Skip to content
Human-readable digests.
Branch: master
Clone or download
Pull request Compare This branch is 23 commits ahead of zacharyvoase:master.
Permalink
Type Name Latest commit message Commit time
Failed to load latest commit information.
.coveragerc Add .coveragerc for consistent coverage results May 11, 2017
.gitignore Add tests, and Travis and Coveralls configuration Apr 11, 2017
.travis.yml Use the install: key in .travis.yml to install test dependencies Apr 11, 2017
MANIFEST.in
README.rst Add installation section to README Jun 6, 2017
UNLICENSE Initial import. Dec 12, 2011
humanhash.py Ignore branch statements for Python 2/3 and __main__ May 11, 2017
setup.py Bump version to 0.0.6 for PyPI release May 11, 2017

README.rst

humanhash

humanhash provides human-readable representations of digests.

Example

>>> import humanhash

>>> digest = '7528880a986c40e78c38115e640da2a1'
>>> humanhash.humanize(digest)
'three-georgia-xray-jig'
>>> humanhash.humanize(digest, words=6)
'high-mango-white-oregon-purple-charlie'

>>> humanhash.uuid()
('potato-oranges-william-friend', '9d2278759ae24698b1345525bd53358b')

Install

This module is available on PyPI as the humanhash3 package. You can install it with pip:

$ pip install humanhash3

Caveats

Don’t store the humanhash output, as its statistical uniqueness is only around 1 in 4.3 billion. Its intended use is as a human-readable (and, most importantly, memorable) representation of a longer digest, unique enough for display in a user interface, where a user may need to remember or verbally communicate the identity of a hash, without having to remember a 40-character hexadecimal sequence. Nevertheless, you should keep original digests around, then pass them through humanize() only as you’re displaying them.

How It Works

The procedure for generating a humanhash involves compressing the input to a fixed length (default: 4 bytes), then mapping each of these bytes to a word in a pre-defined wordlist (a default wordlist is supplied with the library). This algorithm is consistent, so the same input, given the same wordlist, will always give the same output. You can also use your own wordlist, and specify a different number of words for output.

Inspiration

  • Chroma-Hash - A human-viewable representation of a hash (albeit not one that can be output on a terminal, or shouted down a hallway).
  • The NATO Phonetic Alphabet - A great example of the trade-off between clarity of human communication and byte-wise efficiency of representation.
You can’t perform that action at this time.