Check if a string is hexadecimal Check if a string is hexadecimal python python

Check if a string is hexadecimal


(1) Using int() works nicely for this, and Python does all the checking for you :)

int('00480065006C006C006F00200077006F0072006C00640021', 16)6896377547970387516320582441726837832153446723333914657L

will work. In case of failure you will receive a ValueError exception.

Short example:

int('af', 16)175int('ah', 16) ...ValueError: invalid literal for int() with base 16: 'ah'

(2) An alternative would be to traverse the data and make sure all characters fall within the range of 0..9 and a-f/A-F. string.hexdigits ('0123456789abcdefABCDEF') is useful for this as it contains both upper and lower case digits.

import stringall(c in string.hexdigits for c in s)

will return either True or False based on the validity of your data in string s.

Short example:

s = 'af'all(c in string.hexdigits for c in s)Trues = 'ah'all(c in string.hexdigits for c in s)False

Notes:

As @ScottGriffiths notes correctly in a comment below, the int() approach will work if your string contains 0x at the start, while the character-by-character check will fail with this. Also, checking against a set of characters is faster than a string of characters, but it is doubtful this will matter with short SMS strings, unless you process many (many!) of them in sequence in which case you could convert stringhexditigs to a set with set(string.hexdigits).


You can:

  1. test whether the string contains only hexadecimal digits (0…9,A…F)
  2. try to convert the string to integer and see whether it fails.

Here is the code:

import stringdef is_hex(s):     hex_digits = set(string.hexdigits)     # if s is long, then it is faster to check against a set     return all(c in hex_digits for c in s)def is_hex(s):    try:        int(s, 16)        return True    except ValueError:        return False


I know the op mentioned regular expressions, but I wanted to contribute such a solution for completeness' sake:

def is_hex(s):    return re.fullmatch(r"^[0-9a-fA-F]$", s or "") is not None

Performance

In order to evaluate the performance of the different solutions proposed here, I used Python's timeit module. The input strings are generated randomly for three different lengths, 10, 100, 1000:

s=''.join(random.choice('0123456789abcdef') for _ in range(10))

Levon's solutions:

# int(s, 16)  10: 0.257451018987922 100: 0.400816908018896361000: 1.8926858339982573# all(_ in string.hexdigits for _ in s)  10:  1.2884491360164247 100: 10.0477179479785261000: 94.35805322701344

Other answers are variations of these two. Using a regular expression:

# re.fullmatch(r'^[0-9a-fA-F]$', s or '')  10: 0.725040541990893 100: 0.71842728200135751000: 0.7190397029917222

Picking the right solution thus depends on the length on the input string and whether exceptions can be handled safely. The regular expression certainly handles large strings much faster (and won't throw a ValueError on overflow), but int() is the winner for shorter strings.