Thanks to visit codestin.com
Credit goes to lib.rs

#steganography #encryption #low-entropy

nightly no-std seqc

Pattern-based encoding library

2 releases

Uses new Rust 2024

0.1.1 Dec 11, 2025
0.1.0 Aug 10, 2025

#967 in Encoding

MIT license

44KB
631 lines

seqc

Pattern-based encoding library for encoding binary data into human-readable patterns of repeated characters, creating textual representations that resemble visual or rhythmic sequences. It transforms raw bytes into space-separated "words" composed of repeating symbols, where repetition counts encode the original bit patterns.

The library supports customizable "dialects" that define the characters and patterns used, making it flexible for various encoding needs. It is no_std compatible by default, with optional std features for convenience functions like vector-based encoding and decoding.

Usage

First, add seqc to your Cargo.toml with std feature enabled.

Next, to use pattern-based encoding, create a dialect with desired patterns and apply it to your data:

use seqc::{Dialect, Pattern, VariablePattern};

let dialect: Dialect<2> = Dialect::new([
    VariablePattern::Ternary(Pattern::from([b'a', b'b', b'c'])),
    VariablePattern::Quaternary(Pattern::from([b'x', b'y', b'z', b'w'])),
]);

let data = vec![0xAA, 0xBB, 0xCC, 0xDD];
let encoded = dialect.encode(&data);
let decoded = dialect.decode(&encoded).unwrap();

assert_eq!(str::from_utf8(&encoded).unwrap(),
    "aaabbbccc xxxyyyzzww aaabbbbcccc xyyyyzw abbbbcc xyyyyzww "
);
assert_eq!(decoded, data);

For no_std usage, pre-allocate buffers based on measured capacity:

use seqc::{Dialect, Pattern, VariablePattern};

const DIALECT: Dialect<1> = Dialect::new([
    VariablePattern::Binary(Pattern::from([b'0', b'1'])),
]);

const DATA: &[u8] = &[0xB4];

let mut buffer = [0u8; DIALECT.measure_encode_capacity(DATA)];
let bytes_written = DIALECT.encode_slice(DATA, &mut buffer).unwrap();

assert_eq!(bytes_written, 14);
assert_eq!(&buffer[..bytes_written], b"001111 011111 ");

No runtime deps