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Hi there,

This will surely be an easy one but it is really bugging me.

I have a script that reads in a webpage and uses BeutifulSoup to parse it. From the soup I extract all the links as my final goal is to print out the link.contents.

All off the text that I am parsing is ASCII. I know that python treats strings as unicode, and I am sure this is very handy, just of no use in my wee script.

Every time I go to print out a variable that holds 'String' I get u['String'] printed to the screen. Is there a simple way of getting this back into just ascii or should I write a regex to strip it?

Thanks, John.

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You have a typo. Python won't print u['String'] as it is not valid. Please copy and paste real output to the question. – nosklo Mar 1 at 11:16
Thanks for your input all. Apologies for the typo. – gnuchu Mar 1 at 12:18

4 Answers

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[u'ABC'] would be a one-element list of unicode strings. Beautiful Soup always produces Unicode. So you need to convert the list to a single unicode string, and then convert that to ASCII.

I don't know exaxtly how you got the one-element lists; the contents member would be a list of strings and tags, which is apparently not what you have. Assuming that you really always get a list with a single element, and that your test is really only ASCII you would use this:

 soup[0].encode("ascii")

However, please double-check that your data is really ASCII. This is pretty rare. Much more likely it's latin-1 or utf-8.

 soup[0].encode("latin-1")


 soup[0].encode("utf-8")

Or you ask Beautiful Soup what the original encoding was and get it back in this encoding:

 soup[0].encode(soup.originalEncoding)
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Brilliant. Thanks. Apologies for the typo. – gnuchu Mar 1 at 12:15
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You actually don't have to do the encoding, because the OP is only seeing the string repr because thats how you see anything when you print a list. soup[0] will be enough to show the str instead of the repr, showing the contents of the string and not the quote and unicode modifier. – ironfroggy Mar 1 at 13:36
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You probably have a list containing one unicode string. The repr of this is [u'String'].

You can convert this to a list of byte strings using any variation of the following:

# Functional style.
print map(lambda x: x.encode('ascii'), my_list)

# List comprehension.
print [x.encode('ascii') for x in my_list]

# Interesting if my_list may be a tuple or a string.
print type(my_list)(x.encode('ascii') for x in my_list)

# What do I care about the brackets anyway?
print ', '.join(repr(x.encode('ascii')) for x in my_list)

# That's actually not a good way of doing it.
print ' '.join(repr(x).lstrip('u')[1:-1] for x in my_list)
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Use dir or type on the 'string' to find out what it is. I suspect that it's one of BeautifulSoup's tag objects, that prints like a string, but really isn't one. Otherwise, its inside a list and you need to convert each string separately.

In any case, why are you objecting to using Unicode? Any specific reason?

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I've been looking at BeautifulSoup since the last few days. I couldn't figure out how gnuchu would get u['string'] not [u'String']. His comment to Andrew Jaffe seems to prove it is a list. – batbrat Mar 1 at 11:54
+1 on teaching him to fish instead of catching a fish and giving it to him. – batbrat Mar 1 at 11:54
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Do you really mean u'String'?

In any event, can't you just do str(string) to get a string rather than a unicode-string? (This should be different for Python 3, for which all strings are unicode.)

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I should have been clearer. I am using str() but still getting output like below when I print. [u'ABC'] [u'DEF'] [u'GHI'] [u'JKL'] The data is stripped as text from a webpage, then inserted into a database (Google Appstore), then retrieved and printed. – gnuchu Mar 1 at 11:09

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