Hi Dotan,
Just for reference, the weirdness that you're seeing before the email addresses in your text file are "MIME-encoded" strings. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MIME Concretely, the string "=?UTF-8?B?157XqNeZ15Qg15nXoNeY16bXnw==?=" is an encoding of a string in MIME format, and in particular, a utf-8 string in base-64 format. (See http://www.joelonsoftware.com/articles/Unicode.html for details on unicode if you need to brush up.) There are libraries in Python to help decode this stuff. In particular, the 'email' library. http://docs.python.org/lib/module-email.header.html ################################################### >>> from email.header import decode_header >>> from email.header import make_header >>> s = "=?UTF-8?B?157XqNeZ15Qg15nXoNeY16bXnw==?=" >>> h = make_header(decode_header(s)) ################################################### At this point, h is a "Header" object, whose unicode characters are: ######################################################### >>> unicode(h) u'\u05de\u05e8\u05d9\u05d4 \u05d9\u05e0\u05d8\u05e6\u05df' ######################################################### I have a console that supports printing utf-8, and when I look at this, it looks like Hebrew. A direct letter-for-letter transliteration would be: "Mem" "Resh" "Yod" "He" "Yod" "Nun" "Tet" "Tsadi" "Final Nun" I'm sure these consonants make more sense to you than they do to me, since I don't speak Hebrew. In any case, the point is that you may be able to maintain the name-to-email correspondence in your email lists by using Python's support for decoding those base64-encoded strings. _______________________________________________ Tutor maillist - Tutor@python.org http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/tutor