Suppose I have a number like 824 and I write it to a text file using python. In the text file, it will take 3 bytes space. However, If i represent it using bits, it has the following representation 0000001100111000 which is 2 bytes (16 bits). I was wondering how can I write bits to file in python, not bytes. If I can do that, the size of the file will be 2 bytes, not 3. Please provide code. I am using python 2.6. Also, I do not want to use any external modules that do not come with the basic installation I tried below and gave me 12 bytes!
a =824;
c=bin(a)
handle = open('try1.txt','wb')
handle.write(c)
handle.close()
The struct module is what you want. From your example, 824 = 0000001100111000 binary or 0338 hexadecimal. This is the two bytes 03H and 38H. struct.pack will convert 824 to a string of these two bytes, but you also have to decide little-endian (write the 38H first) or big-endian (write the 03H first).
Example
struct returns a two-byte string. the '\x##' notation means (a byte with hexadecimal value ##). the '8' is an ASCII '8' (value 38H). Python byte strings use ASCII for printable characters, and \x## notation for unprintable characters.
Below is an example writing and reading binary data to a file. You should always specify the endian-ness when writing to and reading from a binary file, in case it is read on a system with a different endian default:
Output
Have a look at struct:
I think what you want is to
open
the file in binary mode:However, this will write an integer to the file, which will probably be 4 bytes in size. I do not know if Python has a 2 byte integer type. But you can circumvent that by encoding 2 16 bit number in one 32 bit number: