Question: is there a better way to do that?
VB.Net
Function GuidToBase64(ByVal guid As Guid) As String
Return Convert.ToBase64String(guid.ToByteArray).Replace("/", "-").Replace("+", "_").Replace("=", "")
End Function
Function Base64ToGuid(ByVal base64 As String) As Guid
Dim guid As Guid
base64 = base64.Replace("-", "/").Replace("_", "+") & "=="
Try
guid = New Guid(Convert.FromBase64String(base64))
Catch ex As Exception
Throw New Exception("Bad Base64 conversion to GUID", ex)
End Try
Return guid
End Function
C#
public string GuidToBase64(Guid guid)
{
return Convert.ToBase64String(guid.ToByteArray()).Replace("/", "-").Replace("+", "_").Replace("=", "");
}
public Guid Base64ToGuid(string base64)
{
Guid guid = default(Guid);
base64 = base64.Replace("-", "/").Replace("_", "+") + "==";
try {
guid = new Guid(Convert.FromBase64String(base64));
}
catch (Exception ex) {
throw new Exception("Bad Base64 conversion to GUID", ex);
}
return guid;
}
I understand that the reason you are clipping == in the end is that because you can be certain that for GUID (of 16 bytes), encoded string will always end with ==. So 2 characters can be saved in every conversion.
Beside the point @Skurmedal already mentioned (should throw an exception in case of invalid string as input), I think the code you posted is just good enough.