Online HAVAL224-5 Hash Calculator

Other algorithm calculators

MD2 MD4 MD5 SHA1 SHA224 SHA256 SHA384 SHA512/224 SHA512/256 SHA512 SHA3-224 SHA3-256 SHA3-384 SHA3-512 RIPEMD128 RIPEMD160 RIPEMD256 RIPEMD320 WHIRLPOOL TIGER128,3 TIGER160,3 TIGER192,3 TIGER128,4 TIGER160,4 TIGER192,4 SNEFRU SNEFRU256 GOST GOST-CRYPTO ADLER32 CRC32 CRC32B CRC32C FNV132 FNV1A32 FNV164 FNV1A64 JOAAT MURMUR3A MURMUR3C MURMUR3F XXH32 XXH64 XXH3 XXH128 HAVAL128,3 HAVAL160,3 HAVAL192,3 HAVAL224,3 HAVAL256,3 HAVAL128,4 HAVAL160,4 HAVAL192,4 HAVAL224,4 HAVAL256,4 HAVAL128,5 HAVAL160,5 HAVAL192,5 HAVAL224,5 HAVAL256,5

Your last 10 encodings

AlgorithmStringHash
ripemd1286969413ce7b9c83e3e98111b33fc230ea028
sha1pizza1f6ccd2be75f1cc94a22a773eea8f8aeb5c68217
snefrulakers71fa3b8dabb63016d19a960e2c4342d7b309712406ab6a7174146d68acedcf8c
xxh3access723089f5a7f3306e
sha256password10b14d501a594442a01c6859541bcb3e8164d183d32937b851835442f69d5c94e
murmur3f1122337ea8cc2cdddca778e278ef1d00803cec
sha3-224whateverbc5b1475d45dae5b5a37421d78047a4aef226f447764388abe994f47
sha1zaqda89a65e5debe06011418cdf220b2dd71f7b065f
fnv164michaelfc88bfc51acff1cc
sha256yankees8360632a2b41498c6f979a15aced6655a2857f259533e77106228c683c4ab5af

Usage FAQ

Usage from Address Bar

Access this page directly from your browser's address bar. Enter the string you need to encode with an algorithm according to the following schema: https://md5calc.com/hash/<ALGORITHM>/<PHRASE> For example, to visit the page with the hash of "hello world", simply go to: https://md5calc.com/hash/md5/hello+world Another cool feature is that you can specify "json" or "plain" mode in the URL to get only the HASH in the response. Schema of this feature: https://md5calc.com/hash/<ALGORITHM>.<OUTPUT:plain|json>/<PHRASE> Example: https://md5calc.com/hash/md5.json/hello+world Will output only: "5eb63bbbe01eeed093cb22bb8f5acdc3"

If you have a string containing complex URL-encoded characters, you can send it directly via parameters to avoid processing by our URL parser. Use:
str - for string to encode
algo - for algorithm
output - for output type (empty, "json" or "plain")
https://md5calc.com/hash?algo=<ALGORITHM>&str=<PHRASE>&output=<OUTPUT:plain|json> https://md5calc.com/hash?algo=md5&str=hello%0Aworld https://md5calc.com/hash/md5?str=hello%0Aworld

Usage from Javascript

We have removed CORS restriction so you can access the hash calculator directly in your JavaScript applications via AJAX.

Example:

var toEncode = 'hello world';
var xhr = new XMLHttpRequest();
xhr.onreadystatechange = function () {
if (xhr.readyState == 4 && xhr.status == 200) {
console.log('JSON of "'+toEncode+'" is "'+JSON.parse(xhr.response)+'"');
};
};
xhr.open('GET', 'https://md5calc.com/hash/md5.json/'+encodeURIComponent(toEncode), true);
xhr.send();
Will output: JSON of "hello world" is "5eb63bbbe01eeed093cb22bb8f5acdc3"

Usage from PHP

You can access this function directly in your applications.

PHP Example: <?php
$str = 'hello world';
$url ='https://md5calc.com/hash/md5.plain/'.urlencode($str);
$md5hash = file_get_contents($url);
echo 'Hash of "'.$str.'" is "'.$md5hash.'"';
Will output: Hash of "hello world" is "5eb63bbbe01eeed093cb22bb8f5acdc3"

Chains of algorithms

In some cases, you may need to encode a string using two or more algorithms. For these cases, we have introduced chains of algorithms. For example, if you need to encode a string according to this schema: md5(sha512(sha1('hello world'))) you can do this by connecting algorithms with a double dash: https://md5calc.com/hash/md5--sha512--sha1/hello+world If you do this in your address bar, you can also use a semicolon instead of a double dash. https://md5calc.com/hash/md5;sha512;sha1/hello+world Note that the semicolon should be encoded in the URL, so if you are not using a browser, you should use '%3B' instead: https://md5calc.com/hash/md5%3Bsha512%3Bsha1/hello+world Such approach can be also used with "plain" and "json" mode https://md5calc.com/hash/md5--sha512--sha1.plain/hello+world https://md5calc.com/hash/md5;sha512;sha1.json/hello+world

You can also use special chain item "b64d" or "base64decode" to make base64 decode. It can help to hash any of not printable characters. Example: https://md5calc.com/hash/md5.plain/hello+world https://md5calc.com/hash/b64d--md5.plain/aGVsbG8gd29ybGQ= will be the same: 5eb63bbbe01eeed093cb22bb8f5acdc3

Carriage Return and Line Feed characters

Currently, our text editor doesn't have functionality to determine which of those characters you want to keep in the string. This issue arises because browsers normalize all line endings to the "CRLF" ("\r\n") format according to the HTML specification. This means that if you paste a string from the clipboard:
"hello\nword" and press "Encode", your browser will convert it to "hello\r\nword" and only after this will your browser send the FORM to us. As a result, we will show you the hash of: "hello\r\nword" but not "hello\nword"

You can avoid this by encoding the string to "Base64" on your side and using the "Chains of algorithms" described above.

Example 1: Hash from string with only Line Feed (LF) character Text: hello\nworld
Text encoded to BASE64: aGVsbG8Kd29ybGQ=
URL: https://md5calc.com/hash/b64d--md5.plain/aGVsbG8Kd29ybGQ=
RESULT: 9195d0beb2a889e1be05ed6bb1954837

Example 2: Hash from string with Carriage Return (CR) and Line Feed (LF) character. This is the result you will get if you use an editor with CR, LF, or CRLF symbols.
Text: hello\r\nworld
Text encoded to BASE64: aGVsbG8NCndvcmxk
URL: https://md5calc.com/hash/b64d--md5.plain/aGVsbG8NCndvcmxk
RESULT: 6a4316b18e6162cf9fcfa435c8eb74c1

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