I need to learn how to process a byte stream from a form reader where each pair of bytes has meaning according to lookup dictionaries, then use the values to build an array of rows inserted into a sqlite3 database table.
Here's the context: The OMR card reader sends a stream of 69 bytes over the serial line; the last byte is a carriage return ('\r') indicating the end of record. Three pairs (in specific positions at the beginning of the stream) represent blanks (no value); two other pairs represent character strings; the values are determined from two dictionaries. The remaining 28 pairs represent values from a third dictionary. What I'm doing: I think that I have the first part correct; that is, the three blanks and two string values. The first three dictionaries are: DATA_MAP_BLANK = { chr(32)+chr(32): 0 # SP + SP } DATA_MAP_2 = { chr(32)+chr(36): 'nat', # SP + $ chr(96)+chr(32): 'eco', # + SP chr(36)+chr(32): 'soc' # $ + SP } DATA_MAP_5 = { chr(32)+chr(36): 'pro', # SP + $ chr(96)+chr(32): 'neu', # + SP chr(36)+chr(32): 'con' # $ + SP } I read the data into a string and split that into byte tokens, then start building the row to be inserted into a database table: line = ser.readline() split_line = line.split() # then pre-pend the record number to the front of the row row.join(', ', vote_id) # extract category choice (row 2, bytes 2 and 3); look up value in dictionary cat = split_line(2:4) row.join(', ', DATA_MAP_2(cat) # I'm not sure this is a correct lookup # extract position (row 5, bytes 8 and 9P; look up value in dictionary pos = split_line(8:10) row.join(', ', DATA_MAP_5(pos)) Is the above the most 'correct' way of extracting specific byte pairs, using them as dictionary keys to get values, then build a string of comma-and-quote values for insertion in the database table? Then, I've no idea how to get the rest of the data parsed for use as keys in the last data mapping dictionary. I do not see a skip value for slicing, other than in Numeric Python, and I'm not yet building an array of data. Here's the last dictionary: DATA_MAP_7 = { chr(32)+chr(16): 1.000, # SP + DLE chr(32)+chr(8): 2.000, # SP + BS chr(32)+chr(4): 3.000, # SP + EOT chr(32)+chr(2): 4.000, # SP + STX chr(32)+chr(1): 5.000, # SP + SOH chr(64)+chr(32): 6.000, # @ + SP chr(16)+chr(32): 7.000, # DLE + SP chr(8)+chr(32): 8.000, # BS + SP chr(4)+chr(32): 9.000, # EOT + SP chr(34)+chr(8): 0.500, # " + BS chr(34)+chr(4): 0.333, # " + EOT chr(34)+chr(2): 0.025, # " + STX chr(34)+chr(1): 0.200, # " + SOH chr(66)+chr(32): 0.167, # B + SP chr(18)+chr(32): 0.143, # DC2 + SP chr(10)+chr(32): 0.125, # LF + SP chr(6)+chr(32): 0.111 # ACK + SP } I know how I'd do all this in C, but since I'm learning python I have not found how best to accomplish this despite the books and online references I've read. TIA, Rich -- Richard B. Shepard, Ph.D. | The Environmental Permitting Applied Ecosystem Services, Inc.(TM) | Accelerator <http://www.appl-ecosys.com> Voice: 503-667-4517 Fax: 503-667-8863 -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list