Hello,
Using Python 2.7 (will switch to Py3 soon but Before I'd like to understand how 
string encoding worked)
Could you please tell me is I understood well what occurs in Python's mind:
in a .py file:
if I write s="héhéhé", if my file is declared as unicode coding, python will 
store in memory s='hx82hx82hx82'
however this is not yet unicode for python interpreter this is just raw bytes. 
Right? 
By the way, why 'h' is not turned into hexa value? Because it is already in the 
ASCII table?
If I want python interpreter to recognize my string as unicode I have to 
declare it as unicode s=u'héhéhé' and magically python will look for those 
hex values 'x82' in the Unicode table. Still OK?
Now: how come when I declare s='héhéhé', print(s) displays well 'héhéhé'? Is it 
because of my shell windows that is dealing well with unicode? Or is it 
because the print function is magic?

Thanks
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