[u'String']
is a text representation of a list that contains a Unicode string on Python 2.
If you run print(some_list)
then it is equivalent to
print'[%s]' % ', '.join(map(repr, some_list))
i.e., to create a text representation of a Python object with the type list
, repr()
function is called for each item.
Don't confuse a Python object and its text representation—repr('a') != 'a'
and even the text representation of the text representation differs: repr(repr('a')) != repr('a')
.
repr(obj)
returns a string that contains a printable representation of an object. Its purpose is to be an unambiguous representation of an object that can be useful for debugging, in a REPL. Often eval(repr(obj)) == obj
.
To avoid calling repr()
, you could print list items directly (if they are all Unicode strings) e.g.: print ",".join(some_list)
—it prints a comma separated list of the strings: String
Do not encode a Unicode string to bytes using a hardcoded character encoding, print Unicode directly instead. Otherwise, the code may fail because the encoding can't represent all the characters e.g., if you try to use 'ascii'
encoding with non-ascii characters. Or the code silently produces mojibake (corrupted data is passed further in a pipeline) if the environment uses an encoding that is incompatible with the hardcoded encoding.