I have seen few py scripts which use this at the top of the script. In what cases one should use it?
import sys
reload(sys)
sys.setdefaultencoding("utf-8")
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As per the documentation: This allows you to switch from the default ASCII to other encodings such as UTF-8, which the Python runtime will use whenever it has to decode a string buffer to unicode. This function is only available at Python start-up time, when Python scans the environment. It has to be called in a system-wide module, sitecustomize.py, After this module has been evaluated, the setdefaultencoding() function is removed from the sys module. The only way to actually use it is with a reload hack that brings the attribute back. Also, the use of sys.setdefaultencoding() has always been discouraged, and it has become a no-op in py3k. The encoding is hard-wired to utf-8 and changing it raises an error. I suggest some pointers for readup:
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on shell works , sending to sdtout not , so that is one workaround, to write to stdout . I made other approach, which is not run if sys.stdout.encoding is not define, or in others words , need export PYTHONIOENCODING=UTF-8 first to write to stdout.
will work |
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