Yesterday at the supermarket I gave 3 euro to pay 2.09. The cashier asked me if I had nine cents. I thought she meant to help with the change. I grabbed a bunch of coins I had in my pocket, all 50s and showed her "No, I'm sorry". She said "It's ok" with a weird smile and sent me off. Only when I was outside did I look at the receipt and realised the total was 3.09, not 2.09.
@Jefffrey 1) there's a trivial alternative: store the information in the file; 2) the file contents are no longer self-contained; 3) filenames have all sorts of limitations, like sizes and and character sets.
@Jefffrey Then your question is meaningless. You don't need to encode and decode anything.
If the file name is the information, it needs no encoding to be stored as a file name.
@R.MartinhoFernandes I was to let the user specify a small (max x chars) identifier in whatever form he/she wants (including è, à, ç, /, \, ... characters) that can be used (and read back from) as a filename.
If the user doesn't get to ever see the file name treat the identifier as an opaque binary token and store it in a safe format, like modified base64 or something.
@R.MartinhoFernandes I need to look at the filenames with my file system terminal and check stuff. I need to be able to work out which strings are in what file by eye.
@BartekBanachewicz Say you want to give a useful name to a backup folder. Something like "before building minecraft house" so that it takes the folder, copies it and stores it as "before%20building%20minecraft%20house" and that name is something I can show when listing the backups.
@BartekBanachewicz I am? You are telling me to use a new "special file" that will need special handling, making everything harder to lookup and to manage, and introduce a whole new set of special cases
I would use Base32 in this case - you'll get names a bit longer, but Base32 encoded values are safe for case insensetive environment (FAT/Win32 NTFS access) as well for using as Uri.
Unfortunately there is usually no built-in support for this encoding in frameworks. On other hand code is realitv...
A coworker of mine encountered a weird issue: he passes a float on the C# side through a COM interface, and the float ends up fucked up (it suspiciously looks like it's uninitialized) on the C++ side.