On Sat, 16 Nov 2013 23:16:58 +0100, Laszlo Nagy wrote: > Questions: > > * if we have bytes.fromhex() then why don't we have > bytes_instance.tohex() ?
The Python core developers are quite conservative about adding new methods, particularly when there is already a solution to the given problem. bytes.fromhex is very useful, because when working with binary data it is common to give data as strings of hex values, and so it is good to have a built-in method for it: image = bytes.fromhex('ffd8ffe000104a464946000101 ...') On the other hand, converting bytes to hexadecimal values is less common. There's already at least two ways to do it in Python 2: py> import binascii py> binascii.hexlify('Python') '507974686f6e' py> import codecs py> codecs.encode('Python', 'hex') '507974686f6e' [Aside: in Python 3, the codecs where (mistakenly) removed, but they'll be added back in 3.4 or 3.5.] So I can only imagine that had somebody proposed a bytes.tohex() method, they would have been told "there's already a way to do that, this isn't important enough to justify being built-in". > * if the purpose of binascii.unhexlify and bytes.fromhex is the same, > then why allow binary arguments for the former, and not for the later? I would argue that the purpose is *not* the same. binascii is for working with binary files, hence it accepts bytes and produces bytes. bytes.fromhex is for producing bytes from strings. It's an exceedingly narrow distinction, and I can understand anyone who is not convinced by my argument. I'm only half-convinced myself. > * in this case, should there be "one obvious way to do it" or not? Define "it". Do you mean "convert bytes to bytes", "bytes to str", "str to bytes", or "str to str"? Besides, one *obvious* way is not the same as *only one* way. I agree that its a bit of a mess. But only a little bit, and it will be less messy by 3.5 when the codecs solution is re-introduced. Then the codecs.encode and decode functions will be the one obvious way. -- Steven -- https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list