Is there any module or function in python I can use to convert a decimal number to its binary equivalent? I am able to convert binary to decimal using int('[binary_value]',2), so any way to do the reverse without writing the code to do it myself?
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1Unlike the linked question "convert to binary string", I think this question is different. I came here looking to convert an integer to a corresponding binary array (or boolean array), and I think that would be a sensible answer.– Sanjay ManoharJan 16, 2020 at 20:57
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1@SanjayManohar The pure string processing algorithm found here could be adapted to do what you want.– CopyPasteItMar 15, 2020 at 17:11
8 Answers
all numbers are stored in binary. if you want a textual representation of a given number in binary, use bin(i)
>>> bin(10)
'0b1010'
>>> 0b1010
10
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10
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Without the 0b in front:
"{0:b}".format(int_value)
Starting with Python 3.6 you can also use formatted string literal or f-string, --- PEP:
f"{int_value:b}"
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1I got the following error:
TypeError: non-empty format string passed to object.__format__
Feb 7, 2018 at 15:47 -
1same for me with python 3.5.2 TypeError: non-empty format string passed to object.__format__ ahh - now i got it, what you meant: ```>>> "{0:b}".format(47) ---> '101111' Oct 10, 2019 at 18:58
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3You also can determine amount of bits that it will be represented in this way:>>>
"{:0>15b}".format(3)
>>> '000000000000011' Dec 7, 2020 at 21:35 -
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1
"{0:#b}".format(my_int)
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49Here's the format for printing with leading zero's:
"{0:08b}".format(my_int)
May 6, 2013 at 9:49 -
@WaldoBronchart thats cool. Can you explain to me how does that work, having the leading zeros? Is that inbuilt, that you get the leading zeros with 0+8 or 0+16? May 2, 2020 at 11:52
def dec_to_bin(x):
return int(bin(x)[2:])
It's that easy.
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17-1 - don't return an int. Also,
dec_to_bin(-1)
givesValueError: invalid literal for int() with base 10: 'b1'
– EricJan 8, 2013 at 15:42 -
2
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2Try
bin(2)
. You don't get '10'. You get '0b10'. Same possible pit withhex(2)
('0x2'). So you want all but the first two characters. So you take a slice that starts after the first two characters.– leewzMay 3, 2014 at 5:04 -
1@zero_cool if test_var = "Hello world" then test_var[2:] = "llo world"– WalterApr 10, 2018 at 7:30
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4@Wallace: because binary and decimal are a choice of how to show the number, not part of the number itself.
dec_to_bin(0b101) == 101
, which is nonsense because none of operations you can apply to 101 have any relation to the original 5 - for instance,dec_to_bin(0b101) + 1 == 102
.– EricJan 1, 2020 at 18:29
You can also use a function from the numpy module
from numpy import binary_repr
which can also handle leading zeros:
Definition: binary_repr(num, width=None)
Docstring:
Return the binary representation of the input number as a string.
This is equivalent to using base_repr with base 2, but about 25x
faster.
For negative numbers, if width is not given, a - sign is added to the
front. If width is given, the two's complement of the number is
returned, with respect to that width.
I agree with @aaronasterling's answer. However, if you want a non-binary string that you can cast into an int, then you can use the canonical algorithm:
def decToBin(n):
if n==0: return ''
else:
return decToBin(n/2) + str(n%2)
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int(bin(10), 2)
yields10
.int(decToBin(10))
yields101
andint(decToBin(10), 2)
yields 5. Also, your function hit's recursion limits withfrom __future__ import division
or python 3 Aug 20, 2010 at 4:47 -
5@aaron, the latter point can be solved by switching to
//
(truncating division); the former, by switching the order of the two strings being summed in thereturn
. Not that recursion makes any sense here anyway (bin(n)[2:]
-- or awhile
loop if you're stuck on some old version of Python -- will be much better!). Aug 20, 2010 at 4:56 -
1This is awesome! it could go with the lambda way too :]
binary = lambda n: '' if n==0 else binary(n/2) + str(n%2)
Jun 15, 2015 at 1:52 -
@AzizAlto I get a busload full of numbers with lots of
e-
, also in the recursive call dectobin.– TimoFeb 7, 2018 at 16:18 -
2@Timo lol apparently you are using Python3 just change
binary(n/2)
tobinary(n//2)
then you won't get that busload :-) Feb 7, 2018 at 16:42
n=int(input('please enter the no. in decimal format: '))
x=n
k=[]
while (n>0):
a=int(float(n%2))
k.append(a)
n=(n-a)/2
k.append(0)
string=""
for j in k[::-1]:
string=string+str(j)
print('The binary no. for %d is %s'%(x, string))
For the sake of completion: if you want to convert fixed point representation to its binary equivalent you can perform the following operations:
Get the integer and fractional part.
from decimal import * a = Decimal(3.625) a_split = (int(a//1),a%1)
Convert the fractional part in its binary representation. To achieve this multiply successively by 2.
fr = a_split[1] str(int(fr*2)) + str(int(2*(fr*2)%1)) + ...
You can read the explanation here.