For some reason I'm having a heck of a time figuring out how to do this in Python. I am trying to represent a binary string in a string variable, and all I want it to have is
0010111010
However, no matter how I try to format it as a string, Python always chops off the leading zeroes, which is giving me a headache in trying to parse it out.
I'd hoped this question would have helped, but it doesn't really...
Is there a way to force Python to stop auto-converting my string to an integer?
I have tried the following:
val = ""
if (random.random() > 0.50):
val = val + "1"
else
val = val + "0"
and
val = ""
if (random.random() > 0.50):
val = val + "%d" % (1)
else:
val = val + "%d" % (0)
I had stuck it into an array previously, but ran into issues inserting that array into another array, so I figured it would just be easier to parse it as a string.
Any thoughts on how to get my leading zeroes back? The string is supposed to be a fixed length of 10 bits if that helps.
Edit:
The code:
def create_string(x):
for i in xrange(10): # 10 random populations
for j in xrange(int(x)): # population size
v = ''.join(choice(('0','1')) for _ in range(10))
arr[i][j] = v
return arr
a = create_string(5)
print a
Hopefully the output I'm seeing will show you why I'm having issues:
[[ 10000100 1100000001 101010110 111011 11010111]
[1001111000 1011011100 1110110111 111011001 10101000]
[ 110010001 1011010111 1100111000 1011100011 1000100001]
[ 10011010 1000011001 1111111010 11100110 110010101]
[1101010000 1010110101 110011000 1100001001 1010100011]
[ 10001010 1100000001 1110010000 10110000 11011010]
[ 111011 1000111010 1100101 1101110001 110110000]
[ 110100100 1100000000 1010101001 11010000 1000011011]
[1110101110 1100010101 1110001110 10011111 101101100]
[ 11100010 1111001010 100011101 1101010 1110001011]]
The issue here isn't only with printing, I also need to be able to manipulate them on a per-element basis. So if I go to play with the first element, then it returns a 1, not a 0 (on the first element).
If I understood you right, you could do it this way:
a = 0b0010111010
'{:010b}'.format(a)
#The output is: '0010111010'
Python 2.7
It uses string format method.
This is the answer if you want to represent the binary string with leading zeros.
If you are just trying to generate a random string with a binary you could do it this way:
from random import choice
''.join(choice(('0','1')) for _ in range(10))
Unswering your update. I made a code which has a different output if compared to yours:
from random import choice
from pprint import pprint
arr = []
def create_string(x):
for i in xrange(10): # 10 random populations
arr.append([])
for j in xrange(x): # population size
v = ''.join(choice(('0','1')) for _ in range(10))
arr[-1].append(v)
return arr
a = create_string(5)
pprint(a)
The output is:
[['1011010000', '1001000010', '0110101100', '0101110111', '1101001001'],
['0010000011', '1010011101', '1000110001', '0111101011', '1100001111'],
['0011110011', '0010101101', '0000000100', '1000010010', '1101001000'],
['1110101111', '1011111001', '0101100110', '0100100111', '1010010011'],
['0100010100', '0001110110', '1110111110', '0111110000', '0000001010'],
['1011001011', '0011101111', '1100110011', '1100011001', '1010100011'],
['0110011011', '0001001001', '1111010101', '1110010010', '0100011000'],
['1010011000', '0010111110', '0011101100', '1111011010', '1011101110'],
['1110110011', '1110111100', '0011000101', '1100000000', '0100010001'],
['0100001110', '1011000111', '0101110100', '0011100111', '1110110010']]
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