@Griffin I thought you were converting a number in one base to a number in another base? And a number can only "have" a base if it's in a string. effectively.
the things that "limit the input" are line 26. It gets the "value" for a character, and makes sure the valid is allowed before it continues. Otherwise, it throws an exception.
@MooingDuck actually, if you think about it, base 1 doesn't work consistently because it's a hack...the only digit should be allowed is "0", but it should have the value "0" instead of "1"
@MooingDuck you only allow it to work by making an arbitrary exception that "0" in base 1 (or whatever the only literal you use is) has value 1 instead of 0
@Griffin what other functions? The serialize function converts from int to a string-in-a-base. The parse function converts from a string-in-a-base to an int. They don't interact in any way.
to convert a string from base 33 to base 32, you'd use serialize(parse("14fc2c2ds1",33),32);
@Griffin heh, speed. I create the string, then I reserve enough space for 11 letters, then I insert the results. If I go over what's reserved, it would be slower, but still work.
value is the rest of the number that I haven't put in the string yet. value%base tells me the next digit to put in the string. Then lut[...] tells me what character to use for that digit. Then ret.insert(ret.begin(),...); puts that character in the beginning of the string.
Then value /= base; removes that digit from the "part of the number not in the string".