11

Suppose I am reading a file containing 3 comma separated numbers. The file was saved with with an unknown encoding, so far I am dealing with ANSI and UTF-8. If the file was in UTF-8 and it had 1 row with values 115,113,12 then:

with open(file) as f:
    a,b,c=map(int,f.readline().split(','))

would throw this:

invalid literal for int() with base 10: '\xef\xbb\xbf115'

The first number is always mangled with these '\xef\xbb\xbf' characters. For the rest 2 numbers the conversion works fine. If I manually replace '\xef\xbb\xbf' with '' and then do the int conversion it will work.

Is there a better way of doing this for any type of encoded file?

2 Answers 2

17
import codecs

with codecs.open(file, "r", "utf-8-sig") as f:
    a, b, c= map(int, f.readline().split(","))

This works in Python 2.6.4. The codecs.open call opens the file and returns data as unicode, decoding from UTF-8 and ignoring the initial BOM.

4
  • Thanks. This works on my UTF-8 files but fails on the Unicode and Unicode big endian. Is there a foolproof way of opening any kind of encoded file and getting those numbers or I would having to explicitly specify the encoding?
    – Ηλίας
    Mar 2, 2010 at 9:40
  • AFAIK you have to specify the encoding. Obviously, you can write a small function that does the three tests and returns an appropriately decoded file.
    – tzot
    Mar 2, 2010 at 9:52
  • Great. I found the chardet module that does exactly this chardet.feedparser.org
    – Ηλίας
    Mar 2, 2010 at 10:20
  • 1
    Minor error on your code above: a, b, c= map(int,f.readline().split(","))
    – Ηλίας
    Mar 3, 2010 at 11:12
13

What you're seeing is a UTF-8 encoded BOM, or "Byte Order Mark". The BOM is not usually used for UTF-8 files, so the best way to handle it might be to open the file with a UTF-8 codec, and skip over the U+FEFF character if present.

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.