Module talk:BaseConvert

Fringe feature
About possible hexadecimal input. Unicode defines that the regular characters "0...9A...F" can be recognised as hexadecimal characters. There are no separate characters defined for hex notation. All fine. Now there are more characters that, according to Unicode, may be recognised as hexadecimal. They are socalled Fullwidth form characters. (see here and here).

Their code points are U+FF10 .. U+FF19 (numbers 0-9), U+FF21 .. U+FF26 (A-F), U+FF41 .. U+FF46 (a-f). So, generally spoken, there could be hex input by this regular Unicode input. We could decide that this input should be recognised (and so converted in this template). When or where does that Halfwidth input occur? The characters are pre-Unicode glyphs. If I understand it well, they are used in East Asian (CJK) texts, possibly for Western quotes (including Western numbers). So including them would make BaseConvert a more full generic template, especially when exporting the module from enwiki. -DePiep (talk) 21:43, 24 February 2013 (UTC)
 * Ok, makes sense that this could be useful if this module is exported to other language wikis. I've added normalization of full-width chars. Toohool (talk) 00:11, 25 February 2013 (UTC)
 * Amazingly and bright! And this way all bases are covered, not just 16. Thanks (also for taking time to decipher my post). -DePiep (talk) 09:18, 25 February 2013 (UTC)

Strip off "#" from incoming hex numbers
can you make this work? I tried and it seemed to work fine on the Module:BaseConvert/sandbox and the Template:Module:BaseConvert/testcases (now deleted per my request). Thanks Technical 13 (talk) 17:54, 9 September 2013 (UTC)

Not done: You are already autoconfirmed. You do not need to use this template to edit a semi-protected page. Thanks, Celestra (talk) 02:44, 11 September 2013 (UTC)

It would be easy to do, but why? Is there some particular use case where this would be helpful? Toohool (talk) 06:09, 11 September 2013 (UTC)

Suggestion: metatable allowing this to be called as 10to16 etc
In the sandbox there is a metatable set that allows this module to be called as

This looks nicer and is clearer than the base argument which doesn't specify whether it's the input base or output base. All options except base, from and n are supported.

On a technical note: it doesn't interfere with the original convert function as the "real" members of p are checked before  is called. It will run for anything of this form so e.g. 500to400 will be passed on to _convert, but if someone tries to call a function not of this form they will get the usual error message. User:GKFXtalk 08:27, 25 April 2021 (UTC)