2
>>> var = 'g'  
>>> print hex(ord(var))  
0x67  
>>> print hex(ord(var)) == 0x67  
False

Why isn't this true in python 2.7?
What would be the best way to compare 'g' to the hex value 0x67?

1
  • Thanks for all the great replies.
    – Bill
    Nov 2, 2015 at 4:49

4 Answers 4

1

hex returns a string, which you are comparing to a number. Either do

ord(var) == 0x67

or

hex(ord(var)) == "0x67"

(the first one is less error-prone, as it's case insensitive)

0

You can simply take the ord and compare it to 0x67

>>> ord('g') == 0x67
True

If you do this:

>>> 0x67
103

You are still getting the ascii code for that character.

Furthermore, based on your explicit example, if you are trying to cast that to an int to actually compare to 0x67, then you need to do it in base-16:

>>> int(hex(ord('g')), 16) == 0x67
True

False case:

>>> int(hex(ord('d')), 16) == 0x67
False
0

According to the documentation

hex(x)

Convert an integer number (of any size) to a lowercase hexadecimal string prefixed with 0x

So hex(ord(var)) == '0x67'

It just print that removes quotes.

See

>>> var = 'g'
>>> hex(ord(var))
'0x67'
>>> hex(0x67)
'0x67'
>>> hex(ord(var)) == hex(0x67)
True

And of course ord(g) == 0x67 because numbers are equal despite of representation, i.e 0x67 and 103 and 0147 are all the same number internally

0

First see the type of hex(ord(var)):

>>> print type(hex(ord(var)))
<type 'str'> 

Then see the type of 0x67

>>> type(0x67)
<type 'int'>

You are comparing a str with an int. So, you should do:

hex(ord(var)) == '0x67'
4
  • 1
    Because this answer has been given.
    – Sede
    Nov 1, 2015 at 14:17
  • What is the meaning of Because this answer has been given? Nov 1, 2015 at 14:20
  • 3
    @user3100115 To me, its very harsh to down vote an answer, just because an answer is already been given. There is no rocket science anyone should know before answering this question so that I have to copy the answer from someone else. Really meaningless and disrespectful. Nov 1, 2015 at 14:26
  • It is because of reaction like this that people don't explain why they downvoted a post.
    – Sede
    Nov 1, 2015 at 14:31

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