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# Struct Module
| Since | Origin / Contributor | Maintainer | Source |
| :----- | :-------------------- | :---------- | :------ |
| 2015-02-13 | [Roberto Ierusalimschy ](http://www.inf.puc-rio.br/~roberto/struct/ ), [Philip Gladstone ](https://github.com/pjsg ) | [Philip Gladstone ](https://github.com/pjsg ) | [struct.c ](../../../app/modules/struct.c )|
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This module offers basic facilities to convert Lua values to and from C structs. Its main functions are `struct.pack` , which packs multiple Lua values into a struct-like string; and `struct.unpack` , which unpacks multiple Lua values from a given struct-like string.
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The first argument to both functions is a *format string* , which describes the layout of the structure. The format string is a sequence of conversion elements, which respect the current endianess and the current alignment requirements. Initially, the current endianess is the machine's native endianness and the current alignment requirement is 1 (meaning no alignment at all). You can change these settings with appropriate directives in the format string.
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Note that the float and double conversions are only available with a floating point NodeMCU build.
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### Format String
The elements in the format string are as follows:
- `" "` (empty space) ignored.
- `"!n"` flag to set the current alignment requirement to *n*
(necessarily a power of 2); an absent *n* means the machine's native
alignment.
- `">"` flag to set mode to big endian.
- `"<"` flag to set mode to little endian.
- `"x"` a padding zero byte with no corresponding Lua value.
- `"b"` a signed `char` .
- `"B"` an unsigned `char` .
- `"h"` a signed `short` (native size).
- `"H"` an unsigned `short` (native size).
- `"l"` a signed `long` (native size).
- `"L"` an unsigned `long` (native size).
- `"T"` a `size_t` (native size).
- `"in"` a signed integer with *n* bytes. An absent *n* means the
native size of an `int` .
- `"In"` like `"in"` but unsigned.
- `"f"` a `float` (native size).
- `"d"` a `double` (native size).
- `"s"` a zero-terminated string.
- `"cn"` a sequence of exactly *n* chars corresponding to a single Lua
string. An absent *n* means 1. When packing, the given string must
have at least *n* characters (extra characters are discarded).
- `"c0"` this is like `"cn"` , except that the *n* is given by other
means: When packing, *n* is the length of the given string; when
unpacking, *n* is the value of the previous unpacked value (which
must be a number). In that case, this previous value is not
returned.
#### Examples
To pack and unpack the structure
struct Str {
char b;
int i[4];
};
you can use the string `"<!4biiii"` .
To pack a string with its length coded in its first byte, use the
following code:
x = struct.pack("Bc0", string.len(s), s)
To unpack that string, do as follows:
s = struct.unpack("Bc0", x)
Note that the length (read by the element `"B"` ) is not returned.
To pack a string in a fixed-width field of 10 characters padded with
blanks, do as follows:
x = struct.pack("c10", s .. string.rep(" ", 10))
## struct.pack()
Returns a string containing the values `d1` , `d2` , etc. packed
according to the format string `fmt` .
#### Syntax
`struct.pack (fmt, d1, d2, ...)`
#### Parameters
- `fmt` The format string in the format above
- `d1` The first data item to be packed
- `d2` The second data item to be packed etc.
#### Returns
The packed string.
#### Example
```
s = struct.pack("I", 0x41424344)
print(s)
```
## struct.unpack()
Returns the values packed in string `s` according to the format
string `fmt` . An optional `i` marks where in `s` to start reading
(default is 1). After the read values, this function also returns
the index in `s` where it stopped reading, which is also where you
should start to read the rest of the string.
#### Syntax
`struct.unpack (fmt, s[, offset])`
#### Parameters
- `fmt` The format string in the format above
- `s` The string holding the data to be unpacked
- `offset` The position to start in the string (default is 1)
#### Returns
All the unpacked data.
#### Example
Suppose we have to decode a string `s` with an unknown number of
doubles; the end is marked by a zero value. We can use the following
code:
local a = {}
local i = 1 -- index where to read
while true do
local d
d, i = struct.unpack("d", s, i)
if d == 0 then break end
a[#a + 1] = d
end
## struct.size()
Returns the size of a string formatted according to the format
string `fmt` . The format string should contain neither the option
`s` nor the option `c0` .
#### Syntax
`struct.size (fmt)`
#### Parameters
- `fmt` The format string in the format above
#### Returns
The size of the string that would be output in a pack operation with this format string.
#### Example
```
print(struct.size("i"))
```
T his prints the size of the native integer type.
### License
This package is distributed under the MIT license. See copyright notice
at the end of file `struct.c` .