BitConverter::ToString Method (array<Byte>, Int32)
Converts the numeric value of each element of a specified subarray of bytes to its equivalent hexadecimal string representation.
Assembly: mscorlib (in mscorlib.dll)
Parameters
- value
- Type: array<System::Byte>
An array of bytes.
- startIndex
- Type: System::Int32
The starting position within value.
Return Value
Type: System::StringA string of hexadecimal pairs separated by hyphens, where each pair represents the corresponding element in a subarray of value; for example, "7F-2C-4A-00".
| Exception | Condition |
|---|---|
| ArgumentNullException | value is nullptr. |
| ArgumentOutOfRangeException | startIndex is less than zero or greater than the length of value minus 1. |
The elements from array position startIndex to the end of the array are converted. The order of hexadecimal strings returned by the ToString method depends on whether the computer architecture is little-endian or big-endian.
The following code example converts the part of a Byte array starting at the specified startIndex to a String with the ToString method.
// Example of some BitConverter::ToString( ) method overloads. using namespace System; // Display a byte array, using multiple lines if necessary. void WriteMultiLineByteArray( array<unsigned char>^bytes, String^ name ) { const int rowSize = 20; String^ underLine = "--------------------------------"; int iter; Console::WriteLine( name ); Console::WriteLine( underLine->Substring( 0, Math::Min( name->Length, underLine->Length ) ) ); for ( iter = 0; iter < bytes->Length - rowSize; iter += rowSize ) { Console::Write( BitConverter::ToString( bytes, iter, rowSize ) ); Console::WriteLine( "-" ); } Console::WriteLine( BitConverter::ToString( bytes, iter ) ); Console::WriteLine(); } int main() { array<unsigned char>^arrayOne = {0,0,0,0,128,63,0,0,112,65,0,255,127,71,0,0,128,59,0,0,128,47,73,70,131,5,75,6,158,63,77,6,158,63,80,6,158,63,30,55,190,121,255,255,127,255,255,127,127,1,0,0,0,192,255,0,0,128,255,0,0,128,127}; array<unsigned char>^arrayTwo = {255,255,255,0,0,20,0,33,0,0,0,1,0,0,0,100,167,179,182,224,13,0,202,154,59,0,143,91,0,170,170,170,170,170,170,0,0,232,137,4,35,199,138,255,232,244,255,252,205,255,255,129}; array<unsigned char>^arrayThree = {0,222,0,0,0,224,111,64,0,0,224,255,255,255,239,65,0,0,131,0,0,0,112,63,0,143,0,100,0,0,240,61,223,136,30,28,254,116,170,1,250,89,140,66,202,192,243,63,251,89,140,66,202,192,243,63,252,89,140,66,202,192,243,63,82,211,187,188,232,126,255,255,255,244,255,239,127,1,0,0,0,10,17,0,0,248,255,0,88,0,91,0,0,240,255,0,0,240,157}; Console::WriteLine( "This example of the\n" " BitConverter::ToString( unsigned char[ ], int ) and \n" " BitConverter::ToString( unsigned char[ ], int, int ) \n" "methods generates the following output.\n" ); WriteMultiLineByteArray( arrayOne, "arrayOne" ); WriteMultiLineByteArray( arrayTwo, "arrayTwo" ); WriteMultiLineByteArray( arrayThree, "arrayThree" ); } /* This example of the BitConverter::ToString( unsigned char[ ], int ) and BitConverter::ToString( unsigned char[ ], int, int ) methods generates the following output. arrayOne -------- 00-00-00-00-80-3F-00-00-70-41-00-FF-7F-47-00-00-80-3B-00-00- 80-2F-49-46-83-05-4B-06-9E-3F-4D-06-9E-3F-50-06-9E-3F-1E-37- BE-79-FF-FF-7F-FF-FF-7F-7F-01-00-00-00-C0-FF-00-00-80-FF-00- 00-80-7F arrayTwo -------- FF-FF-FF-00-00-14-00-21-00-00-00-01-00-00-00-64-A7-B3-B6-E0- 0D-00-CA-9A-3B-00-8F-5B-00-AA-AA-AA-AA-AA-AA-00-00-E8-89-04- 23-C7-8A-FF-E8-F4-FF-FC-CD-FF-FF-81 arrayThree ---------- 00-DE-00-00-00-E0-6F-40-00-00-E0-FF-FF-FF-EF-41-00-00-83-00- 00-00-70-3F-00-8F-00-64-00-00-F0-3D-DF-88-1E-1C-FE-74-AA-01- FA-59-8C-42-CA-C0-F3-3F-FB-59-8C-42-CA-C0-F3-3F-FC-59-8C-42- CA-C0-F3-3F-52-D3-BB-BC-E8-7E-FF-FF-FF-F4-FF-EF-7F-01-00-00- 00-0A-11-00-00-F8-FF-00-58-00-5B-00-00-F0-FF-00-00-F0-9D */
Windows 7, Windows Vista SP1 or later, Windows XP SP3, Windows XP SP2 x64 Edition, Windows Server 2008 (Server Core not supported), Windows Server 2008 R2 (Server Core supported with SP1 or later), Windows Server 2003 SP2
The .NET Framework does not support all versions of every platform. For a list of the supported versions, see .NET Framework System Requirements.