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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 12, 20262026-05-12T20:29:31+00:00 2026-05-12T20:29:31+00:00

Please note that this is not homework and i did search before starting this

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Please note that this is not homework and i did search before starting this new thread. I got Store an int in a char array?

I was looking for an answer but didn’t get any satisfactory answer in the above thread.

Here’s my requirement: I want to encode my data(say an integer) in a byte array and then transfer over the network and then decode at the other end and process it.

Here’s the encoding part:

const int MAX=5;
uint32_t a = 0xff00ffaa;
char byte_array[1024]; // this is the array to be transferred over the network
char buff[MAX]="";
sprintf(buff,"%4d",a);
memcpy(byte_array,buff,4);
// fill remaining stuff in the byte array and send it over the network

Here’s the decoding part:

const int MAX=5;
char buff[MAX]="";
strncat(buff,byte_array,4)

int i=atoi(buff);
// Work with i

Here are my questions :

1) Is the above code portable? I guess it is( please correct me)

2) Now, I wish to encode the byte array with 3 bytes (but the integer size is 4) i.e say the integer stores 0x00ffaabb and i just want the byte array to have ff int 0th index aa in the 1st index and bb in the 2nd index. How to do that?

snprinf doesn’t seem to work or may be i am missing something.

A person who has implemented any network protocol can easily help me out.
Decoding logic would still work i guess. (strncat(buff,byte_array,3) followed by atoi function call).

Here’s what the protocol says :

    --------+--------+--------+--------+------------------------------
    |Version|   3       byte    length |  Remaining stuff
    --------+--------+--------+--------+------------------------------

Version is 1 byte, followed by 3 byte length of the message.

I hope I could clarify my problem

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-12T20:29:31+00:00Added an answer on May 12, 2026 at 8:29 pm

    You’re storing as ASCII, where you should be storing the bytes themselves.

    The encoding should be something like:

    uint32_t a = 0xff00ffaa;
    unsigned char byte_array[1024];
    

    Notice how I made your target array unsigned, to indicate that it’s “raw bytes”, and not actually characters.

    byte_array[0] = a >> 24;
    byte_array[1] = a >> 16;
    byte_array[2] = a >> 8;
    byte_array[3] = a >> 0;
    

    This serializes the variable a into the four first bytes of byte_array using big-endian byte ordering, which is sort of the default for many network protocols.

    You may also want to see my answer here: question 1577161.

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