In order to convert an integer to a binary, I have used this code :
>>> bin(6)  
'0b110'
and when to erase the '0b', I use this :
>>> bin(6)[2:]  
'110'
What can I do if I want to show 6 as 00000110 instead of 110?
In order to convert an integer to a binary, I have used this code :
>>> bin(6)  
'0b110'
and when to erase the '0b', I use this :
>>> bin(6)[2:]  
'110'
What can I do if I want to show 6 as 00000110 instead of 110?
>>> '{0:08b}'.format(6)
'00000110'
Just to explain the parts of the formatting string:
{} places a variable into a string0 takes the variable at argument position 0: adds formatting options for this variable (otherwise it would represent decimal 6)08 formats the number to eight digits zero-padded on the leftb converts the number to its binary representationIf you're using a version of Python 3.6 or above, you can also use f-strings:
>>> f'{6:08b}'
'00000110'
Just another idea:
>>> bin(6)[2:].zfill(8)
'00000110'
Shorter way via string interpolation (Python 3.6+):
>>> f'{6:08b}'
'00000110'
 
    
    A bit twiddling method...
>>> bin8 = lambda x : ''.join(reversed( [str((x >> i) & 1) for i in range(8)] ) )
>>> bin8(6)
'00000110'
>>> bin8(-3)
'11111101'
Just use the format function
format(6, "08b")
The general form is
format(<the_integer>, "<0><width_of_string><format_specifier>")
 
    
    eumiro's answer is better, however I'm just posting this for variety:
>>> "%08d" % int(bin(6)[2:])
00000110
 
    
    numpy.binary_repr(num, width=None) has a magic width argumentRelevant examples from the documentation linked above:
>>> np.binary_repr(3, width=4) '0011'The two’s complement is returned when the input number is negative and width is specified:
>>> np.binary_repr(-3, width=5) '11101'
 
    
    .. or if you're not sure it should always be 8 digits, you can pass it as a parameter:
>>> '%0*d' % (8, int(bin(6)[2:]))
'00000110'
 
    
    Going Old School always works
def intoBinary(number):
binarynumber=""
if (number!=0):
    while (number>=1):
        if (number %2==0):
            binarynumber=binarynumber+"0"
            number=number/2
        else:
            binarynumber=binarynumber+"1"
            number=(number-1)/2
else:
    binarynumber="0"
return "".join(reversed(binarynumber))
 
    
    The best way is to specify the format.
format(a, 'b')
returns the binary value of a in string format.
To convert a binary string back to integer, use int() function.
int('110', 2)
returns integer value of binary string.
 
    
    Assuming you want to parse the number of digits used to represent from a variable which is not always constant, a good way will be to use numpy.binary.
could be useful when you apply binary to power sets
import numpy as np
np.binary_repr(6, width=8)
 
    
    ('0' * 7 + bin(6)[2:])[-8:]
or
right_side = bin(6)[2:]
'0' * ( 8 - len( right_side )) + right_side
def int_to_bin(num, fill):
    bin_result = ''
    def int_to_binary(number):
        nonlocal bin_result
        if number > 1:
            int_to_binary(number // 2)
        bin_result = bin_result + str(number % 2)
    int_to_binary(num)
    return bin_result.zfill(fill)
 
    
    The python package Binary Fractions has a full implementation of binaries as well as binary fractions. You can do your operation as follows:
from binary_fractions import Binary
b = Binary(6) # creates a binary fraction string
b.lfill(8) # fills to length 8
This package has many other methods for manipulating binary strings with full precision.
 
    
    Simple code with recursion:
 def bin(n,number=('')):
   if n==0:
     return(number)
   else:
     number=str(n%2)+number
     n=n//2
     return bin(n,number)
 
    
        def convertToBinary(self, n):
        result=""
        if n==0:
            return 0
        while n>0:
            r=n%2
            result+=str(r)
            n=int(n/2)
        if n%2==0:
            result+="0"
        return result[::-1]
