Assuming you're using Python 2.x, remember: there are two types of strings: str and unicode. str are byte strings, whereas unicode are unicode strings. unicode strings can be used to represent text in any language, but to store text in a computer or to send it via email, you need to represent that text using bytes. To represent text using bytes, you need an coding format. There are many coding formats, Python uses ascii by default, but ascii can only represent a few characters, mostly english letters. If you try to encode a text with other letters using ascii, you will get the famous "outside ordinal 128". For example:
>>> u'Cerón'.encode('ascii')
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "<input>", line 1, in <module>
UnicodeEncodeError: 'ascii' codec can't encode character u'\xf3' in position 3:
ordinal not in range(128)
The same happens if you use str(u'Cerón'), because Python uses ascii by default to convert unicode to str.
To make this work, you have to use a different coding format. UTF-8 is a coding format that can express any unicode text as bytes. To convert the u'Cerón' unicode string to bytes you have to use:
>>> u'Cerón'.encode('utf-8')
'Cer\xc3\xb3n'
No errors this time.
Now, back to your email problem. I can see that you're using MIMEText, which accepts an already encoded str argument, in your case is the html variable. MIMEText also accepts an argument specifying what kind of encoding is being used. So, in your case, if html is a unicode string, you have to encode it as utf-8 and pass the charset parameter too (because HTMLText uses ascii by default):
part1 = MIMEText(html.encode('utf-8'), 'html', 'utf-8')
But be careful, because if html is already a str instead of unicode, then the encoding will fail. This is one of the problems of Python 2.x, it allows you to encode an already encoded string but it throws an error.
Another problem to add to the list is that utf-8 is compatible with ascii characters, and Python will always try to automatically encode/decode strings using ascii. If you're not properly encoding your strings, but you only use ascii characters, things will work fine. However, if for some reason some non-ascii characters slips into your message, you will get the error, this makes errors harder to detect.
entryis what contains the text, tryentry = result['Entry Text'].decode('utf8')to get it into Unicode, and then when you are reading to write, perhapsdonotecontent.encode('utf8'). – RocketDonkey Nov 21 '12 at 3:10