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If you were to be an onmyoji (an yin-yang exorcist), this gem would help your work. This gem provides the functions that encodes/decodes Base64 written in hexagrams, the figures used in I Ching. The API is compatible with the Base64 library in the Ruby Standard Library, so it is very easy to make your application more yin-yang-ful.
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 Dependencies

Development

~> 1.7
~> 10.0
>= 0
 Project Readme

Acme::Base64Hexagrams

If you were to be an onmyoji (an yin-yang exorcist), this gem would help your work.

This gem provides the functions that encodes/decodes Base64 written in hexagrams, the figures used in I Ching. The API is compatible with the Base64 library in the Ruby Standard Library, so it is very easy to make your application more yin-yang-ful.

Installation

Add this line to your application's Gemfile:

gem 'acme-base64_hexagrams'

And then execute:

$ bundle

Or install it yourself as:

$ gem install acme-base64_hexagrams

Usage

p Acme::Base64Hexagrams.encode64("きつねかわいい!!") #=> "䷋䷋䷙䷻䷋䷋䷙䷸䷋䷋䷙䷜䷋䷋䷙䷵䷋䷋䷥䷒䷋䷋䷙䷈䷋䷋䷙䷈䷏䷏䷷䷪䷏䷏䷷䷪\n"
p Acme::Base64Hexagrams.decode64("䷋䷋䷙䷻䷋䷋䷙䷸䷋䷋䷙䷜䷋䷋䷙䷵䷋䷋䷥䷒䷋䷋䷙䷈䷋䷋䷙䷈䷏䷏䷷䷪䷏䷏䷷䷪\n").force_encoding("utf-8") #=> "きつねかわいい!!"

p Acme::Base64Hexagrams.strict_encode64("きつねかわいい!!") #=> "䷋䷋䷙䷻䷋䷋䷙䷸䷋䷋䷙䷜䷋䷋䷙䷵䷋䷋䷥䷒䷋䷋䷙䷈䷋䷋䷙䷈䷏䷏䷷䷪䷏䷏䷷䷪"
p Acme::Base64Hexagrams.strict_decode64("䷋䷋䷙䷻䷋䷋䷙䷸䷋䷋䷙䷜䷋䷋䷙䷵䷋䷋䷥䷒䷋䷋䷙䷈䷋䷋䷙䷈䷏䷏䷷䷪䷏䷏䷷䷪").force_encoding("utf-8") #=> "きつねかわいい!!"

Contributing

  1. Fork it ( https://github.com/nullkal/acme-base64_hexagrams/fork )
  2. Create your feature branch (git checkout -b my-new-feature)
  3. Commit your changes (git commit -am 'Add some feature')
  4. Push to the branch (git push origin my-new-feature)
  5. Create a new Pull Request