On 1/20/11 8:31 AM, Helmut Jarausch wrote:
Hi,
I've searched the net but didn't find the information I need.
Using Python-2.7.1, I know, I can't modify defaultencoding at run time.

You're not supposed to. It must remain 'ascii'. Otherwise, you will break dict lookups among other things. Can you be specific about why you think you want to change this? What are you trying to achieve? It looks like you are conflating a variety of different behaviors below.

Python even ignores
export PYTHONIOENCODING=ISO8859-1

locale.getdefaultlocale()[1]
returns
'ISO8859-1'

This does not introspect the same thing as sys.getdefaultencoding().

still sys.stdout is using the ascii codec.

This reflects your terminal settings, not sys.getdefaultencoding(). I'm not sure why the PYTHONIOENCODING variable isn't affecting that. It works fine for me.

How can I recompile Python (itself) to change this to iso8859-1 ?
(My favourite editor cannot be told to use unicode.)

You wouldn't want to change sys.getdefaultencoding() for this. That parameter affects how str and unicode objects are converted between each other without an explicit .encode()/.decode() call, not what encoding Python assumes for the parsing of the code.

Instead, you want to use an encoding declaration in each file:

http://docs.python.org/reference/lexical_analysis.html#encoding-declarations

--
Robert Kern

"I have come to believe that the whole world is an enigma, a harmless enigma
 that is made terrible by our own mad attempt to interpret it as though it had
 an underlying truth."
  -- Umberto Eco

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