Sebastian Elsner | RISE wrote:
> Unicode is tricky, it bites me every time. This works:

It's not that hard.  There are two possibilities.  Either the setTool
function does not accept Unicode strings, or the default tool tip font
does not include those extended characters.


> Please note, the .py file actually has to be saved/encoded as utf-8.
> You need to do this via your editor's save/convert function.

Actually, it doesn't.  There are no characters in his file beyond the
base ASCII set, except for the one character in a comment, so the file
coding is irrelevant.  If this worked for you, then his original code
would have worked for you also.  That would imply that your tooltip uses
a different default font.  No one here has mentioned what operating
systems they are using; that makes a difference.

-- 
Tim Roberts, [email protected]
Providenza & Boekelheide, Inc.

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