On Tuesday, March 12, 2019 at 2:09:06 PM UTC+5:30, Peter Otten wrote: > dimplemathew...@gmail.com wrote: > > > On Monday, March 11, 2019 at 4:32:48 PM UTC+5:30, Peter Otten wrote: > >> dimplemathew...@gmail.com wrote: > >> > >> > Hi i have a similar challenge where i need to store the thumbnailPhoto > >> > attribute to my local db and display the image every-time user logs in. > >> > But this solution does work . data looks like this: > >> > > >> > \xff\xd8\xff\xe0\x00\x10JFIF\x00\x01\x01\x01\x00`\x00`\x00\x00\xff\xdb\x00C\x00 > >> > >> > import PIL > >> > from PIL import Image > >> > import io > >> > data = open("bytes.txt") > >> > my_data=(data.read()) > >> > photo_inline = io.StringIO(my_data) > >> > photo = PIL.Image.open(photo_inline) > >> > error: > >> > Traceback (most recent call last): > >> > File "convertToImage.py", line 9, in <module> > >> > photo = PIL.Image.open(photo_inline) > >> > File "", line 2657, in open > >> > % (filename if filename else fp)) > >> > OSError: cannot identify image file <_io.StringIO object at 0x0367FD00> > >> > >> Did you try > >> > >> photo = PIL.Image.open("bytes.txt") > >> > >> ? > >> > >> If the above code is illustrative, and you really need the bytes in > >> memory remember to open the file in binary mode: > >> > >> with open("bytes.txt", "rb") as instream: > >> data = instream.read() > >> > >> To create the image later the file-like objects needs to produce bytes: > >> > >> instream = io.BytesIO(data) # not StringIO! > >> photo = Image.open(instream) > > > > Hey, > > It shows the same error. > > I am actually getting that image from ldap in bytes: > > > '\xef\xd8\xff\xe0\x00\x10JFIF\x00\x01\x01\x01\x00`\x00`\x00\x00\xff\xdb\x00C\x00\x08\x06\x06\x07\x06\x05\x08\x07\x07\x07\t\t\x08\n\x0c\x14\r\x0c..... > > I want to display this image on my template. > > Save the image to a file (in binary mode!) and then try to open it with an > image viewer. The data may be corrupted.
When i tried doing that it says Invalid Image... -- https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list