Rafase282 @JamesKee @sabahang @crisvdkooij for your help with Bonfire: Binary Agents
NOTE: Please add your username only if you have added any relevant main contents to the wiki page. (Please don't remove any existing usernames.)