I use org.apache.commons.codec.binary.Base64 to convert a UUID into a url-safe unique string that is 22 characters in length and has the same uniqueness as UUID.
I posted my code on Storing UUID as base64 String
문제
I'm trying to make the java UUID shorter while preserving the same uniqueness as the UUID has. I wrote the following code:
public static void main(String[] args) {
UUID uid=UUID.randomUUID();
String shortId=to62System(uid.getMostSignificantBits())+
to62System(uid.getLeastSignificantBits());
System.out.println(shortId);
}
static char[] DIGITS = "0123456789abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyzABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ".toCharArray();
static int RADIX = DIGITS.length;
public static String to62System(long value) {
if (value == 0) {
return "0";
} else {
char[] buf = new char[11];
int charPos = 10;
long i = value;
while (i != 0) {
buf[charPos--] = DIGITS[Math.abs((int) (i % RADIX))];
i /= RADIX;
}
return new String(buf, charPos + 1, (10 - charPos));
}
}
Am I doing it right or did I overlooked something important?
해결책
I use org.apache.commons.codec.binary.Base64 to convert a UUID into a url-safe unique string that is 22 characters in length and has the same uniqueness as UUID.
I posted my code on Storing UUID as base64 String
다른 팁
Take a look at FriendlyId library. This library allow to encode UUID to Base62 string (Url62) and back. Uniqueness is achieved and encoded string is shorter.
I believe even once you get it down to 22 characters by changing to base whatever, you can safely truncate a few characters and still be reasonably certain you won't get any collisions, as you probably know the astronomically large numbers involved. LOL loved the first guy's response thinking u were just like grabbing some characters from a standard UUID and calling it a day haha