> Is the following more like how you want it? > > > > data = "" > > try: > > while True: > > try: > > more = client_socket.recv(9) > > except bluetooth.BluetoothError, b: > > print "Bluetooth Error: ", b > > else: > > data += more > > > > while len(data) >= 9: > > print "Data: [%s]" % binascii.hexlify(data[ : 9]) > > data = data[9 : ] > > except KeyboardInterrupt: > > #print "Closing socket...", > > client_socket.close() > > #print "done." > > > > You could, of course, decide to recv more than 9 bytes at a time. It > > could return less than you asked for (but it should block until at > > least 1 byte is available), but it will never return more than you > > asked for.
Thank you for your interest and quick reply. Its a great start, seeing as I'm a beginner with python, I was actually hoping to see an example of http://code.activestate.com/recipes/408859/ as it appears to be exactly what I need, but I haven't got a clue how to implement it. Basically as each byte perhaps gets read or 9 bytes at a time, that way I can seek out as much real data as possible Data: [0000002c025b025321] Data: [00010048000602505e] Data: [0002004a000a025552] Data: [0003004b0006025752] Data: [00046698000702569e] (notice the header data[9:1] will always flow in this pattern 0 -> 4 and then back again, so I figure that might as well be my start) And skip the errors... Data: [0002004b000a026343] Data: [00] Data: [03004f0006025b4a00] Data: [046698000802569d00] Data: [00003002830257f100] -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list