Levenshtein coding
Levenstein coding, or Levenshtein coding, is a universal code encoding the non-negative integers developed by Vladimir Levenshtein.[1][2]
Encoding[]
The code of zero is "0"; to code a positive number:
- Initialize the step count variable C to 1.
- Write the binary representation of the number without the leading "1" to the beginning of the code.
- Let M be the number of bits written in step 2.
- If M is not 0, increment C, repeat from step 2 with M as the new number.
- Write C "1" bits and a "0" to the beginning of the code.
The code begins:
Number | Encoding | Implied probability | |
---|---|---|---|
0 | 0 |
1/2 | |
1 | 10 |
1/4 | |
2 | 110 0 |
1/16 | |
3 | 110 1 |
1/16 | |
4 | 1110 0 00 |
1/128 | |
5 | 1110 0 01 |
1/128 | |
6 | 1110 0 10 |
1/128 | |
7 | 1110 0 11 |
1/128 | |
8 | 1110 1 000 |
1/256 | |
9 | 1110 1 001 |
1/256 | |
10 | 1110 1 010 |
1/256 | |
11 | 1110 1 011 |
1/256 | |
12 | 1110 1 100 |
1/256 | |
13 | 1110 1 101 |
1/256 | |
14 | 1110 1 110 |
1/256 | |
15 | 1110 1 111 |
1/256 | |
16 | 11110 0 00 0000 |
1/4096 | |
17 | 11110 0 00 0001 |
1/4096 |
To decode a Levenstein-coded integer:
- Count the number of "1" bits until a "0" is encountered.
- If the count is zero, the value is zero, otherwise
- Start with a variable N, set it to a value of 1 and repeat count minus 1 times:
- Read N bits, prepend "1", assign the resulting value to N
The Levenstein code of a positive integer is always one bit longer than the Elias omega code of that integer. However, there is a Levenstein code for zero, whereas Elias omega coding would require the numbers to be shifted so that a zero is represented by the code for one instead.
Example code[]
Encoding[]
void levenshteinEncode(char* source, char* dest)
{
IntReader intreader(source);
BitWriter bitwriter(dest);
while (intreader.hasLeft())
{
int num = intreader.getInt();
if (num == 0)
bitwriter.outputBit(0);
else
{
int c = 0;
BitStack bits;
do {
int m = 0;
for (int temp = num; temp > 1; temp>>=1) // calculate floor(log2(num))
++m;
for (int i=0; i < m; ++i)
bits.pushBit((num >> i) & 1);
num = m;
++c;
} while (num > 0);
for (int i=0; i < c; ++i)
bitwriter.outputBit(1);
bitwriter.outputBit(0);
while (bits.length() > 0)
bitwriter.outputBit(bits.popBit());
}
}
}
Decoding[]
void levenshteinDecode(char* source, char* dest)
{
BitReader bitreader(source);
IntWriter intwriter(dest);
while (bitreader.hasLeft())
{
int n = 0;
while (bitreader.inputBit()) // potentially dangerous with malformed files.
++n;
int num;
if (n == 0)
num = 0;
else
{
num = 1;
for (int i = 0; i < n-1; ++i)
{
int val = 1;
for (int j = 0; j < num; ++j)
val = (val << 1) | bitreader.inputBit();
num = val;
}
}
intwriter.putInt(num); // write out the value
}
bitreader.close();
intwriter.close();
}
See also[]
References[]
- ^ "1968 paper by V. I. Levenshtein (in Russian)" (PDF).
- ^ David Salomon (2007). Variable-length codes for data compression. Springer. p. 80. ISBN 978-1-84628-958-3.
Categories:
- Data compression
- Numeral systems
- Lossless compression algorithms