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python-3.xhexencode

Python v3.3 encode('hex')


Has HEX codec been excluded from Python 3.3? When I write the code

>>> s="Hallo"
>>> s.encode('hex')
Traceback (most recent call last):
  File "<pyshell#24>", line 1, in <module>
    s.encode('hex')
LookupError: unknown encoding: hex

What does that mean? I know about binascii.hexlify() but still .encode() method is nice!

Any suggestion?


Solution

  • No, using encode() to hexlify isn't nice.

    The way you use the hex codec worked in Python 2 because you can call encode() on 8-bit strings in Python 2, ie you can encode something that is already encoded. That doesn't make sense. encode() is for encoding Unicode strings into 8-bit strings, not for encoding 8-bit strings as 8-bit strings.

    In Python 3 you can't call encode() on 8-bit strings anymore, so the hex codec became pointless and was removed.

    Although you theoretically could have a hex codec and use it like this:

    >>> import codecs
    >>> hexlify = codecs.getencoder('hex')
    >>> hexlify(b'Blaah')[0]
    b'426c616168'
    

    Using binascii is easier and nicer:

    >>> import binascii
    >>> binascii.hexlify(b'Blaah')
    b'426c616168'