Yes. From the original description, this is a binary operation, not a character operation.
On Apr 10, 2014 10:45 PM, raito@raito.com wrote:
I end up doing something like:
(defmacro with-open-binary-file (args &rest rest) `(with-open-file (,@args :element-type '(unsigned-byte 8)) ,@rest))
(defun write-word (word out) (write-byte (ldb (byte 8 8) word) out) (write-byte (ldb (byte 8 0) word) out))
only because I'm exclusively writing binary stuff to the files this code serves, and because it parallels the C code that does the same thing fairly well. I'm not writing to a socket stream, but this may help anyway. It might need to account for endianness, but I'm not sure. It's been a while since I've looked at it closely.
Neil Gilmore raito@raito.com
I can't easily verify right now, but check the :external-format on your stream: it may be defaulting to UTF-8 and you will need to specify something else.
-tree
Sent from my iPhone
On Apr 10, 2014, at 10:31, Paul Tarvydas paultarvydas@gmail.com wrote:
I'm using sbcl to write-char a 16-bit unsigned integer to a socket as two separate unsigned 8-bit bytes, for example 141 should appear as
#x00 #x8d.
SBCL appears to convert the #x8d into a two-byte utf-8 char, resulting in 3 bytes written to the stream
#x00 #xcd #x8d.
What is the proper incantation to achieve this? (SBCL on Windows, if that matters).
thanks pt
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