I'm trying to wrap my head around unicode and different character encodings in Python 2.7.
As far as I know:
encode('utf-8')
: converts utf-8 text (<type 'unicode'>
) to bytes (<type 'str'>
)decode('utf-8')
: converts bytes (<type 'str'>
) to uft-8 text (<type 'unicode'>
)
Based on the above, say I wanted to write some code capable of handling input in any encoding (which I certainly should be doing). The way I do this is:
raw_input().encode(sys.stdin.encoding)
(Note that sys.stdin.encoding
is UTF-8 in my case)
This should give me a bytes representation of the users whatever encoded input. However, what happens is this raises an exception:
UnicodeDecodeError: 'ascii' codec can't decode byte 0xc3 in position 0: ordinal not in range(128)
(Note that it says decode error on encoding? What?)
Now let us try:
raw_input().decode(sys.stdin.encoding)
This gives me a <type 'unicode'>
. This means, that raw_input()
gives me a bytes representation (<type 'str'>
) of the user input. I can confirm this by:
raw_input()
--> I enter the characters 'űáéő' --> I get<type'str'>
: '\xc5\xb1\xc3\xa1\xc3\xa9\xc5\x91'raw_input().decode(sys.stdin.encoding).encode(sys.stdin.encoding)
--> I enter the characters 'űáéő' --> I get<type 'str'>
: '\xc5\xb1\xc3\xa1\xc3\xa9\xc5\x91'
Right now I feel confused. I've always thought encodings were some kind of black magic, because thats what most people told me. But now: If what I get from raw_input()
is an already byte representation (<type 'str'>
) of the users unicode input (and thats what I need to be able to work with it, let's say generate it's hash or anything like that) than what's this huge confusion in most programmers about encodings?
I mean it doesn't seem that terrible at all. What I get from inputs is bytes, I only need to make sure I don't mix up inputs from different sources without making sure they are the same encoding. Developing an application which gets all it's input from the same terminal, I don't have to do anything special.
Are my assumptions correct? Also, is this true in other languages? (Do I always get the user input as bytes?) If it's that easy, why is that most legacy code and even new code messes encodings up? (in any language)