# large buffers apparently increase the chance that the memory
# is allocated in high address space.
a = create_string_buffer(1000000)
- p = "Hello, World"
+ p = b"Hello, World"
result = memmove(a, p, len(p))
self.failUnlessEqual(a.value, "Hello, World")
[97, 98, 99, 100, 101, 102, 0])
def test_string_at(self):
- s = string_at("foo bar")
+ s = string_at(b"foo bar")
# XXX The following may be wrong, depending on how Python
# manages string instances
self.failUnlessEqual(2, sys.getrefcount(s))
self.failUnless(s, "foo bar")
- self.failUnlessEqual(string_at("foo bar", 8), "foo bar\0")
- self.failUnlessEqual(string_at("foo bar", 3), "foo")
+ self.failUnlessEqual(string_at(b"foo bar", 8), "foo bar\0")
+ self.failUnlessEqual(string_at(b"foo bar", 3), "foo")
try:
create_unicode_buffer