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HTML5 Data and Services Cookbook

You're reading from   HTML5 Data and Services Cookbook Take the fast track to the rapidly growing world of HTML5 data and services with this brilliantly practical cookbook. Whether building websites or web applications, this is the handbook you need to master HTML5.

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Product type Paperback
Published in Sep 2013
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781783559282
Length 480 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
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Toc

Table of Contents (21) Chapters Close

HTML5 Data and Services Cookbook
Credits
About the Authors
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
1. Display of Textual Data 2. Display of Graphical Data FREE CHAPTER 3. Animated Data Display 4. Using HTML5 Input Components 5. Custom Input Components 6. Data Validation 7. Data Serialization 8. Communicating with Servers 9. Client-side Templates 10. Data Binding Frameworks 11. Data Storage 12. Multimedia Installing Node.js and Using npm Community and Resources Index

Decoding base64 encoded binary data


Until very recently, JavaScript didn't have any native support for storing binary data types. Most binary data was handled as strings. Binary data that could not be handled using strings (for example, images) was handled as base64 encoded strings.

Note

Base64 is a method to encode binary data by converting groups of bytes into groups of base64 numbers. The goal is to avoid data loss by safely representing binary data using only printable characters which will not be interpreted in a special way.

HTML5 has much better support for binary data, it can be stored and manipulated using the ArrayBuffer class and the typed array classes. However, legacy libraries and API may still use base64 data. In order to do more efficient binary processing in modern browsers, we might want to convert this data into array buffers.

In this recipe, we're going to write a conversion function that converts base64 encoded strings to array buffers.

Getting ready

To write this function...

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