Jul-21-2019, 11:25 PM
When printing byte-strings Python leaves ascii symbols as is.
Convert it to char-codes, e.g.
You can access third byte, e.g. using y[2].
Convert it to char-codes, e.g.
list(y)
Output:[64, 226, 1, 0]
So, '@' -> '64' (ascii code of the @-symbol).You can access third byte, e.g. using y[2].