Package Exports
- bech32-buffer
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Readme
Bech32 Encoding for Arbitrary Buffers
Bech32 is a new proposed Bitcoin address format specified in BIP 173. Among its advantages are: better adaptability to QR codes and in voice conversations, and improved error detection. This library generalizes Bech32 to encode any (reasonably short) byte buffers.
Usage
Encoding data
function encode(prefix, data)Encodes binary data with the specified human-readable prefix into a Bech32 string.
Arguments
- prefix: string
Human-readable prefix to hint what kind of data Bech32 encodes. Must contain ASCII chars in the range 33-126 - data: Uint8Array
Binary data to encode
Return value
String containing:
prefix'1'separator chardataencoded with the variant of base32 encoding used by Bech32, and- 6-char checksum calculated based on
prefixanddata
Example
var bech32 = require('bech32-buffer');
var data = new Uint8Array(20);
bech32.encode('test', data);
// 'test1qqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqql6aptf'Decoding data
function decode(data)Extracts human-readable prefix and binary data from the Bech32-encoded string.
Arguments
- data: string
String to decode
Return value
An object with the following fields:
- prefix: string
Human-readable prefix - data: Uint8Array
Binary data encoded into the input string
The encoding may fail for a variety of reasons (e.g., invalid checksum, or Invalid
chars in the input). In this case, decode() throws an exception
with a descriptive message.
Example
var bech32 = require('bech32-buffer');
var data = 'lost1qsyq7yqh9gk0szs5';
bech32.decode(data);
// {
// prefix: 'lost',
// data: Uint8Array([ 4, 8, 15, 16, 23, 42 ])
// }Bitcoin addresses
class BitcoinAddress {
prefix: 'bc' | 'tb';
scriptVersion: number;
data: Uint8Array;
static decode(message: string): BitcoinAddress;
constructor(prefix: 'bc' | 'tb', scriptVersion: number, data: Uint8Array);
encode(): string;
type(): void | 'p2wsh' | 'p2wpkh';
}Provides basic functionality to work with Bech32 encoding of Bitcoin addresses.
Addresses can be decoded from strings and encoded into strings.
It is also possible to check the type of an address. P2WSH and P2WPKH address
types are defined per BIP 141. Encoding constraints are defined per BIP 173.
Example
var bech32 = require('bech32-buffer');
var address = bech32.BitcoinAddress.decode('BC1QW508D6QEJXTDG4Y5R3ZARVARY0C5XW7KV8F3T4');
// address.prefix === 'bc'
// address.scriptVersion === 0
// address.data.length === 20
// address.type() === 'p2wpkh'Use in Browsers
Use dist/bech32-buffer.min.js from the package distribution
or your favorite browserifier. In the first case,
the library will be available as a bech32 global variable:
<script src="bech32-buffer.min.js"></script>
<!-- later -->
<script>
bech32.encode('test', new Uint8Array(20));
</script>Check out the web demo to see how
bech32-buffer works in browser. It is also available in the examples
directory of the package.
Acknowledgements
BIP 173 is authored by Pieter Wuille and Greg Maxwell and is licensed under the 2-clause BSD license.
There are at least 2 existing implementations of Bech32 for JavaScript:
- The reference implementation by Pieter Wuille
- Another implementation available as the
bech32package
Both implementations are Bitcoin-specific, and the reference implementation is also not in the Npm / yarn package manager.
License
(c) 2017 Alex Ostrovski
bech32-buffer is available under Apache-2.0 license.