In message <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, Duncan Booth wrote: > If I have a unicode string such as: u'\u201d' (right double quote), then I > want that encoded in my html as '”' (or ” but the numeric form > is better).
Right-double-quote is not an HTML special, so there's no need to quote it. I'm only concerned here with characters that have special meanings in HTML markup. > There should be a one-stop shop where I can take my unicode text and > convert it into something I can safely insert into a generated html page; > at present I need to call both cgi.escape and s.encode to get the desired > effect. What you're really asking for is a version of cgi.escape that a) fixes the bugs discussed in this thread, and b) copes with different encodings while doing so. To handle b), you would need to pass it some indication of what the encoding of the string is. In any case, converting a literal right-double-quote to ” is not relevant to the purpose of cgi.escape. -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list