Norbert Thek wrote:
> Thank You for your help, its working!
>
> Now I have an additional question.
...which would warrant a separate thread...
> The problem is the encoding of the Text
> I'm using German, Can you tell me how to encode
> the textstring that the Windows commandline shows the special letters
> right?
> For exampel i get 'f�r' but i want 'f�r' (maybe reader with only an
> english enabled browser wouldn't see a difference..)
>
> I tried to work with the encode method of string but It didn't work for me
> some hint what to do?
>>> u"f�r" # what you have (minus unicode)
u'f\xb3r'
>>> u"f�r"
u'f\xfcr' # what you need
One way to get that (wrong) representation:
>>> u"f�r".encode("cp1252").decode("cp850")
u'f\xb3r'
So it could be that you are interpreting cp1252 ("German" windows) as cp850
("German" DOS).
Try the following script:
# -*- coding: cp1252 -*-
text = u"text with umlauts ��� ��� �".encode("cp850")
print text
If that works correctly, you can prepare every string literal in your
program in the same way. Or redirect sys.stdout
sys.stdout = codecs.getwriter("cp850")(sys.stdout)
as posted by Martin von L�wis on de.comp.lang.python only two days ago.
Peter
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