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Using SQLite3 in Python, I am trying to store a compressed version of a snippet of UTF-8 HTML code.

Code looks like this:

...
c = connection.cursor()
c.execute('create table blah (cid integer primary key,html blob)')
...
c.execute('insert or ignore into blah values (?, ?)',(cid, zlib.compress(html)))

At which point at get the error:

sqlite3.ProgrammingError: You must not use 8-bit bytestrings unless you use a text_factory that can interpret 8-bit bytestrings (like text_factory = str). It is highly recommended that you instead just switch your application to Unicode strings.

If I use 'text' rather than 'blob' and don't compress the HTML snippet, it works all fine (db is to large though). When I use 'blob' and compress via Python zlib library, I get the above error message. I looked around but couldn't find a simple answer for this one.

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3 Answers

If you want to use 8-bit strings instead of unicode string in sqlite3, set approptiate text_factory for sqlite connection:

connection = sqlite3.connect(...)
connection.text_factory = str
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Found the solution, I should have spent just a little more time searching.

Solution is to 'cast' the value as a Python 'buffer', like so:

c.execute('insert or ignore into blah values (?, ?)',(cid, buffer(zlib.compress(html))))

Hopefully this will help somebody else.

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Could you explain why this works? – Moshe Apr 8 at 14:58

You could store the value using repr(html) instead of the raw output and then use eval(html) when retrieving the value for use.

c.execute('insert or ignore into blah values (?, ?)',(1, repr(zlib.compress(html))))
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