Nick Coghlan <ncogh...@gmail.com> added the comment:

I'd strongly prefer to just go back to the PEP 538 design. It's much simpler to 
implement, we don't actually want anyone turning off locale coercion except for 
debugging purposes (unlike UTF-8 mode), and the only argument against doing 
this the way PEP 538 describes is a purist one, not a practical one (which was 
already resolved in favour of practicality when PEP 538 was accepted).

However, if you were willing to do the updates on my PR branch to implement it, 
then I'd accept an alternative that added a pass through the command line 
arguments that checks for at least one of the two following cases after a 
legacy locale has been detected:

- the new option "-X coerce_c_locale=0" (ASCII) is present in the arg list
- neither "-E" nor "-I" (ASCII) are present in the arg list, and 
PYTHONCOERCECLOCALE is not set to zero

The code that sets warn_on_c_locale in the core config would then look for `-X 
coerce_c_locale=warn` in addition to looking for `PYTHONCOERCECLOCALE=warn`.

That's quite a bit of code to add for the sake of a flag we don't really want 
anyone to ever use, though. (If it hadn't been for the 
debugging-CentOS-7-problems-on-Fedora issue, I doubt I would have included the 
off switch in PEP 538 at all)

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