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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 18, 20262026-05-18T03:56:51+00:00 2026-05-18T03:56:51+00:00

I’m trying to send a series of binary bytes across a socket, to meet

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I’m trying to send a series of binary bytes across a socket, to meet a particular standard my company uses. No one in my company has used Ruby for this before, but in other languages, they send the data across one byte at a time, (usually with some sort of “pack” method).

I can’t find anyway to create binary on the fly, or create bytes at all (the closest I can find it how you can turn a string into the bytes representing it’s characters).

I know you can say something like :

@var = 0b101010101

But how would I convert a string in the form “101010101” or the resulting integer created when I do string.to_i(2) into an actual binary. If I just send the string accross a socket, won’t that just send the ASCII for “0” and “1” instead of the literal characters?

Surely there is SOME way to do this natively in Ruby?

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-18T03:56:52+00:00Added an answer on May 18, 2026 at 3:56 am

    To make a string that has an arbitrary sequence of bytes, do something like this:

    binary_string = "\xE5\xA5\xBD"
    

    The “\x” is a special escape to encode an arbitrary byte from hex, so “\xE5” means byte 0xE5.

    Then try sending that string on the socket.

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