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I use SL4A to run python scripts on android. I have a file in a server which is a .csv file and contain strings. There are lines, one line content is like this:

1;ABC Budaörs;47.472518;19.059895

I try to make a toast on my android mobile phone, but I get the following error.

UnicodeDecodeError: 'utf-8' codec can't decode bytes in position 10-13: invalid data

I guess that python can't decode the caharacter: ö. Why? Isn't it in utf-8 when I download the file?

Here is my code:

f = urllib.urlopen(URL);
for line in f:
     droid.makeToast(line)

Anyway, if I just try to print to the console the 1;ABC Budaörs;47.472518;19.059895 line I get the following result:

1;ABC Buda�rs;47.472518;19.059895

What is this � character?

Thanks for the answers!!

2 Answers 2

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� is replacement character (often a black diamond with a white question mark) is a symbol found in the Unicode standard at codepoint U+FFFD in the Specials table. It is used to indicate problems when a system is not able to render a stream of data to a correct symbol.

and your error is because of that Your string doesn't actually contain utf-8 it contains some other encoding. Figure out what that encoding is and use it for encoding!

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  • And how can I figure out? I try to check the content-type from the header, but it just contains text/plain.
    – Tamás
    Dec 4, 2014 at 22:33
  • @Tamás you sont need to check the type just based on your language you can search and find the proper encoding for that , and then decode your string !
    – Mazdak
    Dec 4, 2014 at 22:45
  • I solved my problem, just added f.read().decode("latin-1) and now it is working.
    – Tamás
    Dec 5, 2014 at 16:31
  • @Tamás nice ,im glad !so latin-1 is what you wont !
    – Mazdak
    Dec 5, 2014 at 16:34
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The csv file is in something like iso-8859-1 or windows-1252.

You can use iconv to convert it to utf-8 (available free on windows and unix)

If you look at the file in a hex editor you will probably find one byte with the high bit set at the location rather than two.

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