Reputation: 17071
guess its getting late, and Im a beginner, just need a little help..
Im trying to find the length of a list.. BUT NOT of the lists themselves, rather the length of the values within..
I take something like:
Other = [<<"366">>,0,
<<1>>,
<<"344">>,<<"Really"
<<1>>,
<<"989">>,<<"NotReally">>
<<1>>,
<<"345">>,4,
<<1>>,
<<"155">>,"209.191"]
I would really want to first convert Other into its RAW constituent binary
Example:
Other = [<<3>>,<<4>>,<<7>>,<<56>>,<<45>>,<<56>>...]
This, of course, is an example of way the original Other would look like(Not right conversion values). So that all of the values in there are there most basic binary data.
Then I could simply iterate through counting each <<_>> and determining the total message length.
Hope I was clear enough to find a solution.
Thanks all for the help, GN
Upvotes: 2
Views: 1878
Reputation: 26121
iolist_size/1
is what you are looking for.
1> iolist_size([<<"366">>,0,<<1>>,<<"344">>,<<"Really">>,<<1>>,<<"989">>,<<"NotReally">>,<<1>>,<<"345">>,4,<<1>>,<<"155">>,"209.191"]).
43
2> v(1) - 1.
42
P.S.: Why your example data have this one surplus character? ;-)
Upvotes: 2
Reputation: 3835
If all you're trying to do is find the length of the entire structure, I'd try something like this:
my_length(X) when is_integer(X) -> 1;
my_length(X) when is_binary(X) -> erlang:size(X);
my_length(Lst) when is_list(Lst) ->
lists:sum([my_length(X) || X <- Lst]).
If you really want to build a flat version of your structure, then erlang:list_to_binary gets you pretty close to what you need, then just call size on that. (Actually, this may be better than my first attempt.)
1> erlang:list_to_binary([<<"366">>,0,<<"155">>,"209.191"]).
<<51,54,54,0,49,53,53,50,48,57,46,49,57,49>>
Upvotes: 1