Ops, i have another update: string = u"blabla"
This is unicode, ok. Unicode UTF-8? Thankyou 2010/3/3 Giorgio <anothernetfel...@gmail.com> > Ok. > > So, how do you encode .py files? UTF-8? > > 2010/3/3 Dave Angel <da...@ieee.org> > > Giorgio wrote: >> >>> >>>> >>>>> Depends on your python version. If you use python 2.x, you have to use >>>>> a >>>>> >>>>> >>>> u before the string: >>>> >>>> s = u'Hallo World' >>>> >>>> >>> >>> >>> Ok. So, let's go back to my first question: >>> >>> s = u'Hallo World' is unicode in python 2.x -> ok >>> s = 'Hallo World' how is encoded? >>> >>> >>> >> Since it's a quote literal in your source code, it's encoded by your text >> editor when it saves the file, and you tell Python which encoding it was by >> the second line of your source file, right after the shebang line. >> >> A sequence of bytes in an html file should be should have its encoding >> identified by the tag at the top of the html file. And I'd *guess* that on >> a form result, the encoding can be assumed to match that of the html of the >> form itself. >> >> DaveA >> >> > > > -- > -- > AnotherNetFellow > Email: anothernetfel...@gmail.com > -- -- AnotherNetFellow Email: anothernetfel...@gmail.com
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