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Groups > comp.lang.python > #44248 > unrolled thread
| Started by | pabloblo85@gmail.com |
|---|---|
| First post | 2013-04-24 00:33 -0700 |
| Last post | 2013-04-26 01:17 -0700 |
| Articles | 5 — 4 participants |
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Fixing escaped characters python-xbee pabloblo85@gmail.com - 2013-04-24 00:33 -0700
Re: Fixing escaped characters python-xbee MRAB <python@mrabarnett.plus.com> - 2013-04-24 11:53 +0100
Re: Fixing escaped characters python-xbee Peter Otten <__peter__@web.de> - 2013-04-24 13:49 +0200
Re: Fixing escaped characters python-xbee Dennis Lee Bieber <wlfraed@ix.netcom.com> - 2013-04-24 20:29 -0400
Re: Fixing escaped characters python-xbee pabloblo85@gmail.com - 2013-04-26 01:17 -0700
| From | pabloblo85@gmail.com |
|---|---|
| Date | 2013-04-24 00:33 -0700 |
| Subject | Fixing escaped characters python-xbee |
| Message-ID | <704e1981-1e13-4030-b4ca-a7305ec98b32@googlegroups.com> |
I am using a XBee to receive data from an arduino network.
But they have AP=2 which means escaped characters are used when a 11 or 13 appears (and some more...)
When this occurs, XBee sends 7D and inmediatly XOR operation with char and 0x20.
I am trying to recover the original character in python but I don't know ho to do it.
I tried something like this:
read = ser.read(4) #Read 4 chars from serial port
for x in range (0,4):
if(toHex(read[x]) != '7d'): #toHex converts it to hexadecimal just for checking purposes
if(x < 3):
read[x] = logical_xor(read[x+1], 20) #XOR
for y in range (x+1,3):
read[y] = read[y+1]
read[3] = ser.read()
else:
read[x] = logical_xor(ser.read(), 20) #XOR
data = struct.unpack('<f', read)[0]
logical_xor is:
def logical_xor(str1, str2):
return bool(str1) ^ bool(str2)
I check if 7D character is in the first 3 chars read, I use the next char to convert it, if it is the 4th, I read another one.
But I read in python strings are inmutables and I can't change their value once they have one.
What would you do in this case? I started some days ago with python and I don't know how to solve this kind of things...
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| From | MRAB <python@mrabarnett.plus.com> |
|---|---|
| Date | 2013-04-24 11:53 +0100 |
| Message-ID | <mailman.1014.1366800795.3114.python-list@python.org> |
| In reply to | #44248 |
On 24/04/2013 08:33, pabloblo85@gmail.com wrote:
> I am using a XBee to receive data from an arduino network.
>
> But they have AP=2 which means escaped characters are used when a 11 or 13 appears (and some more...)
>
> When this occurs, XBee sends 7D and inmediatly XOR operation with char and 0x20.
>
> I am trying to recover the original character in python but I don't know ho to do it.
>
> I tried something like this:
>
> read = ser.read(4) #Read 4 chars from serial port
> for x in range (0,4):
> if(toHex(read[x]) != '7d'): #toHex converts it to hexadecimal just for checking purposes
> if(x < 3):
> read[x] = logical_xor(read[x+1], 20) #XOR
> for y in range (x+1,3):
> read[y] = read[y+1]
> read[3] = ser.read()
> else:
> read[x] = logical_xor(ser.read(), 20) #XOR
>
> data = struct.unpack('<f', read)[0]
>
> logical_xor is:
>
> def logical_xor(str1, str2):
> return bool(str1) ^ bool(str2)
>
> I check if 7D character is in the first 3 chars read, I use the next char to convert it, if it is the 4th, I read another one.
>
> But I read in python strings are inmutables and I can't change their value once they have one.
>
> What would you do in this case? I started some days ago with python and I don't know how to solve this kind of things...
>
You could try converting to a list, which is mutable.
# Python 3
read = list(ser.read(4))
pos = 0
try:
while True:
pos = read.index(0x7D, pos)
del read[pos]
read.extend(ser.read())
read[pos] ^= 0x20
except ValueError:
# There are no (more) 0x7D in the data.
pass
data = struct.unpack('<f', bytes(read))[0]
# Python 2
read = [ord(c) for c in ser.read(4)]
pos = 0
try:
while True:
pos = read.index(0x7D, pos)
del read[pos]
read.append(ord(ser.read()))
read[pos] ^= 0x20
except ValueError:
# There are no (more) 0x7D in the data.
pass
data = struct.unpack('<f', b"".join(chr(c) for c in read))[0]
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| From | Peter Otten <__peter__@web.de> |
|---|---|
| Date | 2013-04-24 13:49 +0200 |
| Message-ID | <mailman.1018.1366804172.3114.python-list@python.org> |
| In reply to | #44248 |
pabloblo85@gmail.com wrote:
> I am using a XBee to receive data from an arduino network.
>
> But they have AP=2 which means escaped characters are used when a 11 or 13
> appears (and some more...)
>
> When this occurs, XBee sends 7D and inmediatly XOR operation with char and
> 0x20.
>
> I am trying to recover the original character in python but I don't know
> ho to do it.
>
> I tried something like this:
>
> read = ser.read(4) #Read 4 chars from serial port
> for x in range (0,4):
> if(toHex(read[x]) != '7d'): #toHex converts it to hexadecimal just for
> checking purposes if(x < 3):
> read[x] = logical_xor(read[x+1], 20) #XOR
> for y in range (x+1,3):
> read[y] = read[y+1]
> read[3] = ser.read()
> else:
> read[x] = logical_xor(ser.read(), 20) #XOR
>
> data = struct.unpack('<f', read)[0]
>
> logical_xor is:
>
> def logical_xor(str1, str2):
> return bool(str1) ^ bool(str2)
>
> I check if 7D character is in the first 3 chars read, I use the next char
> to convert it, if it is the 4th, I read another one.
>
> But I read in python strings are inmutables and I can't change their value
> once they have one.
>
> What would you do in this case? I started some days ago with python and I
> don't know how to solve this kind of things...
As you cannot change the old string you have to compose a new one. I think
the simplest approach is to always read one byte, and if it's the escape
marker read another one and decode it. The decoded bytes/chars are then
stored in a list and finally joined:
# Python 2
# untested
def read_nbytes(ser, n):
accu = []
for i in xrange(n):
b = ser.read(1)
if b == "\x7d":
b = chr(ord(ser.read(1)) ^ 0x20)
accu.append(b)
return "".join(accu)
b = read_nbytes(ser, 4)
data = struct.unpack('<f', b)[0]
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| From | Dennis Lee Bieber <wlfraed@ix.netcom.com> |
|---|---|
| Date | 2013-04-24 20:29 -0400 |
| Message-ID | <mailman.1043.1366849755.3114.python-list@python.org> |
| In reply to | #44248 |
On Wed, 24 Apr 2013 00:33:30 -0700 (PDT), pabloblo85@gmail.com declaimed
the following in gmane.comp.python.general:
> I am using a XBee to receive data from an arduino network.
>
> But they have AP=2 which means escaped characters are used when a 11 or 13 appears (and some more...)
>
> When this occurs, XBee sends 7D and inmediatly XOR operation with char and 0x20.
>
> I am trying to recover the original character in python but I don't know ho to do it.
>
> I tried something like this:
>
> read = ser.read(4) #Read 4 chars from serial port
Why read 4 at a time if you need to detect the escape marker...
PSEUDO_CODE -- UNTESTED:
for c in ser.read(): #presumes it will function as an iterator
if ord(c) == 0x7D:
c =chr(ord(ser.read(1)) ^ 0x20)
#do something with c (save to a list for later joining as a
string?)
#probably need some condition to exit the read loop too
> def logical_xor(str1, str2):
> return bool(str1) ^ bool(str2)
>
bool() returns True or False based on the argument... Any non-empty
string will be True. Instead what you want is to x-or the bits of the
character itself.
--
Wulfraed Dennis Lee Bieber AF6VN
wlfraed@ix.netcom.com HTTP://wlfraed.home.netcom.com/
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| From | pabloblo85@gmail.com |
|---|---|
| Date | 2013-04-26 01:17 -0700 |
| Message-ID | <f26c6cdb-4fd5-4122-a60e-18396f81ad3c@googlegroups.com> |
| In reply to | #44307 |
> > the following in gmane.comp.python.general: > > > > > I am using a XBee to receive data from an arduino network. > > > > > > But they have AP=2 which means escaped characters are used when a 11 or 13 appears (and some more...) > > > > > > When this occurs, XBee sends 7D and inmediatly XOR operation with char and 0x20. > > > > > > I am trying to recover the original character in python but I don't know ho to do it. > > > > > > I tried something like this: > > > > > > read = ser.read(4) #Read 4 chars from serial port > > > > Why read 4 at a time if you need to detect the escape marker... > > > > PSEUDO_CODE -- UNTESTED: > > > > for c in ser.read(): #presumes it will function as an iterator > > if ord(c) == 0x7D: > > c =chr(ord(ser.read(1)) ^ 0x20) > > #do something with c (save to a list for later joining as a > > string?) > > #probably need some condition to exit the read loop too > > > def logical_xor(str1, str2): > > > return bool(str1) ^ bool(str2) > > > > > bool() returns True or False based on the argument... Any non-empty > > string will be True. Instead what you want is to x-or the bits of the > > character itself. > > -- It works! Thank you so much. Now I can go ahead with my work!
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