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Conversor de Endereço IPv4TI e DesenvolvimentoInstant browser workflowFocused single-task utilityNo setup required

Conversor de Endereço IPv4

Converta endereços IPv4 entre formatos decimal, binário, hexadecimal e inteiro

192.168.1.1Private3232235777Inteiro3232235777Mapeado para IPv6::ffff:192.168.1.1
Endereço IPv4
192.168.1.1

Private

Commonly used inside LANs and NAT-protected internal networks.

Examples

Resultado
Copy any representation directly from the conversion grid.

Decimal (Pontilhado)

Canonical dotted-decimal address

192.168.1.1

Binário

8-bit octets for packet-level inspection

11000000.10101000.00000001.00000001

Hexadecimal

Hex view used in logs and memory dumps

0xC0A80101

Inteiro

Unsigned 32-bit integer representation

3232235777

Mapeado para IPv6

IPv6-compatible address wrapper

::ffff:192.168.1.1

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Endereço IPv4192.168.1.1ProfilePrivateHexadecimal0xC0A80101Inteiro3232235777
Privacy & Trust

Binário

Switch between dotted decimal, binary, hex, integer, and IPv6-mapped views in one place.

Address profile

Commonly used inside LANs and NAT-protected internal networks.

Resultado

All calculations run locally in the browser with no network lookup required.

Resultado

Copy or export the current IPv4 conversion summary.

Endereço IPv4: 192.168.1.1 Profile: Private Binário: 11000000.10101000.00000001.00000001 Hexadecimal: 0xC0A80101 Inteiro: 3232235777 Mapeado para IPv6: ::ffff:192.168.1.1

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Funciona inteiramente no seu navegador. Nenhum software para baixar ou instalar.

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IPv4 Address Formats: Decimal, Binary, Hex, and Octal

Key Takeaways

  • An IPv4 address is a 32-bit number that can be represented in dotted decimal, binary, hexadecimal, and integer formats.
  • Understanding different IPv4 representations is essential for network debugging, firewall rules, and low-level protocol analysis.
  • All address conversion happens in your browser — your IP addresses are never transmitted to any server.

IPv4 addresses are most commonly written in dotted-decimal notation (192.168.1.1), but the underlying 32-bit integer can be expressed in many formats. Binary representation reveals subnet boundaries, hexadecimal is used in packet captures and memory dumps, and integer format appears in some database storage schemes. Converting between these formats is a frequent task in network administration and security analysis.

There are approximately 4.3 billion possible IPv4 addresses (2^32), with less than 15% remaining unallocated.

IPv4 Address Space

Key Concepts

1

Dotted Decimal Notation

The standard format (192.168.1.1) represents each of the four octets as a decimal number (0-255) separated by dots. This is the most human-readable format used in configuration.

2

Binary Representation

Each octet is an 8-bit binary number. 192.168.1.1 = 11000000.10101000.00000001.00000001. Binary is essential for understanding subnetting and mask operations.

3

Hexadecimal Format

Each octet as two hex digits: 192.168.1.1 = C0.A8.01.01 or 0xC0A80101. Hex appears in packet captures (Wireshark), memory addresses, and low-level network programming.

4

Integer (Long) Format

The entire 32-bit address as a single integer: 192.168.1.1 = 3232235777. Some databases store IP addresses as integers for efficient range queries and indexing.

Pro Tips

Use binary format to visualize subnet boundaries — the network/host boundary falls at the subnet mask's transition from 1s to 0s.

Store IPv4 addresses as 32-bit integers in databases for 4x storage savings and faster range queries compared to string storage.

Be aware that some systems interpret leading zeros as octal — 010.010.010.010 may be parsed as 8.8.8.8, not 10.10.10.10.

Use hex format when analyzing network packets in Wireshark or writing raw socket programs.

All IPv4 address conversion is performed entirely in your browser. Your IP addresses and network information are never transmitted to any external server.

Perguntas Frequentes