On Nov 29, 8:05 am, "Gianmaria Iaculo - NVENTA" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > Txs all, > i wont to respond to who asked why i needed it: > > I'm using python on GSM modules and the informations i have to move goes > along GPRS/UMTS connections so it's beatiful for me to transfer more > informations with less space... > imagine i have to send this simple data.... > > 41.232323,12.345678 > > i can send it as it's or use the nibble trick and on the receiving station > 'unlift" the data and rebuild the original information... > > isn'it???
Sorry, but it's not apparent what you propose to do. If each number has 8 decimal digits of precision (as in your example), you could possibly get by with a 32-bit floating point number. If it's always 6 decimal places and 0 <= number < 1000, you could pack (number * 1000000) into a 32-bit integer. For the above two options, check out the struct module. OTOH, maybe it's "packed decimal" that you mean -- try Googling that phrase and see if it matches your intentions. If it does, and you are concerned with speed, a 100-element dictionary mapping each byte-pair to a packed byte might be a good idea instead of the bit bashing: convert = { '78': '\x78', ... } See http://mail.python.org/pipermail/python-list/2000-October/056329.html HTH, John -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list