tags:

views:

146

answers:

3

I assign a value to a variable x in the following way:

import wave
w = wave.open('/usr/share/sounds/ekiga/voicemail.wav', 'r')
x = w.readframes(1)

When I type x I get:

'\x1e\x00'

So x got a value. But what is that? Is it hexadecimal? type(x) and type(x[0]) tell me that x and x[0] a strings. Can anybody tell me how should I interpret this strings? Can I transform them into integer?

A: 

This strings represent bytes. I guess you can turn them into an integer with struct package, which allows interpreting strings of bytes.

gruszczy
+2  A: 

The interactive interpreter echoes unprintable characters like that. The string contains two bytes, 0x1E and 0x00. You can convert it to an (WORD-size) integer with struct.unpack("<H", x) (little endian!).

AndiDog
A: 

It's a two byte string:

>>> x='\x1e\x00'
>>> map(ord, list(x))
[30, 0]
>>> [ord(i) for i in x]
[30, 0]
Andrew McGregor