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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:

  1. raw_input() --> I enter the characters 'űáéő' --> I get <type'str'>: '\xc5\xb1\xc3\xa1\xc3\xa9\xc5\x91'
  2. 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)

1 Answer 1

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It looks like you're on the right track but you've been mislead that all Unicode problems are resolved in Python 2.x

In Python 2.x stdin (including raw_input()) is not automatically decoded. This is in contrast to stdout, where Unicodes are encoded on output.

When reading from a stdin source, you must decode it from a byte string to a Unicode.

Obviously, you need to know what encoding to use for decoding. Python uses the user's locale for the output encoding and the same can be manually used for input decoding.

E.g.

my_unicode = raw_input().decode(locale.getpreferredencoding())

locale.getpreferredencoding() is the best source of encoding, as sys.stdin.encoding is set to None when Python doesn't have a terminal. I.e. when piping:

$ echo € | python -c "import sys ; print sys.stdin.encoding"
None 

In Python 3, input is decoded to Python3/Unicode strings and output is encoded. This relies on the user having a healthy locale and set to match their terminal emulation.

In other languages:

Java

Java's String()s are always decoded bytes. Stdin and stdout is automatically decoded/encoded. InputStreams for file and network input are byte streams that require decoding byte-by-byte or by using text wrappers, such as Readers. Readers can use the system encoding or be defined as a property. Java has a system property/command line argument, -Dfile.encoding which can override Java's opinion.

PHP

AFAIK, PHP only byte strings. Many methods assume iso-8995-1/latin. There's a number of MultiByte methods, which understand UTF-8 encoding.

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  • input mean your example. i got default encoding utf-8. so wrong system setup and python setup. Please read how to install an os with all enviroment variables.
    – dsgdfg
    Jan 20, 2016 at 8:43
  • I don't understand what you're saying. The above statements in my answer are true on vanilla cPython 2.x on OS X and Linux. You may be getting different results for Python 3 or if you're performing the commands incorrectly. If you want to link to a document to tell me how to setup my machine, please provide the href. Do you have links for AIX and Solaris also, as I have experience on these also? Jan 20, 2016 at 8:58

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