djb2a
v3.0.0
Published
DJB2a non-cryptographic hash function
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djb2a
DJB2a non-cryptographic hash function
DJB2a has good distribution and collisions are rare.
The implementation uses BigInt internally for precision, avoiding integer overflow issues that can occur with JavaScript's regular number type when processing long strings.
Install
npm install djb2aUsage
import djb2a from 'djb2a';
// Hash a string (UTF-16 code units by default)
djb2a('🦄🌈');
//=> 1484783307
// Hash a string as UTF-8 bytes for cross-language compatibility
djb2a('🦄🌈', {bytes: true});
//=> 1642026147
// Hash bytes directly
djb2a(new Uint8Array([1, 2, 3]));
//=> 193375973
// Return a 64-bit BigInt instead of a 32-bit number
djb2a.bigint('🦄🌈');
//=> 5779750603n
// BigInt with UTF-8 bytes
djb2a.bigint('🦄🌈', {bytes: true});
//=> 7564289453806755nAPI
djb2a(input, options?)
Returns the hash as a positive 32-bit integer.
input
Type: string | Uint8Array
The input to hash. Strings are hashed as UTF-16 code units by default (see options.bytes to change this).
options
Type: object
bytes
Type: boolean
Default: false
Interpret the string as UTF-8 encoded bytes instead of UTF-16 code units.
This provides compatibility with DJB2a implementations in other languages, which typically operate on UTF-8 bytes.
djb2a.bigint(input, options?)
Returns the hash as a positive 64-bit BigInt.
Accepts the same arguments as the main function.
Implementation notes
By default, this implementation processes strings as UTF-16 code units using JavaScript's charCodeAt method. This makes it a JavaScript-specific variant of DJB2a that differs from the original C implementation (which operates on bytes) for non-ASCII characters.
Use the bytes option to encode strings as UTF-8 for compatibility with other language implementations.
