blob: 5b4a9aa2566fcbd8ca3fc852b282abd79b098255 [file] [log] [blame]
Guido van Rossum5fdeeea1994-01-02 01:22:07 +00001\section{Built-in module \sectcode{struct}}
2\bimodindex{struct}
3\indexii{C}{structures}
4
5This module performs conversions between Python values and C
6structs represented as Python strings. It uses \dfn{format strings}
7(explained below) as compact descriptions of the lay-out of the C
8structs and the intended conversion to/from Python values.
9
10The module defines the following exception and functions:
11
12\renewcommand{\indexsubitem}{(in module struct)}
13\begin{excdesc}{error}
14 Exception raised on various occasions; argument is a string
15 describing what is wrong.
16\end{excdesc}
17
18\begin{funcdesc}{pack}{fmt\, v1\, v2\, {\rm \ldots}}
19 Return a string containing the values
20 \code{\var{v1}, \var{v2}, {\rm \ldots}} packed according to the given
21 format. The arguments must match the values required by the format
22 exactly.
23\end{funcdesc}
24
25\begin{funcdesc}{unpack}{fmt\, string}
26 Unpack the string (presumably packed by \code{pack(\var{fmt}, {\rm \ldots})})
27 according to the given format. The result is a tuple even if it
28 contains exactly one item. The string must contain exactly the
29 amount of data required by the format (i.e. \code{len(\var{string})} must
30 equal \code{calcsize(\var{fmt})}).
31\end{funcdesc}
32
33\begin{funcdesc}{calcsize}{fmt}
34 Return the size of the struct (and hence of the string)
35 corresponding to the given format.
36\end{funcdesc}
37
38Format characters have the following meaning; the conversion between C
39and Python values should be obvious given their types:
40
41\begin{tableiii}{|c|l|l|}{samp}{Format}{C}{Python}
42 \lineiii{x}{pad byte}{no value}
43 \lineiii{c}{char}{string of length 1}
44 \lineiii{b}{signed char}{integer}
45 \lineiii{h}{short}{integer}
46 \lineiii{i}{int}{integer}
47 \lineiii{l}{long}{integer}
48 \lineiii{f}{float}{float}
49 \lineiii{d}{double}{float}
50\end{tableiii}
51
52A format character may be preceded by an integral repeat count; e.g.
53the format string \code{'4h'} means exactly the same as \code{'hhhh'}.
54
55C numbers are represented in the machine's native format and byte
56order, and properly aligned by skipping pad bytes if necessary
57(according to the rules used by the C compiler).
58
59Examples (all on a big-endian machine):
60
61\bcode\begin{verbatim}
62pack('hhl', 1, 2, 3) == '\000\001\000\002\000\000\000\003'
63unpack('hhl', '\000\001\000\002\000\000\000\003') == (1, 2, 3)
64calcsize('hhl') == 8
65\end{verbatim}\ecode
66
67Hint: to align the end of a structure to the alignment requirement of
68a particular type, end the format with the code for that type with a
69repeat count of zero, e.g. the format \code{'llh0l'} specifies two
70pad bytes at the end, assuming longs are aligned on 4-byte boundaries.
71
72(More format characters are planned, e.g. \code{'s'} for character
73arrays, upper case for unsigned variants, and a way to specify the
74byte order, which is useful for [de]constructing network packets and
75reading/writing portable binary file formats like TIFF and AIFF.)