I am trying to use unpack to decode a binary file. The binary file has the following structure:
ABCDEF\tFFFABCDEF\tFFFF....
where
ABCDEF -> String of fixed length
\t -> tab character
FFF -> 3 Floats
.... -> repeat thousands of times
I know how to do it when types are all the same or with only numbers and fixed length arrays, but I am struggling in this situation. For example, if I had a list of floats I would do
s.unpack('F*')
Or if I had integers and floats like
[1, 3.4, 5.2, 4, 2.3, 7.8]
I would do
s.unpack('CF2CF2')
But in this case I am a bit lost. I was hoping to use a format string such `(CF2)*' with brackets, but it does not work.
I need to use Ruby 2.0.0-p247 if that matters
Example
ary = ["ABCDEF\t", 3.4, 5.6, 9.1, "FEDCBA\t", 2.5, 8.9, 3.1]
s = ary.pack('P7fffP7fff')
then
s.scan(/.{19}/)
["\xA8lf\xF9\xD4\x7F\x00\x00\x9A\x99Y@33\xB3@\x9A\x99\x11", "A\x80lf\xF9\xD4\x7F\x00\x00\x00\x00 @ff\x0EAff"]
Finally
s.scan(/.{19}/).map{ |item| item.unpack('P7fff') }
Error: #<ArgumentError: no associated pointer>
<main>:in `unpack'
<main>:in `block in <main>'
<main>:in `map'
<main>:in `<main>'
P7is the issue, try changing just to lowercasep(no 7). There is some differences when packing/unpacking. When reading the file, you use theP7because it is not null-terminates, but when packing it again, it is. I just used the example without error by packing withP7fffP7fffand unpacking withpfffpfff.p. When reading the file, it is going to be a string of bytes without a being separated into array items, so you must specify the fixed length with the uppercase variantP7.pandPare the issue.