Tcl
Tcl
Decompress a Base64-Encoded Gzip String
See more Gzip Examples
This example demonstrates how to use the UncompressStringENC method to decompress Gzip-compressed data that is provided as an encoded string.
The example first compresses a string and encodes the result as Base64. It then demonstrates how the Base64 string can be decoded and decompressed back into the original text.
Internally, the method performs three steps:
- The input string is decoded from the specified encoding (Base64 in this example) to obtain the compressed binary data.
- The binary data is decompressed using the Gzip algorithm.
- The resulting bytes are interpreted using the specified character set (UTF-8) to produce the final string.
This method is useful when working with compressed data embedded in text-based formats such as JSON, XML, or HTTP responses.
Chilkat Tcl Downloads
load ./chilkat.dll
# This example demonstrates how to decompress Gzip data that is
# provided as a Base64-encoded string.
set gzip [new_CkGzip]
# First, create a compressed Base64 string for demonstration purposes:
set inputStr "The quick brown fox jumps over the lazy dog."
CkGzip_put_Filename $gzip "quickBrownFox.txt"
set compressedBase64 [CkGzip_compressStringENC $gzip $inputStr "utf-8" "base64"]
if {[CkGzip_get_LastMethodSuccess $gzip] == 0} then {
puts [CkGzip_lastErrorText $gzip]
delete_CkGzip $gzip
exit
}
puts "Compressed (Base64): $compressedBase64"
# Now decompress the Base64-encoded Gzip string:
set decompressed [CkGzip_uncompressStringENC $gzip $compressedBase64 "utf-8" "base64"]
if {[CkGzip_get_LastMethodSuccess $gzip] == 0} then {
puts [CkGzip_lastErrorText $gzip]
delete_CkGzip $gzip
exit
}
puts "Decompressed string:"
puts "$decompressed"
delete_CkGzip $gzip