Which encoding uses the \x (backslash x) prefix?

EncodingInternationalization

Encoding Problem Overview


I'm attempting to decode text which is prefixing certain 'special characters' with \x. I've worked out the following mappings by hand:

\x28   (
\x29   )
\x3a   :

e.g. 12\x3a39\x3a03 AM

Does anyone recognise what this encoding is?

Encoding Solutions


Solution 1 - Encoding

It's ASCII. All occurrences of the four characters \xST are converted to 1 character, whose ASCII code is ST (in hexadecimal), where S and T are any of 0123456789abcdefABCDEF.

Solution 2 - Encoding

The '\xAB' notation is used in C, C++, Perl, and other languages taking a cue from C, as a way of expressing hexadecimal character codes in the middle of a string.

The notation '\007' means use octal for the character code, when there are digits after the backslash.

In C99 and later, you can also use \uabcd and \U00abcdef to encode Unicode characters in hexadecimal (with 4 and 8 hex digits required; the first two hex digits in \U must be 0 to be valid, and often the third digit will be 0 too — 1 is the only other valid value).

Note that in C, octal escapes are limited to a maximum of 3 digits but hexadecimal escapes are not limited to 2 or 3 digits; the hexadecimal escape ends at the first character that's not a hexadecimal digit. In the question, the sequence is "12\x3a39\x3a03". That is a string containing 4 characters: 1, 2, \x3a39 and \x3a03. The actual value used for the 4-digit hex characters is implementation-defined. To achieve the desired result (using \x3A to represent a colon :), the code would have to use string concatenation:

"12\x3a" "39\x3a" "03"

This now contains 8 characters: 1, 2, :, 3, 9, :, 0, 3.

Solution 3 - Encoding

I use CyberChef for this sort of thing.

If you drop it in the input field and drag Magic from the Favourites list into the recipe it'll tell you the conversion and that you could've used the From_Hex recipe with a \x delimiter.

Solution 4 - Encoding

I'm guessing that what you are dealing with is a unicode string that has been encoded differently than the output stream it was sent to. ie. a utf-16 string output to a latin-1 device. In that situation, certain characters will be outputted as escape values to avoid sending control characters or wrong characters to the output device. This happens in python at least.

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Content TypeOriginal AuthorOriginal Content on Stackoverflow
QuestionAlex AngasView Question on Stackoverflow
Solution 1 - EncodingptsView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 2 - EncodingJonathan LefflerView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 3 - EncodingrichView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 4 - EncodinglostlogicView Answer on Stackoverflow