Python, how to decode Binary coded decimal (BCD)

Whit3H0rse picture Whit3H0rse · Jul 26, 2012 · Viewed 17.5k times · Source

Description of the binary field is:

Caller number, expressed with compressed BCD code, and the surplus bits are filled with “0xF”

I have tried to print with struct format '16c' and I get: ('3', '\x00', '\x02', '\x05', '\x15', '\x13', 'G', 'O', '\xff', '\xff', '\xff', '\xff', '\xff', '\xff', '\xff', '\xff') and if I use '16b' i get (51, 0, 2, 5, 21, 19, 71, 79, -1, -1, -1, -1, -1, -1, -1, -1). And it is not correct, I should get phone number, and numbers above are invalid.

print struct.unpack_from('>16b', str(data.read()),offset=46)

Above is code that didn't work and I get invalid numbers. With what format should I unpack that 16 byte field and how to convert BCD code ?

Answer

Martijn Pieters picture Martijn Pieters · Jul 26, 2012

BCD codes work with 4 bits per number, and normally encode only the digits 0 - 9. So each byte in your sequence contains 2 numbers, 1 per 4 bits of information.

The following method uses a generator to produce those digits; I am assuming that a 0xF value means there are no more digits to follow:

def bcdDigits(chars):
    for char in chars:
        char = ord(char)
        for val in (char >> 4, char & 0xF):
            if val == 0xF:
                return
            yield val

Here I use a right-shift operator to move the left-most 4 bits to the right, and a bitwise AND to select just the right-most 4 bits.

Demonstration:

>>> characters = ('3', '\x00', '\x02', '\x05', '\x15', '\x13', 'G', 'O', '\xff', '\xff', '\xff', '\xff', '\xff', '\xff', '\xff', '\xff')
>>> list(bcdDigits(characters))
[3, 3, 0, 0, 0, 2, 0, 5, 1, 5, 1, 3, 4, 7, 4]

The method works with the c output; you can skip the ord call in the method if you pass integers directly (but use the B unsigned variant instead). Alternatively, you could just read those 16 bytes straight from your file and apply this function to those bytes directly without using struct.