Python Unicode: Difference between revisions

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* [http://unicode.org/faq/normalization.html Normalization FAQ] (not Python-specific) -- a single unicode string can be encoded multiple ways via "surrogates". This introduces ambiguity. This talks about some of that.
* [http://unicode.org/faq/normalization.html Normalization FAQ] (not Python-specific) -- a single unicode string can be encoded multiple ways via "surrogates". This introduces ambiguity. This talks about some of that.


[[Category:Software development]]
[[Category:Developers]]
[[Category:Developers]]
[[Category:Language support]]
[[Category:Language support]]
[[Category:Languages (international)]]
[[Category:Languages (international)]]
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Revision as of 22:58, 11 January 2007

Python has good unicode support, but it is not necessarily easy to use. Some things to note:

  • You must test your application with real Unicode (not ASCII-encodable) text. You can miss lots of bugs if you just use normal ASCII text (i.e., a-z, no accents).
  • You should be careful not to confuse 8-bit strings (that contain binary data and are of type "str"), and text (that contains unicode data and is of type "unicode"). It's easy to substitute one for the other, until you use non-ASCII text, then you'll get a UnicodeEncode/DecodeError.
  • The codecs module has some helpers for reading unicode from files.

Resources

Some resources to learn about Unicode: