These functions raise TypeError when expecting a bytes parameter and
called with a non-bytes parameter.
This instance of PyTypeObject represents the Python bytes type; it
is the same object as bytes in the Python layer.
Return true if the object o is a bytes object or an instance of a subtype of the bytes type. This function always succeeds.
Return true if the object o is a bytes object, but not an instance of a subtype of the bytes type. This function always succeeds.
Return a new bytes object with a copy of the string v as value on success,
and NULL on failure. The parameter v must not be NULL; it will not be
checked.
Return a new bytes object with a copy of the string v as value and length
len on success, and NULL on failure. If v is NULL, the contents of
the bytes object are uninitialized.
Take a C printf()-style format string and a variable number of
arguments, calculate the size of the resulting Python bytes object and return
a bytes object with the values formatted into it. The variable arguments
must be C types and must correspond exactly to the format characters in the
format string. The following format characters are allowed:
Format Characters |
Type |
Comment |
|---|---|---|
|
n/a |
The literal % character. |
|
int |
A single byte, represented as a C int. |
|
int |
Equivalent to
|
|
unsigned int |
Equivalent to
|
|
long |
Equivalent to
|
|
unsigned long |
Equivalent to
|
|
Equivalent to
|
|
|
size_t |
Equivalent to
|
|
int |
Equivalent to
|
|
int |
Equivalent to
|
|
const char* |
A null-terminated C character array. |
|
const void* |
The hex representation of a C
pointer. Mostly equivalent to
|
An unrecognized format character causes all the rest of the format string to be copied as-is to the result object, and any extra arguments discarded.
Identical to PyBytes_FromFormat() except that it takes exactly two
arguments.
Return the bytes representation of object o that implements the buffer protocol.
Return the length of the bytes in bytes object o.
Similar to PyBytes_Size(), but without error checking.
Return a pointer to the contents of o. The pointer
refers to the internal buffer of o, which consists of len(o) + 1
bytes. The last byte in the buffer is always null, regardless of
whether there are any other null bytes. The data must not be
modified in any way, unless the object was just created using
PyBytes_FromStringAndSize(NULL, size). It must not be deallocated. If
o is not a bytes object at all, PyBytes_AsString() returns NULL
and raises TypeError.
Similar to PyBytes_AsString(), but without error checking.
Return the null-terminated contents of the object obj
through the output variables buffer and length.
Returns 0 on success.
If length is NULL, the bytes object
may not contain embedded null bytes;
if it does, the function returns -1 and a ValueError is raised.
The buffer refers to an internal buffer of obj, which includes an
additional null byte at the end (not counted in length). The data
must not be modified in any way, unless the object was just created using
PyBytes_FromStringAndSize(NULL, size). It must not be deallocated. If
obj is not a bytes object at all, PyBytes_AsStringAndSize()
returns -1 and raises TypeError.
Changed in version 3.5: Previously, TypeError was raised when embedded null bytes were
encountered in the bytes object.
Create a new bytes object in *bytes containing the contents of newpart
appended to bytes; the caller will own the new reference. The reference to
the old value of bytes will be stolen. If the new object cannot be
created, the old reference to bytes will still be discarded and the value
of *bytes will be set to NULL; the appropriate exception will be set.
Create a new bytes object in *bytes containing the contents of newpart appended to bytes. This version releases the strong reference to newpart (i.e. decrements its reference count).
Similar to sep.join(iterable) in Python.
sep must be Python bytes object.
(Note that PyUnicode_Join() accepts NULL separator and treats
it as a space, whereas PyBytes_Join() doesn’t accept NULL
separator.)
iterable must be an iterable object yielding objects that implement the buffer protocol.
On success, return a new bytes object.
On error, set an exception and return NULL.
Added in version 3.14.
Resize a bytes object. newsize will be the new length of the bytes object.
You can think of it as creating a new bytes object and destroying the old
one, only more efficiently.
Pass the address of an
existing bytes object as an lvalue (it may be written into), and the new size
desired. On success, *bytes holds the resized bytes object and 0 is
returned; the address in *bytes may differ from its input value. If the
reallocation fails, the original bytes object at *bytes is deallocated,
*bytes is set to NULL, MemoryError is set, and -1 is
returned.
Get the string representation of bytes. This function is currently used to
implement bytes.__repr__() in Python.
This function does not do type checking; it is undefined behavior to pass
bytes as a non-bytes object or NULL.
If smartquotes is true, the representation will use a double-quoted string
instead of single-quoted string when single-quotes are present in bytes.
For example, the byte string 'Python' would be represented as
b"'Python'" when smartquotes is true, or b'\'Python\'' when it is
false.
On success, this function returns a strong reference to a
str object containing the representation. On failure, this
returns NULL with an exception set.
Unescape a backslash-escaped string s. s must not be NULL.
len must be the size of s.
errors must be one of "strict", "replace", or "ignore". If
errors is NULL, then "strict" is used by default.
On success, this function returns a strong reference to a Python
bytes object containing the unescaped string. On failure, this
function returns NULL with an exception set.
Changed in version 3.9: unicode and recode_encoding are now unused.