A space to discuss and keep up software development and manage your software career
An inclusive community for gaming enthusiasts
News and discussion of science and technology such as AI, VR, cryptocurrency, quantum computing, and more.
From composing and gigging to gear, hot music takes, and everything in between.
Memes and software development shitposting
Discussing AI software development, and showing off what we're building.
Movie and TV enthusiasm, criticism and everything in-between.
Web design, graphic design and everything in-between
A community for makers, hobbyists, and professionals to discuss Arduino, Raspberry Pi, 3D printing, and much more.
For engineers building software at scale. We discuss architecture, cloud-native, and SRE—the hard-won lessons you can't just Google
Discussing the core forem open source software project — features, bugs, performance, self-hosting.
A collaborative community for all things Crypto—from Bitcoin to protocol development and DeFi to NFTs and market analysis.
I'm not familiar with the library BUT:
BytesIO is basically a buffer of bytes in memory, somewhere your library wants bytes, not the buffer itself, hence the:
TypeError: expected bytes-like object, not BytesIO
In the file_list you're doing this:
file_list
file_list.append([filename, f, mime_type])
where f is the BytesIO. What you need is the value contained in it:
file_list.append([filename, f.getvalue(), mime_type])
you can see the documentation for that method here: docs.python.org/3/library/io.html#...
BTW you should probably tag this post as #help because... you're asking for help :D
Thank you, your suggestion worked for me. I added the tag too :)
Are you sure you want to hide this comment? It will become hidden in your post, but will still be visible via the comment's permalink.
Hide child comments as well
Confirm
For further actions, you may consider blocking this person and/or reporting abuse
We're a place where coders share, stay up-to-date and grow their careers.
I'm not familiar with the library BUT:
BytesIO is basically a buffer of bytes in memory, somewhere your library wants bytes, not the buffer itself, hence the:
In the
file_list
you're doing this:where f is the BytesIO. What you need is the value contained in it:
you can see the documentation for that method here: docs.python.org/3/library/io.html#...
BTW you should probably tag this post as #help because... you're asking for help :D
Thank you, your suggestion worked for me. I added the tag too :)