7.1. |
Character | Byte order | Size | Alignment |
---|---|---|---|
@ | native | native | native |
= | native | standard | none |
< | little-endian | standard | none |
> | big-endian | standard | none |
! | network (= big-endian) | standard | none |
If the first character is not one of these, '@'
is assumed.
Native byte order is big-endian or little-endian, depending on the host system. For example, Intel x86 and AMD64 (x86-64) are little-endian; Motorola 68000 and PowerPC G5 are big-endian; ARM and Intel Itanium feature switchable endianness (bi-endian). Use sys.byteorder
to check the endianness of your system.
Native size and alignment are determined using the C compiler’s sizeof
expression. This is always combined with native byte order.
Standard size depends only on the format character; see the table in the Format Characters section.
Note the difference between '@'
and '='
: both use native byte order, but the size and alignment of the latter is standardized.
The form '!'
is available for those poor souls who claim they can’t remember whether network byte order is big-endian or little-endian.
There is no way to indicate non-native byte order (force byte-swapping); use the appropriate choice of '<'
or '>'
.
Notes:
Format characters have the following meaning; the conversion between C and Python values should be obvious given their types. The ‘Standard size’ column refers to the size of the packed value in bytes when using standard size; that is, when the format string starts with one of '<'
, '>'
, '!'
or '='
. When using native size, the size of the packed value is platform-dependent.
Format | C Type | Python type | Standard size | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
x | pad byte | no value | ||
c | char | bytes of length 1 | 1 | |
b | signed char | integer | 1 | (1),(3) |
B | unsigned char | integer | 1 | (3) |
? | _Bool | bool | 1 | (1) |
h | short | integer | 2 | (3) |
H | unsigned short | integer | 2 | (3) |
i | int | integer | 4 | (3) |
I | unsigned int | integer | 4 | (3) |
l | long | integer | 4 | (3) |
L | unsigned long | integer | 4 | (3) |
q | long long | integer | 8 | (2), (3) |
Q | unsigned long long | integer | 8 | (2), (3) |
n | ssize_t | integer | (4) | |
N | size_t | integer | (4) | |
e | (7) | float | 2 | (5) |
f | float | float | 4 | (5) |
d | double | float | 8 | (5) |
s | char[] | bytes | ||
p | char[] | bytes | ||
P | void * | integer | (6) |
Changed in version 3.3: Added support for the 'n'
and 'N'
formats.
Changed in version 3.6: Added support for the 'e'
format.
Notes:
The '?'
conversion code corresponds to the _Bool
type defined by C99. If this type is not available, it is simulated using a char
. In standard mode, it is always represented by one byte.
The 'q'
and 'Q'
conversion codes are available in native mode only if the platform C compiler supports C long long
, or, on Windows, __int64
. They are always available in standard modes.
When attempting to pack a non-integer using any of the integer conversion codes, if the non-integer has a __index__()
method then that method is called to convert the argument to an integer before packing.
Changed in version 3.2: Use of the __index__()
method for non-integers is new in 3.2.
The 'n'
and 'N'
conversion codes are only available for the native size (selected as the default or with the '@'
byte order character). For the standard size, you can use whichever of the other integer formats fits your application.
For the 'f'
, 'd'
and 'e'
conversion codes, the packed representation uses the IEEE 754 binary32, binary64 or binary16 format (for 'f'
, 'd'
or 'e'
respectively), regardless of the floating-point format used by the platform.
The 'P'
format character is only available for the native byte ordering (selected as the default or with the '@'
byte order character). The byte order character '='
chooses to use little- or big-endian ordering based on the host system. The struct module does not interpret this as native ordering, so the 'P'
format is not available.
The IEEE 754 binary16 “half precision” type was introduced in the 2008 revision of the IEEE 754 standard. It has a sign bit, a 5-bit exponent and 11-bit precision (with 10 bits explicitly stored), and can represent numbers between approximately 6.1e-05
and 6.5e+04
at full precision. This type is not widely supported by C compilers: on a typical machine, an unsigned short can be used for storage, but not for math operations. See the Wikipedia page on the half-precision floating-point format for more information.
A format character may be preceded by an integral repeat count. For example, the format string '4h'
means exactly the same as 'hhhh'
.
Whitespace characters between formats are ignored; a count and its format must not contain whitespace though.
For the 's'
format character, the count is interpreted as the length of the bytes, not a repeat count like for the other format characters; for example, '10s'
means a single 10-byte string, while '10c'
means 10 characters. If a count is not given, it defaults to 1. For packing, the string is truncated or padded with null bytes as appropriate to make it fit. For unpacking, the resulting bytes object always has exactly the specified number of bytes. As a special case, '0s'
means a single, empty string (while '0c'
means 0 characters).
When packing a value x
using one of the integer formats ('b'
, 'B'
, 'h'
, 'H'
, 'i'
, 'I'
, 'l'
, 'L'
, 'q'
, 'Q'
), if x
is outside the valid range for that format then struct.error
is raised.
Changed in version 3.1: In 3.0, some of the integer formats wrapped out-of-range values and raised DeprecationWarning
instead of struct.error
.
The 'p'
format character encodes a “Pascal string”, meaning a short variable-length string stored in a fixed number of bytes, given by the count. The first byte stored is the length of the string, or 255, whichever is smaller. The bytes of the string follow. If the string passed in to pack()
is too long (longer than the count minus 1), only the leading count-1
bytes of the string are stored. If the string is shorter than count-1
, it is padded with null bytes so that exactly count bytes in all are used. Note that for unpack()
, the 'p'
format character consumes count
bytes, but that the string returned can never contain more than 255 bytes.
For the '?'
format character, the return value is either True
or False
. When packing, the truth value of the argument object is used. Either 0 or 1 in the native or standard bool representation will be packed, and any non-zero value will be True
when unpacking.
Note
All examples assume a native byte order, size, and alignment with a big-endian machine.
A basic example of packing/unpacking three integers:
Unpacked fields can be named by assigning them to variables or by wrapping the result in a named tuple:
The ordering of format characters may have an impact on size since the padding needed to satisfy alignment requirements is different:
The following format 'llh0l'
specifies two pad bytes at the end, assuming longs are aligned on 4-byte boundaries:
This only works when native size and alignment are in effect; standard size and alignment does not enforce any alignment.
The struct
module also defines the following type:
struct.
Struct
(format)Return a new Struct object which writes and reads binary data according to the format string format. Creating a Struct object once and calling its methods is more efficient than calling the struct
functions with the same format since the format string only needs to be compiled once.
Compiled Struct objects support the following methods and attributes:
pack
(v1, v2, ...)Identical to the pack()
function, using the compiled format. (len(result)
will equal size
.)
pack_into
(buffer, offset, v1, v2, ...)Identical to the pack_into()
function, using the compiled format.
unpack
(buffer)Identical to the unpack()
function, using the compiled format. The buffer’s size in bytes must equal size
.
unpack_from
(buffer, offset=0)Identical to the unpack_from()
function, using the compiled format. The buffer’s size in bytes, minus offset, must be at least size
.
iter_unpack
(buffer)Identical to the iter_unpack()
function, using the compiled format. The buffer’s size in bytes must be a multiple of size
.
New in version 3.4.
format
The format string used to construct this Struct object.
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