On 2006-06-01, Tim Chase <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: >>>> for example I want to convert number 7 to 0111 so I can make some >>>> bitwise operations... >>> Just do it: >>> >>>>>> 7 & 3 >>> 3 >>>>>> 7 | 8 >>> 15 >> I know I can do that but I need to operate in every bit separeted. > > > I suppose there might be other operations for which having them > as strings could be handy. E.g. counting bits: > > bitCount = len([c for c in "01001010101" if c=="1"]) > > or parity checking with those counted bits...sure, it can be done > with the raw stuff, but the operations often tend to be more obscure.
I would think an array or list of bits would be a lot more useful for doing "bitwise operations": bitCount = sum([0,1,0,0,1,0,1,0,1,0,1]) parity = reduce(operator.xor,[0,1,0,0,1,0,1,0,1,0,1]) > Other reasons for wanting an arbitrary integer in binary might be > for plain-old-display, especially if it represents bitmap data. Yes. I thought C should have had a %b format since the beginning, but nobody listens. But that's not what the OP said he wanted it for. -- Grant Edwards grante Yow! Now I'm concentrating at on a specific tank battle visi.com toward the end of World War II! -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list