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You're reading from  Protocol Buffers Handbook

Product typeBook
Published inApr 2024
PublisherPackt
ISBN-139781805124672
Edition1st Edition
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Clément Jean
Clément Jean
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Clément Jean

Clément Jean is the CTO of Education for Ethiopia, a start-up focusing on educating K-12 students in Ethiopia. On top of that, he is also an online instructor (on Udemy, Linux Foundation, and others) teaching people about diff erent kinds of technologies. In both his occupations, he deals with technologies such as Protobuf and gRPC and how to apply them to real-life use cases. His overall goal is to empower people through education and technology.
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Length-delimited encoding

So far, we’ve seen how to encode values that have static sizes. For example, when dealing with the encoding of an int32, Protobuf deals with 4 bytes and turns them into a variable number of bytes. The same is true with other number types. In this section, we are going to learn how to encode a value that has a dynamic size. In other words, a size that can only be determined at runtime.

The types with such a dynamic size are strings and bytes. However, some other parts of Protobuf are encoded with length-delimited encoding: embedded messages and packed repeated fields. We are going to talk about the latter in the next section, but we are going to see strings and embedded messages here.

Let’s look at an example of encoding strings in Protobuf. Once again, we are going to create a message (length_delimited/encoding.proto):

syntax = "proto3";
message Encoding {
  string s = 1;
}

We’re also going to describe the...

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Protocol Buffers Handbook
Published in: Apr 2024Publisher: PacktISBN-13: 9781805124672

Author (1)

author image
Clément Jean

Clément Jean is the CTO of Education for Ethiopia, a start-up focusing on educating K-12 students in Ethiopia. On top of that, he is also an online instructor (on Udemy, Linux Foundation, and others) teaching people about diff erent kinds of technologies. In both his occupations, he deals with technologies such as Protobuf and gRPC and how to apply them to real-life use cases. His overall goal is to empower people through education and technology.
Read more about Clément Jean