only dead programmers are 100% sure. Do your work, try to write some code and ask specific and detailed question on errors or unwanted results please. This question is too broad you are asking someone to write a complete working class for you. — dparoli5 mins ago
Post a question on the main site, not chat, with a [mcve]. That'd probably consist of code that opens a file in wb mode and writes a single bytes object to the file, along with a hex dump of the file's contents after running the code.
MCVE. Shortest code necessary to demonstrate the error. Usually involves stripping out a lot of code important to your program's functionality but not important to reproducing the error.
This is part of a script I'm writing to create random bitmap without using modules that create the file (this is going to be used by others who may not know how to use pip etc so I'm not using modules other than random).
I created a square grid of a size determined by the user (2 for example):
...
That's not an MCVE. You're missing relevant imports, and it could probably be made a lot more minimal. Also, the randomness is almost certainly unnecessary for reproducing the problem.
Also, you don't explicitly say anywhere in the question that the file contents you've posted are a hex dump, or how you've produced the dump (for example, why are there quotes?).
The code you run should be the exact same code you post. You should be able to literally copy-paste the code you ran into the question box, highlight it, hit the code-formatting button, and post it like that. If you don't want a bunch of commented-out code in your post, there shouldn't be a bunch of commented-out code in what you run.
@DSM: Some weird gravatar thing. I used to be purple, but suddenly their algorithm changed and they gave me a brown version one day. That was actually quite a while ago, but it's taking a while for the purple one to expire from various caches.
My current avatar arrived unexpectedly all the way from Hungary, and I'm confident that's the first time in the history of the human race those words have been put in that order.
@SylentNyte: it's far more likely that you're doing something silly than that everything is behaving mysteriously. I find that if I start from the assumption that I'm doing something wrong and look for it, I have better luck than otherwise.
I once got into an argument with a DBA at NumberFirm where I was telling him that one of his tables had garbage content and he didn't want to hear it. But I was much more confident that something went wrong on his end -- a complex and notoriously flaky data pipeline -- than that sqlalchemy suddenly decided to give me deterministically corrupt rows midway through one particular table. :rolls_eyes: