Difference between revisions of "Lua:byteTableToQword"

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[[Category:Lua]]
 
[[Category:Lua]]
'''function''' byteTableToQword(''Table'') ''':''' integer
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'''function''' byteTableToQword(''Table'') ''':''' Number
  
Converts a byte table to a QWORD (8 bytes), interpreting them as an integer.
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Converts a table of bytes to a 64-bit qword (integer).
  
 
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===Function Parameters===
=== Function Parameters ===
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{|width="85%" cellpadding="10%" cellspacing="0" border="0"
{|width="85%" cellpadding="10%" cellpadding="5%" cellspacing="0" border="0"
 
 
!align="left"|Parameter
 
!align="left"|Parameter
 
!align="left"|Type
 
!align="left"|Type
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|-
 
|-
 
|Table
 
|Table
|table
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|Table
|The table of bytes to convert
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|A table containing the bytes to convert (least significant byte first).
 
|}
 
|}
  
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===Returns===
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Number — The resulting 64-bit qword (integer).
  
== Examples ==
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===Explanation===
Code:
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The function takes a table of bytes (e.g., <code>{0x88, 0x77, 0x66, 0x55, 0x44, 0x33, 0x22, 0x11}</code>) and combines them into a single 64-bit value.
  local bt = { 0x64, 0x00, 0x00, 0x00, 0x00, 0x00, 0x00, 0x00 }
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The first element is the least significant byte (little-endian order).
  local value = byteTableToQword(bt)
 
  print(string.format('0x%0X', value))
 
  print(value)
 
  
Output:
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For example, <code>byteTableToQword({0x88, 0x77, 0x66, 0x55, 0x44, 0x33, 0x22, 0x11})</code> returns <code>0x1122334455667788</code>.
  0x64
 
  100
 
  
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===Examples===
 +
<pre>
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local qword = byteTableToQword({0x88, 0x77, 0x66, 0x55, 0x44, 0x33, 0x22, 0x11})
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print(string.format("0x%X", qword)) -- Output: 0x1122334455667788
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</pre>
  
 
{{LuaSeeAlso}}
 
{{LuaSeeAlso}}

Revision as of 17:38, 11 July 2025

function byteTableToQword(Table) : Number

Converts a table of bytes to a 64-bit qword (integer).

Function Parameters

Parameter Type Description
Table Table A table containing the bytes to convert (least significant byte first).

Returns

Number — The resulting 64-bit qword (integer).

Explanation

The function takes a table of bytes (e.g., {0x88, 0x77, 0x66, 0x55, 0x44, 0x33, 0x22, 0x11}) and combines them into a single 64-bit value. The first element is the least significant byte (little-endian order).

For example, byteTableToQword({0x88, 0x77, 0x66, 0x55, 0x44, 0x33, 0x22, 0x11}) returns 0x1122334455667788.

Examples

local qword = byteTableToQword({0x88, 0x77, 0x66, 0x55, 0x44, 0x33, 0x22, 0x11})
print(string.format("0x%X", qword)) -- Output: 0x1122334455667788

See also

Lua
Script Engine

Related Functions

Read Functions
readBytes
readSmallInteger
readInteger
readQword
readPointer
readFloat
readDouble
readString
Read Functions (Local Process)
readBytesLocal
readIntegerLocal
readQwordLocal
readPointerLocal
readFloatLocal
readDoubleLocal
readStringLocal
Write Functions
writeBytes
writeSmallInteger
writeInteger
writeQword
writeFloat
writeDouble
writeString
Write Functions (Local Process)
writeBytesLocal
writeIntegerLocal
writeQwordLocal
writeFloatLocal
writeDoubleLocal
writeStringLocal
Byte Table Conversions (Value → Byte Table)
wordToByteTable
dwordToByteTable
qwordToByteTable
floatToByteTable
doubleToByteTable
stringToByteTable
wideStringToByteTable
Byte Table Conversions (Byte Table → Value)
byteTableToWord
byteTableToDword
byteTableToQword
byteTableToFloat
byteTableToDouble
byteTableToString
byteTableToWideString