Here's my use case: It's my job to clean CSV files which are often scrapped from web pages (most are english but some german and other weird non unicode characters sneak in there). Python 3 is "utf-8" by default and the usual
import csv
#open file
with open('input.csv','r',encoding = 'utf-8')
reader = csv.reader(f)
fails with UnicodeEncodeError
even with try/catch blocks everywhere
I can't figure out how to clean the input if I can't even open it. My end goal is simply to read each line into a list I call text.
I'm out of ideas I've even tried the following:
for encoding in ('utf-8','latin-1',etc, etc):
try:
//open the file
I can't make any assumptions about the encoding as they may be written on a unix machine in another part of the world and I'm on a windows machine. The input are just simple strings otherwise example
test case: "This is an example of a test case and the test may wrap around to a new line when opened in a text processor"
.decode
it with various methods?latin1
, and it can read anything (but not accurately if not reallylatin1
) without a "UnicodeDecodeError", so where exactly are you getting the error? Actual, reproducible examples with exact tracebacks help. My guess is aprint
is really getting the exception if you have "UnicodeEncodeError". If you can't make any assumptions about the encoding, you have a bigger problem. Maybe thechardet
module can help.