vote up 3 vote down star

I'm a total python noob so please bear with me. I want to have python scan a page of html and replace instances of Microsoft Word entities with something UTF-8 compatible.

My question is, how do you do that in Python (I've Googled this but haven't found a clear answer so far)? I want to dip my toe in the Python waters so I figure something simple like this is a good place to start. It seems that I would need to:

  1. load text pasted from MS Word into a variable
  2. run some sort of replace function on the contents
  3. output it

In PHP I would do it like this:

$test = $_POST['pasted_from_Word']; //for example “Going Mobile”

function defangWord($string) 
{
    $search = array(
        (chr(0xe2) . chr(0x80) . chr(0x98)),
        (chr(0xe2) . chr(0x80) . chr(0x99)),
        (chr(0xe2) . chr(0x80) . chr(0x9c)), 
        (chr(0xe2) . chr(0x80) . chr(0x9d)), 
        (chr(0xe2) . chr(0x80) . chr(0x93)),
        (chr(0xe2) . chr(0x80) . chr(0x94)), 
        (chr(0x2d))
    ); 

    $replace = array(
        "‘",
        "’",
        "“",
        "”",
        "–",
        "—",
        "–"
    );

    return str_replace($search, $replace, $string); 
} 

echo defangWord($test);

How would you do it in Python?

EDIT: Hmmm, ok ignore my confusion about UTF-8 and entities for the moment. The input contains text pasted from MS Word. Things like curly quotes are showing up as odd symbols. Various PHP functions I used to try and fix it were not giving me the results I wanted. By viewing those odd symbols in a hex editor I saw that they corresponded to the symbols I used above (0xe2, 0x80 etc.). So I simply swapped out the oddball characters with HTML entities. So if the bit I have above already IS UTF-8, what is being pasted in from MS Word that is causing the odd symbols?

EDIT2: So I set out to learn a bit about Python and found I don't really understand encoding. The problem I was trying to solve can be handled simply by having sonsistent encoding from end to end. If the input form is UTF-8, the database that stores the input is UTF-8 and the page that outputs it is UTF-8... pasting from Word works fine. No special functions needed. Now, about learning a little Python...

flag

+1: "defangWord()"... I love it! :-) – Jarret Hardie Apr 16 at 1:43

5 Answers

vote up 20 vote down check

First of all, those aren't Microsoft Word entities—they are UTF-8. You're converting them to HTML entities.

The Pythonic way to write something like:

chr(0xe2) . chr(0x80) . chr(0x98)

would be:

'\xe2\x80\x98'

But Python already has built-in functionality for the type of conversion you want to do:

def defang(string):
    return string.decode('utf-8').encode('ascii', 'xmlcharrefreplace')

This will replace the UTF-8 codes in a string for characters like with numeric entities like “.

If you want to replace those numeric entities with named ones where possible:

import re
from htmlentitydefs import codepoint2name

def convert_match_to_named(match):
    num = int(match.group(1))
    if num in codepoint2name:
        return "&%s;" % codepoint2name[num]
    else:
        return match.group(0)

def defang_named(string):
    return re.sub('&#(\d+);', convert_match_to_named, defang(string))

And use it like so:

>>> defang_named('\xe2\x80\x9cHello, world!\xe2\x80\x9d')
'“Hello, world!”'


To complete the answer, the equivalent code to your example to process a file would look something like this:

# in Python, it's common to operate a line at a time on a file instead of
# reading the entire thing into memory

my_file = open("test100.html")
for line in my_file:
    print defang_named(line)
my_file.close()

Note that this answer is targeted at Python 2.5; the Unicode situation is dramatically different for Python 3+.

I also agree with bobince's comment below: if you can just keep the text in UTF-8 format and send it with the correct content-type and charset, do that; if you need it to be in ASCII, then stick with the numeric entities—there's really no need to use the named ones.

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+1 for xmlcharrefreplace — there is no need for HTML named entities today really. But really, leave the UTF-8 alone, smart-quotes intact. As long as you serve it with the correct ‘charset’ header/meta-tag there is no problem. – bobince Apr 16 at 2:14
+1 for pointing out that the entities are UTF-8 and not some MS weirdness ;-) (and for a well-written answer overall, too) – David Apr 16 at 2:48
I'm confused. The document I am importing in the example is full of strange symbols that correspond to MS Word curly quotes. If I drop them straight into a page with UTF-8 encoding I get strange symbols. If I convert them using my example code they render fine. So, what are they before I convert? – gaoshan88 Apr 16 at 5:46
It's hard to tell what you mean when you say "drop them straight into a page with UTF-8 encoding". It sounds like you're opening the test100.html file in a text editor with the incorrect character set (probably Windows-1252)—make sure you open it as UTF-8. – Miles Apr 16 at 6:11
Sorry, that wasn't clear. The PHP I wrote was created to handle people pasting directly from Word into a textarea. The pasted code would then appear with the garbled symbols (looking like “Inside Quotes†for example) and I could not find a good solution to clean it. My above code cleans it. – gaoshan88 Apr 16 at 6:18
show 5 more comments
vote up 3 vote down

The Python code has the same outline.

Just replace all of the PHP-isms with Python-isms.

Start by creating a File object. The result of a file.read() is a string object. Strings have a "replace" operation.

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vote up 2 vote down

Your best bet for cleaning Word HTML is using HTML Tidy which has a mode just for that. There are a few Python wrappers you can use if you need to do it programmatically.

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vote up 1 vote down

As S.Lott said, the Python code would be very, very similar—the only differences would essentially be the function calls/statements.

I don't think Python has a direct equivalent to file_get_contents(), but since you can obtain an array of the lines in the file, you can then join them by newlines, like this:

sample = '\n'.join(open(test, 'r').readlines())

EDIT: Never mind, there's a much easier way: sample = file(test).read()

String replacing is almost exactly the same as str_replace():

sample = sample.replace(search, replace)

And outputting is as simple as a print statement:

print defang_word(sample)

So as you can see, the two versions look almost exactly the same.

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file('foo.txt').read() – Justus Apr 16 at 2:09
Good call—edited. – htw Apr 16 at 2:11
vote up 0 vote down

Just for the record, that is not the way to do it in PHP.

$test = "test100.html";

$sample = file_get_contents($test);

echo htmlentities($sample, ENT_COMPAT, 'UTF-8');

Edit: for just these characters in a php file saved with UTF-8 encoding:

$search = array (
  '‘',
  '’',
  '“',
  '”',
  '–',
  '—',
  '-',
);

Of course, outputting the content as UTF-8 means you dont have to do this conversion at all.

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Actually for what I'm doing it is. The problem with your solution is that it converts everything to entities causing correct markup to appear as <, for example. My solution only alters the strange symbols introduced my Word, nothing else. – gaoshan88 Apr 16 at 5:55

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