On 2012-12-24 15:58, Tim Chase wrote:
On 12/24/12 09:36, Roy Smith wrote:
I have an integer that I want to encode as a hex string, but I don't
want "0x" at the beginning, nor do I want "L" at the end if it happened
to be a long.  The result needs to be something I can pass to int(h, 16)
to get back my original integer.

The brute force way works:

   h = hex(i)
   assert h.startswith('0x')
   h = h[2:]
   if h.endswith('L'):
       h = h[:-1]

but I'm wondering if there's some built-in call which gives me what I
want directly.  Python 2.7.

Would something like

   h = "%08x" % i

or

   h = "%x" % i

work for you?

Or:

    h = "{:x}".format(i)

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