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Re: Python 3.x and bytes

References <4DD2C2A5.3080403@stoneleaf.us>
From Ian Kelly <ian.g.kelly@gmail.com>
Date 2011-05-17 13:20 -0600
Subject Re: Python 3.x and bytes
Newsgroups comp.lang.python
Message-ID <mailman.1697.1305660064.9059.python-list@python.org> (permalink)

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On Tue, May 17, 2011 at 12:47 PM, Ethan Furman <ethan@stoneleaf.us> wrote:
> In Python 3 one can say
>
> --> huh = bytes(5)
>
> Since the bytes type is actually a list of integers, I would have expected
> this to have huh being a bytestring with one element -- the integer 5.
>  Actually, what you get is:
>
> --> huh
> b'\x00\x00\x00\x00\x00'
>
> or five null bytes.  Note that this is an immutable type, so you cannot go
> in later and say
>
> --> huh[3] = 9
> Traceback (most recent call last):
>  File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module>
> TypeError: 'bytes' object does not support item assignment
>
>
> So, out of curiosity, does anyone actually use this, um, feature?

I suppose it's for interoperability with the mutable bytearray type,
which takes the same parameters in the constructor.

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Re: Python 3.x and bytes Ian Kelly <ian.g.kelly@gmail.com> - 2011-05-17 13:20 -0600

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