Regular expression parsing a binary file?
I have a file which mixes binary data and text data. I want to parse it through a regular expression, but I get this error:
TypeError: can't use a string pattern on a bytes-like object
I'm guessing that message means that Python doesn't want to parse binary files.
I'm opening the file with the "rb"
flags.
How can I parse binary files with regular expressions in Python?
EDIT: I'm using Python 3.2.0
Solution 1:
I think you use Python 3 .
1.Opening a file in binary mode is simple but subtle. The only difference from opening it in text mode is that the mode parameter contains a 'b' character.
........
4.Here’s one difference, though: a binary stream object has no encoding attribute. That makes sense, right? You’re reading (or writing) bytes, not strings, so there’s no conversion for Python to do.
http://www.diveintopython3.net/files.html#read
Then, in Python 3, since a binary stream from a file is a stream of bytes, a regex to analyse a stream from a file must be defined with a sequence of bytes, not a sequence of characters.
In Python 2, a string was an array of bytes whose character encoding was tracked separately. If you wanted Python 2 to keep track of the character encoding, you had to use a Unicode string (u'') instead. But in Python 3, a string is always what Python 2 called a Unicode string — that is, an array of Unicode characters (of possibly varying byte lengths).
http://www.diveintopython3.net/case-study-porting-chardet-to-python-3.html
and
In Python 3, all strings are sequences of Unicode characters. There is no such thing as a Python string encoded in UTF-8, or a Python string encoded as CP-1252. “Is this string UTF-8?” is an invalid question. UTF-8 is a way of encoding characters as a sequence of bytes. If you want to take a string and turn it into a sequence of bytes in a particular character encoding, Python 3 can help you with that.
http://www.diveintopython3.net/strings.html#boring-stuff
and
4.6. Strings vs. Bytes# Bytes are bytes; characters are an abstraction. An immutable sequence of Unicode characters is called a string. An immutable sequence of numbers-between-0-and-255 is called a bytes object.
....
1.To define a bytes object, use the b' ' “byte literal” syntax. Each byte within the byte literal can be an ASCII character or an encoded hexadecimal number from \x00 to \xff (0–255).
http://www.diveintopython3.net/strings.html#boring-stuff
So you will define your regex as follows
pat = re.compile(b'[a-f]+\d+')
and not as
pat = re.compile('[a-f]+\d+')
More explanations here:
15.6.4. Can’t use a string pattern on a bytes-like object
Solution 2:
In your re.compile
you need to use a bytes
object, signified by an initial b
:
r = re.compile(b"(This)")
This is Python 3 being picky about the difference between strings and bytes.