Since I started using version 3 of Python I have had many problems with sending string through sockets. I know that to send a string in a socket, a 'b' must be placed before the string to convert it to bytes. But what happens when I have to convert an input() to bytes? How is it done?
I need to send a message written by keyboard to a socket:
import socket
client = socket.socket(socket.AF_INET, socket.SOCK_STREAM)
client.connect(("localhost",7500))
msg = input()
client.send(msg)
However, when I try it, I get the following error:
TypeError: a bytes-like object is required, not 'str'
Can someone tell me how I convert input() to bytes? I always use version 2.7 and I do not understand why version 3 is so irritating for the handling of sockets. :(
You need to encode you message like this:
msg = input().encode()
The reason you did not need to do this in Python 2 is because unicode strings were then their own type, but in Python 3 all strings are now unicode by default.
To do that, you can use
import socket
client = socket.socket(socket.AF_INET, socket.SOCK_STREAM)
client.connect(("localhost",7500))
msg = input()
client.send(msg.encode())
It returns the string encoded as a bytes object. See str.encode
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