On Wed, Apr 13, 2016, at 06:51 AM, durgadevi1 wrote: > I would like to check with you whether using binascii.hexlify() to > convert the series of bytes into alphabets and integers is correct.
To be clear, they already are integers.The \x notation is how you naively represent a byte out of the printable range in ASCII. A byte is a number from 0 to 255, which can also be thought of as 0x00 to 0xFF.. The 'printable range' is those bytes which represent normal characters instead of control codes and such. Computers like showing raw byte data in hex \x (which shouldn't be confused with binascii.hexify) because then each byte concisely fills up exactly 2 (well, 4, counting the \x) characters, instead of some bytes being only one character (1), some being two (10), and some being three (100). You can see the integer value, consider: >>> data = b'$//W?\xc0\x829\xa2\xb9\x13\x8c\xd5{\\' >>> print data[0] 36 >>> print data[10] 19 >>> list(data) [36, 47, 47, 87, 63, 192, 130, 57, 162, 185, 19, 140, 213, 123, 92] binascii is almost certainly not what you want: that converts arbitrary bytes into an ASCII encoded string, at which point its no longer bytes (and before you did something to it besides displaying it, you'd want to decode it back to bytes again, probably). --Stephen m e @ i x o k a i . i o -- https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list