My Notepad++ binhex plugin
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See https://github.com/bruderstein/nppPluginManager how to add it to the plugin manager.
Typically on github the source code is not added as zip, but directly. Additionally it is possible in this case to add an appveyor configuration for continuous integration builds. Releases could be done under https://github.com/skycc86/npp_binhex_plugin/releases instead of adding the binaries to the master.
PluginManager needs the binaries as zip. -
See https://github.com/skycc86/npp_binhex_plugin/pull/1
Seems you didn’t use the latest plugin template from https://github.com/npp-plugins/plugintemplate/releases/tag/v3.1 -
thanks @chcg , i have merge your pull request and just made a binary release in github
https://github.com/skycc86/npp_binhex_plugin/releaseswill find out how to add it into plugin manager next.
i have check on the plugintemplate, i am using the latest release v3.1, i just download the template from github master branch recently :)
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Ah, the spirit of C++98… It’s like when I was younger, I feel nostalgia. No abstractions over abstractions over abstractions that overcomplicate the code understanding significantly - and in fact are used only in the name of flexibility that no one really understands at the end…
Is it expected to work with UTF-8 text that contains non-Latin characters, by the way? -
Sorry, my wording might be confusing on the binary hex conversion, its actually mean binary base to hexadecimal base string value conversion.
For eg, 0xa5 -> 0b10100101
So,it will not work with latin char, maybe you are looking for hex editor plugin
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Available from PluginManager on the dev plugin list. For x64 see https://github.com/bruderstein/npp-plugins-x64/commit/451f3bb9e4041de14cb6a2a99e91ae46725ff28d. x86 is already available.
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cool, justed tested it out with plugin manager, it works, thanks @chcg
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I have a big problem with your plugin, so I had to uninstall it. It does some work on Ctrl-Shift-Left/Right. This is a Windows global shortcut reserved for moving one word left or right while selecting. I use it quite a lot and I was mystified when not only it did not work, but it was changing the selected text (even when it was NOT valid hexadecimal, like “Download”). I only installed it because I was looking for a hex editor, so uninstalling it does not impact me, but I thought I would tell you so you can address the problem for people who want to use it.
Cheers!
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@Costin-Manda See https://github.com/skycc86/npp_binhex_plugin/issues/3. Maybe you want to contribute there.
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Hello, @skycc-lim, @costin-manda, and All
I tested your plugin features and everything works as expected ! Great :-))
Notes :
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When you speak of HEX shift and HEX rotate, I think that you should write, strictly, BIN shift and BIN rotate !
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To avoid shortcut conflicts, mentioned by @costin-manda, I personally use the
<
and>
symbols, instead. Note, that, on my French keyboard, these two symbols are obtained with the same key, as shown here :
http://ascii-table.com/keyboard.php/189
For people, having a key for the
<
symbol and an other key for the>
symbol, on their keyboard, as the US one, for instance, shortcuts would be more simple to create !- On the other hand, to avoid the shortcut conflict with the native Select All Between Matching Braces option of N++, I changed the
B
with theN
letter ( from word biN ) and I also changed the hex2bin shortcut, accordingly !
So, may be, @skycc-lim, it would judicious to, globally, change the BinHex menu, as below :
BEFORE AFTER ¯¯¯¯¯¯ ¯¯¯¯¯ -------------------------------------------- -------------------------------------------- bin2hex Ctrl + Shift + H bin2Hex Ctrl + Shift + H hex2bin Ctrl + Shift + B hex2biN Ctrl + Shift + N bin_invert Ctrl + Alt + B Hex_invert Ctrl + Alt + H <-- Swapped hex_invert Ctrl + Alt + H biN_invert Ctrl + Alt + N <-- Swapped reverse Ctrl + R Reverse Ctrl + R -------------------------------------------- -------------------------------------------- hex_shift >> Ctrl + Shift + Right bin_shift >> Ctrl + Shift + <> hex_shift << Ctrl + Shift + Left bin_shift << Ctrl + <> hex_rotate >> Ctrl + Alt + Right bin_rotate >> Ctrl + Alt + Shift + <> hex_rotate << Ctrl + Alt + Left bin_rotate << Ctrl + Alt + <> -------------------------------------------- -------------------------------------------- grouping_2 Ctrl + Alt + 2 grouping_2 Ctrl + Alt + 2 grouping_4 Ctrl + Alt + 4 grouping_4 Ctrl + Alt + 4 grouping_8 Ctrl + Alt + 8 grouping_8 Ctrl + Alt + 8 grouping_16 Ctrl + Alt + 6 grouping_16 Ctrl + Alt + 6 ungroup Ctrl+ Alt + 1 ungroup Ctrl+ Alt + 1 -------------------------------------------- -------------------------------------------- incremental search incremental search move to other view move to other view -------------------------------------------- -------------------------------------------- help help -------------------------------------------- --------------------------------------------
Just a suggestion, of course ;-))
Now, for people, not acquainted to bits manipulation, here are, below, some explanations, on the different commands of the BinHex plugin :
In this summary, I use, in all the examples, the hexadecimal number
f2a58b0437fc5e8223a6bd401cff90a7
( two Q-words )~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ORIGINAL Number N ( 2 Q-words ) = f2a58b0437fc5e8223a6bd401cff90a7 Hex2Bin ( Replace each HEX symbol with its 4-Bits BINARY equivalent ) => 11110010101001011000101100000100001101111111110001011110100000100010001110100110101111010100000000011100111111111001000010100111 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ORIGINAL Number N ( 128 bits ) = 11110010101001011000101100000100001101111111110001011110100000100010001110100110101111010100000000011100111111111001000010100111 Bin2Hex ( Replace each group of 4 BIN symbols with its HEX equivalent ) => f2a58b0437fc5e8223a6bd401cff90a7 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ORIGINAL Number N ( 2 Q-words ) = f2a58b0437fc5e8223a6bd401cff90a7 As : Bin-Invert of 0 (0000) = F (1111) Bin-Invert of 4 (0100) = B (1011) Bin-Invert of 8 (1000) = 7 (0111) Bin-Invert of C (1100) = 3 (0011) Bin-Invert of 1 (0001) = E (1110) Bin-Invert of 5 (0101) = A (1010) Bin-Invert of 9 (1001) = 6 (0110) Bin-Invert of D (1101) = 2 (0010) Bin-Invert of 2 (0010) = D (1101) Bin-Invert of 6 (0110) = 9 (1001) Bin-Invert of A (1010) = 5 (0101) Bin-Invert of E (1110) = 1 (0001) Bin-Invert of 3 (0011) = C (1100) Bin-Invert of 7 (0111) = 8 (1000) Bin-Invert of B (1011) = 4 (0100) Bin-Invert of F (1111) = 0 (0000) Hex_Invert => 0d5a74fbc803a17ddc5942bfe3006f58 — Strictly, Bin2Hex (Bin_Invert (Hex2Bin (N))) ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ORIGINAL Number N ( 2 Q-words ) = f2a58b0437fc5e8223a6bd401cff90a7 Reverse ( RIGHT to LEFT reading of the HEX string ) => 7a09ffc104db6a3228e5cf7340b85a2f ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Hex2Bin + Grouping_4 => 1111_0010_1010_0101_1000_1011_0000_0100_0011_0111_1111_1100_0101_1110_1000_0010_0010_0011_1010_0110_1011_1101_0100_0000_0001_1100_1111_1111_1001_0000_1010_0111 As MSB = Most Significant Bit and LSB = Least Significant Bit : Bin-Shift >> ( Add 0 as MSB — Shift OUT the LSB ) => 7952c5821bfe2f4111d35ea00e7fc853 = 0111_1001_0101_0010_1100_0101_1000_0010_0001_1011_1111_1110_0010_1111_0100_0001_0001_0001_1101_0011_0101_1110_1010_0000_0000_1110_0111_1111_1100_1000_0101_0011 Bin-Shift << ( Shift OUT the MSB — Add 0 as LSB ) => e54b16086ff8bd04474d7a8039ff214e = 1110_0101_0100_1011_0001_0110_0000_1000_0110_1111_1111_1000_1011_1101_0000_0100_0100_0111_0100_1101_0111_1010_1000_0000_0011_1001_1111_1111_0010_0001_0100_1110 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Hex2Bin + Grouping_4 => 1111_0010_1010_0101_1000_1011_0000_0100_0011_0111_1111_1100_0101_1110_1000_0010_0010_0011_1010_0110_1011_1101_0100_0000_0001_1100_1111_1111_1001_0000_1010_0111 As MSB = Most Significant Bit and LSB = Least Significant Bit : Bin-Rotate >> ( Move the LSB as the MSB ) => f952c5821bfe2f4111d35ea00e7fc853 = 1111_1001_0101_0010_1100_0101_1000_0010_0001_1011_1111_1110_0010_1111_0100_0001_0001_0001_1101_0011_0101_1110_1010_0000_0000_1110_0111_1111_1100_1000_0101_0011 Bin-Rotate << ( Move the MSB as the LSB ) => e54b16086ff8bd04474d7a8039ff214f = 1110_0101_0100_1011_0001_0110_0000_1000_0110_1111_1111_1000_1011_1101_0000_0100_0100_0111_0100_1101_0111_1010_1000_0000_0011_1001_1111_1111_0010_0001_0100_1111 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ORIGINAL Number N ( 2 Q-words ) = f2a58b0437fc5e8223a6bd401cff90a7 Grouping_2 => f2_a5_8b_04_37_fc_5e_82_23_a6_bd_40_1c_ff_90_a7 : 16 Bytes of 8 bits ( 128 bits ) Grouping_4 => f2a5_8b04_37fc_5e82_23a6_bd40_1cff_90a7 : 8 Words of 16 bits ( 128 bits ) Grouping_8 => f2a58b04_37fc5e82_23a6bd40_1cff90a7 : 4 D-Words of 32 bits ( 128 bits ) Grouping_16 => f2a58b0437fc5e82_23a6bd401cff90a7 : 2 Q-Words of 64 bits ( 128 bits ) ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Best Regards,
guy038
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Hi @guy038
Thanks for your suggestions, i will look into it when i have some time.
I am quite busy recentlyFor the shortcut key mapping,
User can change this anytime to their preference. The shortcut key can be change as below
goto Settings -> Shortcut Mapper
then click on Plugin commands tab on top, then you will see list of plugin and its correspond function and shortcut key
look for binhex.dll, just click on the shortcut key you wish to change then save it -
I think the shortcuts problem people keep talking about is that you’ve taken over very common key-combinations in your plugin. Sure, people can remap them, but really, why not supply the plugin without these?
I dislike it when a plugin I’m simply trying out takes over my keycombos assigned to other things. Grr…
IMO plugins should not set default shortcut keycombos at all. Sure, provide mappable commands, but let the end-user map them as desired.
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hi @Scott Summer
this sounds like a good idea, i have just made an release v2.0.0.1
this removing the default shortcut that clash with npp default shortcut -
updated pluginmanager with v2.0.0.1
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hi @chcg ,
after i try to update my binhex plugin from v2.0.0.0 to v2.0.0.1, the update run successfully, however, under the updates tab from the plugin manager, its still showing current install version as 2.0 and require update. can you help to take a look ?binhex plugin is not showing up at the available and installed tab from plugin manager too.
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Hi @chcg
please ignore my previous post, i have found the issue, i forgot to change the versioning in the dll, i have fix it and made a new release to overwrite previous release, its still same version v2.0.0.1.however plugin manager show it fail to validate the integrity of binhex.dll, i guess might need to update on the new binhex.dll checksum or some integrity check ? can you help ?
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Done. Updated the md5 sums.
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FWIW, just FYI:
The Mistpen malware is a modification of a legitimate plugin for the Notepad++ open-source text and source code editor.
Ref: https://cybersecuritynews.com/hackers-targeting-job-seekers/Another link: https://therecord.media/north-korea-hackers-energy-aerospace
It seems the malware in question reuses only the ability of binhex, but not uses Notepad++ as loader.