22
import save

string = ""

with open("image.jpg", "rb") as f:
    byte = f.read(1)
    while byte != b"":
        byte = f.read(1)
        print ((byte))

I'm getting bytes like:

b'\x00'

How do I get rid of this b''?

Let's say I wanna save the bytes to a list, and then save this list as the same image again. How do I proceed?

Thanks!

3
  • 1
    The b means it's a byte... you don't want to get rid of it...
    – Ben
    Jun 9, 2013 at 19:04
  • 7
    byte.decode('ascii') if you know that the byte represents an ASCII character
    – Pithikos
    Mar 20, 2015 at 16:57
  • @Pithikos bytes.decode('ascii'), to correct it.
    – Doruk
    Nov 27, 2017 at 18:28

6 Answers 6

13

You can use bytes.decode function if you really need to "get rid of b": http://docs.python.org/3.3/library/stdtypes.html#bytes.decode

But it seems from your code that you do not really need to do this, you really need to work with bytes.

0
4

The b"..." is just a python notation of byte strings, it's not really there, it only gets printed. Does it cause some real problems to you?

3
  • 2
    When I save it to a txt it saves with the b''
    – user1952219
    Jun 9, 2013 at 19:12
  • I see, you are saving it as string. If that is the problem then str(byte)[1:] should remove the 'b'
    – jureslak
    Jun 9, 2013 at 19:13
  • 2
    it's python slice syntax. "string"[1:] takes string character from index 1 till the end: it produces "tring". See python docs fore more references on slicing :)
    – jureslak
    Jun 9, 2013 at 19:22
3

The b'', is only the string representation of the data that is written when you print it.

Using decode will not help you here because you only want the bytes, not the characters they represent. Slicing the string representation will help even less because then you are still left with a string of several useless characters ('\', 'x', and so on), not the original bytes.

There is no need to modify the string representation of the data, because the data is still there. Just use it instead of the string (i.e. don't use print). If you want to copy the data, you can simply do:

data = file1.read(...)
...
file2.write(data)

If you want to output the binary data directly from your program, use the sys.stdout.buffer:

import sys

sys.stdout.buffer.write(data)
2

To operate on binary data you can use the array-module. Below you will find an iterator that operates on 4096 chunks of data instead of reading everything into memory at ounce.

import array

def bytesfromfile(f):
    while True:
        raw = array.array('B')
        raw.fromstring(f.read(4096))
        if not raw:
            break
        yield raw

with open("image.jpg", 'rb') as fd
    for byte in bytesfromfile(fd):
        for b in byte:
            # do something with b 
2

This is one way to get rid of the b'':

import sys
print(b)

If you want to save the bytes later it's more efficient to read the entire file in one go rather than building a list, like this:

with open('sample.jpg', mode='rb') as fh:
    content = fh.read()
    with open('out.jpg', mode='wb') as out:
        out.write(content)
-4

Here is one solution

print(str(byte[2:-1]))

1
  • 2
    That's flawed. You mean str(byte)[2:-1] (note the different bracket placement). However, even when corrected it's not a very forward-/backward-compatible, or transparent/maintainable, way to do it.
    – jez
    Jan 15, 2016 at 18:13