2

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"

4
  • could you read it in bytes the try to .decode it with various methods? May 11, 2016 at 4:09
  • Tadhg, I thought of that, but in python 3, reading a csv as 'wb' throws another error. I'm sure there's a way to do it I'm not sure what that is.
    – MrL
    May 11, 2016 at 4:14
  • 1
    You said you tried latin1, and it can read anything (but not accurately if not really latin1) without a "UnicodeDecodeError", so where exactly are you getting the error? Actual, reproducible examples with exact tracebacks help. My guess is a print 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 the chardet module can help. May 11, 2016 at 5:48

1 Answer 1

3

Maybe try reading in the contents entirely, then using bytes.decode() in much the same way you mentioned:

#!python3
import csv
from io import StringIO

with open('input.csv', 'rb') as binfile:
    csv_bytes = binfile.readall()

for enc in ('utf-8', 'utf-16', 'latin1'):
    try:
        csv_string = csv_bytes.decode(encoding=enc, errors='strict')
        break
    except UnicodeError as e:
        last_err = e
else: #none worked
    raise last_err


with StringIO(csv_string) as csvfile:
    csv = csv.reader(csvfile)
    for row in csv:
        print(row[0])
1
  • 1
    I hope you don't mind, I edited the code so that it wouldn't get a NameError if all the encodings failed. May 11, 2016 at 4:20

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