CodesToConvert = [
    
    
  # need a comma to seperate codes

"0000 0067 0000 0023 0030 0020 0010 0010 0010 0010 0010 0010 0010 0010 0010 0010 0010 0010 0010 0020 0010 0020 0010 0020 0010 0020 0010 0020 0010 0020 0010 0020 0010 0020 0010 0010 0010 0010 0020 0020 0010 0020 0010 0020 0010 0020 0010 0010 0010 0020 0010 0010 0010 0010 0010 0020 0010 0010 0010 0010 0010 0010 0010 0020 0010 0010 0010 0020 0010 0020 0010 0010 0010 0233",

]


import binascii
import struct
import sys
import base64
import time

def pronto2lirc(pronto):
    codes = [long(binascii.hexlify(pronto[i:i+2]), 16) for i in xrange(0, len(pronto), 2)]

    if codes[0]:
        raise ValueError('Pronto code should start with 0000')
    if len(codes) != 4 + 2 * (codes[2] + codes[3]):
        raise ValueError('Number of pulse widths does not match the preamble')

    frequency = 1 / (codes[1] * 0.241246)
    return [int(round(code / frequency)) for code in codes[4:]]

def lirc2broadlink(pulses):
    array = bytearray()

    for pulse in pulses:
        pulse = pulse * 269 / 8192  # 32.84ms units

        if pulse < 256:
            array += bytearray(struct.pack('>B', pulse))  # big endian (1-byte)
        else:
            array += bytearray([0x00])  # indicate next number is 2-bytes
            array += bytearray(struct.pack('>H', pulse))  # big endian (2-bytes)

    packet = bytearray([0x26, 0x02])  # 0x26 = IR, 0x00 = no repeats
    packet += bytearray(struct.pack('<H', len(array)))  # little endian byte count
    packet += array
    packet += bytearray([0x0d, 0x05])  # IR terminator

    # Add 0s to make ultimate packet size a multiple of 16 for 128-bit AES encryption.
    remainder = (len(packet) + 4) % 16  # rm.send_data() adds 4-byte header (02 00 00 00)
    if remainder:
        packet += bytearray(16 - remainder)

    return packet

for code in CodesToConvert:
    # get rid of spaces in the code.
    time.sleep(0.1)
    cleanCode = code.replace(" ","")
    # pronto2lirc needs a byte array, convert it
    pronto = bytearray.fromhex(cleanCode)
    # convert the pronto to LIRC pulse format
    pulses = pronto2lirc(pronto)
    # convert LIRC pulse format to broadlink
    packet = lirc2broadlink(pulses)

    #print
    # print binascii.hexlify(packet) #print Raw Hex
    #print ""
    print base64.b64encode(packet) #print base64


# I'm not using this.
# but it was in the original code so I'm leaving it
# if someone compiles a python executable it uses the code below.
#if __name__ == '__main__':

#    for code in sys.argv[1:]:
#        pronto = bytearray.fromhex(code)
#        pulses = pronto2lirc(pronto)
#        packet = lirc2broadlink(pulses)

        # print
#        print binascii.hexlify(packet) 
by

Python Online Compiler

Write, Run & Share Python code online using OneCompiler's Python online compiler for free. It's one of the robust, feature-rich online compilers for python language. Getting started with the OneCompiler's Python editor is easy and fast. The editor shows sample boilerplate code when you choose language as Python or Python2. OneCompiler also has reference programs, where you can look for the sample code and start coding.

Taking inputs (stdin)

OneCompiler's python online editor supports stdin and users can give inputs to programs using the STDIN textbox under the I/O tab. Following is a sample python program which takes name as input and print your name with hello.

import sys
name = sys.stdin.readline()
print("Hello "+ name)

About Python

Python is a very popular general-purpose programming language which was created by Guido van Rossum, and released in 1991. It is very popular for web development and you can build almost anything like mobile apps, web apps, tools, data analytics, machine learning etc. It is designed to be simple and easy like english language. It's is highly productive and efficient making it a very popular language.

Tutorial & Syntax help

Loops

1. If-Else:

When ever you want to perform a set of operations based on a condition IF-ELSE is used.

if conditional-expression
    #code
elif conditional-expression
    #code
else:
    #code

Note:

Indentation is very important in Python, make sure the indentation is followed correctly

2. For:

For loop is used to iterate over arrays(list, tuple, set, dictionary) or strings.

Example:

mylist=("Iphone","Pixel","Samsung")
for i in mylist:
    print(i)

3. While:

While is also used to iterate a set of statements based on a condition. Usually while is preferred when number of iterations are not known in advance.

while condition  
    #code 

Collections

There are four types of collections in Python.

1. List:

List is a collection which is ordered and can be changed. Lists are specified in square brackets.

Example:

mylist=["iPhone","Pixel","Samsung"]
print(mylist)

2. Tuple:

Tuple is a collection which is ordered and can not be changed. Tuples are specified in round brackets.

Example:

myTuple=("iPhone","Pixel","Samsung")
print(myTuple)

Below throws an error if you assign another value to tuple again.

myTuple=("iPhone","Pixel","Samsung")
print(myTuple)
myTuple[1]="onePlus"
print(myTuple)

3. Set:

Set is a collection which is unordered and unindexed. Sets are specified in curly brackets.

Example:

myset{"iPhone","Pixel","Samsung"}
print{myset}

4. Dictionary:

Dictionary is a collection of key value pairs which is unordered, can be changed, and indexed. They are written in curly brackets with key - value pairs.

Example:

mydict = {
    "brand" :"iPhone",
    "model": "iPhone 11"
}
print(mydict)