112
votes

I'm currently working on an encryption/decryption program and I need to be able to convert bytes to an integer. I know that:

bytes([3]) = b'\x03'

Yet I cannot find out how to do the inverse. What am I doing terribly wrong?

4
There is also the struct module if you want to convert multiple variables at once. - tdelaney
inverse: b'\x03'[0] - djvg
If you have a bytes object var = b'abc', then var[0] would return 97 and var[1] 98, and so on. - Have a nice day

4 Answers

193
votes

Assuming you're on at least 3.2, there's a built in for this:

int.from_bytes( bytes, byteorder, *, signed=False )

...

The argument bytes must either be a bytes-like object or an iterable producing bytes.

The byteorder argument determines the byte order used to represent the integer. If byteorder is "big", the most significant byte is at the beginning of the byte array. If byteorder is "little", the most significant byte is at the end of the byte array. To request the native byte order of the host system, use sys.byteorder as the byte order value.

The signed argument indicates whether two’s complement is used to represent the integer.


## Examples:
int.from_bytes(b'\x00\x01', "big")                         # 1
int.from_bytes(b'\x00\x01', "little")                      # 256

int.from_bytes(b'\x00\x10', byteorder='little')            # 4096
int.from_bytes(b'\xfc\x00', byteorder='big', signed=True)  #-1024
11
votes

Lists of bytes are subscriptable (at least in Python 3.6). This way you can retrieve the decimal value of each byte individually.

>>> intlist = [64, 4, 26, 163, 255]
>>> bytelist = bytes(intlist)       # b'@x04\x1a\xa3\xff'

>>> for b in bytelist:
...    print(b)                     # 64  4  26  163  255

>>> [b for b in bytelist]           # [64, 4, 26, 163, 255]

>>> bytelist[2]                     # 26 
3
votes
int.from_bytes( bytes, byteorder, *, signed=False )

doesn't work with me I used function from this website, it works well

https://coderwall.com/p/x6xtxq/convert-bytes-to-int-or-int-to-bytes-in-python

def bytes_to_int(bytes):
    result = 0
    for b in bytes:
        result = result * 256 + int(b)
    return result

def int_to_bytes(value, length):
    result = []
    for i in range(0, length):
        result.append(value >> (i * 8) & 0xff)
    result.reverse()
    return result
0
votes

In case of working with buffered data I found this useful:

int.from_bytes([buf[0],buf[1],buf[2],buf[3]], "big")

Assuming that all elements in buf are 8-bit long.