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version pytest license monthly-downloads Code style: black

Bit Vectors For Humans™

This simple bit vector implementation aims to make addressing single bits a little less fiddly. It can be used by itself to work with bit fields in an integer word, but it really starts to shine when you use the supplied BitField descriptor with a subclass of BitVector:

> from bitvector import BitVector, BitField
>
> class IOTDeviceCommand(BitVector):
>     def __init__(self):
>         super().__init__(size=32)
>
>     power = BitField(0, 1) # offset and size
>     spin  = BitField(1, 1)
>     speed = BitField(2, 4)
>     sense = BitField(6, 2)
>     red   = BitField(8, 8)
>     blue  = BitField(16, 8)
>     green = BitField(24, 8)
>
> widget_cmd = IOTDeviceCommand()
> widget_cmd.power = 1
> widget_cmd.sense = 2
> widget_cmd.speed = 5
> widget_cmd.red = 0xaa
> widget_cmd.blue = 0xbb
> widget_cmd.green = 0xcc
> widget_cmd
IOTDeviceCommand(value=0xccbbaa95, size=32)
> widget_cmd.bytes
b'\xcc\xbb\xaa\x95'

Installation

$ python3 -m pip install bitvector-for-humans
$ pydoc bitvector
...

Or directly from github:

$ pip install git+https://github.com/JnyJny/bitvector.git

Motivations

  1. Address sub-byte bits in a less error prone way.
  2. Minimize subdependencies (zero is minimized right?).
  3. Learn something about descriptors: ✅.

Caveats

The tests need expanding and I got lazy when writing the multi-bit setting / getting code and it could undoubtedly be improved. Pull requests gladly accepted.

Other Ways to Implement a Bit Vector

  1. Python builtin ctypes.Structure allows sub-byte bit fields
  2. Python builtin struct provides extensive support for byte manipulations
  3. Python3 IntEnums can be used to build bit field masks
  4. The plain int will serve admirably with bitwise operators
  5. Provide cffi bindings to existing bit-twiddling libraries
  6. Use Numpy bool arrays as the "backing store"
  7. Other good ideas I overlooked, forgot about or just plain don't know.