How do I print a bytes
string without the b'
prefix in Python 3?
>>> print(b'hello')
b'hello'
Use decode
:
>>> print(b'hello'.decode())
hello
utf-8
by default? I don't want to use the .decode('utf-8')
everytime I print something.
Jan 10, 2018 at 14:09
If the bytes use an appropriate character encoding already; you could print them directly:
sys.stdout.buffer.write(data)
or
nwritten = os.write(sys.stdout.fileno(), data) # NOTE: it may write less than len(data) bytes
According to the source for bytes.__repr__
, the b''
is baked into the method.
One workaround is to manually slice off the b''
from the resulting repr()
:
>>> x = b'\x01\x02\x03\x04'
>>> print(repr(x))
b'\x01\x02\x03\x04'
>>> print(repr(x)[2:-1])
\x01\x02\x03\x04
repr(x)[2:-1]
, produces a str
object that will print as wish. In particular, repr(b'\x01')[2:-1]
returns the string \\x01
, while decode()
will return \x01
which does not work as one would wish with print()
. To be even more explicit, print(repr(b'\x01')[2:-1])
will print \x01
while print(b'\x01'.decode())
will not print anything.
print(repr(b"\x01".decode()))
will print '\x01'
(a string including the single quotes ), so that print(repr(b"\x01".decode())[1:-1])
prints \x01
(a string without the single quotes ).
If the data is in an UTF-8 compatible format, you can convert the bytes to a string.
>>> print(str(b"hello", "utf-8"))
hello
Optionally, convert to hex first if the data is not UTF-8 compatible (e.g. data is raw bytes).
>>> from binascii import hexlify
>>> print(hexlify(b"\x13\x37"))
b'1337'
>>> print(str(hexlify(b"\x13\x37"), "utf-8"))
1337
>>> from codecs import encode # alternative
>>> print(str(encode(b"\x13\x37", "hex"), "utf-8"))
1337
To show or print:
<byte_object>.decode("utf-8")
To encode or save:
<str_object>.encode('utf-8')
I am a little late but for Python 3.9.1 this worked for me and removed the -b prefix:
print(outputCode.decode())
It's so simple... (With that, you can encode the dictionary and list bytes, then you can stringify it using json.dump / json.dumps)
You just need use base64
import base64
data = b"Hello world!" # Bytes
data = base64.b64encode(data).decode() # Returns a base64 string, which can be decoded without error.
print(data)
There are bytes that cannot be decoded by default(pictures are an example), so base64 will encode those bytes into bytes that can be decoded to string, to retrieve the bytes just use
data = base64.b64decode(data.encode())
Use decode()
instead of encode()
for converting bytes to a string.
>>> import curses
>>> print(curses.version.decode())
2.2