vote up 5 vote down star
1

I'm writing some mail-processing software in Python that is encountering strange bytes in header fields. I suspect this is just malformed mail; the message itself claims to be us-ascii, so I don't think there is a true encoding, but I'd like to get out a unicode string approximating the original one without throwing a UnicodeDecodeError .

So, I'm looking for a function that takes a str and optionally some hints and does its darndest to give me back a unicode. I could write one of course, but if such a function exists its author has probably thought a bit deeper about the best way to go about this.

I also know that Python's design prefers explicit to implicit and that the standard library is designed to avoid implicit magic in decoding text. I just want to explicitly say "go ahead and guess".

flag

4 Answers

vote up 6 vote down

You may be interested in Universal Encoding Detector.

link|flag
+1 for being 5 seconds faster than me :-) – unbeknown Nov 6 '08 at 15:27
Really useful, thanks. But not in the standard library. – Nick Nov 7 '08 at 21:03
vote up 4 vote down

+1 for the chardet module (suggested by insin).

It is not in the standard library, but you can easily install it with the following command:

$ easy_install chardet

Example:

>>> import chardet
>>> import urllib
>>> detect = lambda url: chardet.detect(urllib.urlopen(url).read())
>>> detect('http://stackoverflow.com')
{'confidence': 0.85663169917190185, 'encoding': 'ISO-8859-2'}    
>>> detect('http://stackoverflow.com/questions/269060/is-there-a-python-lib')
{'confidence': 0.98999999999999999, 'encoding': 'utf-8'}

See Installing EasyInstall if you don't have one.

link|flag
vote up 0 vote down

The best way to do this that I've found is to iteratively try decoding a prospective with each of the most common encodings inside of a try except block.

link|flag
vote up 1 vote down check

As far as I can tell, the standard library doesn't have a function, though it's not too difficult to write one as suggested above. I think the real thing I was looking for was a way to decode a string and guarantee that it wouldn't throw an exception. The errors parameter to string.decode does that.

def decode(s, encodings=('ascii', 'utf8', 'latin1')):
    for encoding in encodings:
    	try:
    		return s.decode(encoding)
    	except UnicodeDecodeError:
    		pass
    return s.decode('ascii', 'ignore')
link|flag

Your Answer

Get an OpenID
or

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.