"Tom Green" <xchime...@gmail.com> wrote

Here is my question. I work with a lot of sockets and most of them require
hex data.  I am usually given a string of data to send to the socket.
Example:

"414243440d0a"

Is there a way in Python to say this is a string of HEX characters like
Perl's pack? Right now I have to take the string and add a \x to every two
values i.e. \x41\x42...

Assuming you actually want to send the hex values rather than
a hex string representation then the way I'd send that would be
to convert that to a number using int() then transmit it using
struct()

Sometimes my string values are 99+ bytes in length. I did write a parsing program that would basically loop thru the string and insert the \x, but I
was wondering if there was another or better way.

OK, Maybe you do want to send the hex representation rather than
the actual data (I can't think why unless you have a very strange
parser at the other end). In that case I think you do need  to insert
the \x characters.


--
Alan Gauld
Author of the Learn to Program web site
http://www.alan-g.me.uk/

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