how to convert negative integer value to hex in python

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我寻月下人不归
我寻月下人不归 2020-12-08 10:17

I use python 2.6

>>> hex(-199703103)
\'-0xbe73a3f\'

>>> hex(199703103)
\'0xbe73a3f\'

Positive and negative value are the

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  • 2020-12-08 10:35

    Adding to Marks answer, if you want a different output format, use

    '{:X}'.format(-199703103 & (2**32-1))
    
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  • 2020-12-08 10:40

    Python's integers can grow arbitrarily large. In order to compute the raw two's-complement the way you want it, you would need to specify the desired bit width. Your example shows -199703103 in 64-bit two's complement, but it just as well could have been 32-bit or 128-bit, resulting in a different number of 0xf's at the start.

    hex() doesn't do that. I suggest the following as an alternative:

    def tohex(val, nbits):
      return hex((val + (1 << nbits)) % (1 << nbits))
    
    print tohex(-199703103, 64)
    print tohex(199703103, 64)
    

    This prints out:

    0xfffffffff418c5c1L
    0xbe73a3fL
    
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  • 2020-12-08 10:40

    Because Python integers are arbitrarily large, you have to mask the values to limit conversion to the number of bits you want for your 2s complement representation.

    >>> hex(-199703103 & (2**32-1)) # 32-bit
    '0xf418c5c1L'
    >>> hex(-199703103 & (2**64-1)) # 64-bit
    '0xfffffffff418c5c1L'
    

    Python displays the simple case of hex(-199703103) as a negative hex value (-0xbe73a3f) because the 2s complement representation would have an infinite number of Fs in front of it for an arbitrary precision number. The mask value (2**32-1 == 0xFFFFFFFF) limits this:

    FFF...FFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFF418c5c1
    &                             FFFFFFFF
    --------------------------------------
                                  F418c5c1
    
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