Degree symbol (UTF-8
Peter Clark
pc451 at yahoo.com
Wed Apr 16 21:20:28 EDT 2003
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Wed Apr 16 21:20:28 EDT 2003
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"Dennis Reinhardt" <DennisR at dair.com> wrote in message news:<TUhna.928$cq2.100423716 at newssvr13.news.prodigy.com>... > > I'm working with a xml document which doesn't include an encoding, > > The lack of an encoding is your problem. Pick an encoding which defines 256 > characters, not 128, if you want to represent chr(176).in a single byte. I'm sorry, upon re-reading my first message, I realize that I did not describe the problem adequately enough. Let me see if I can try again. When I try chr(176).encode('latin-1') I get the following message: UnicodeError: ASCII decoding error: ordinal not in range(128). But when I try 'print chr(176)' I get the degree symbol, which is what I want. Yet when I try inserting this into the XML stream, I get the following error: w += [chr(176) + scale.strip()] UnicodeError: ASCII decoding error: ordinal not in range(128) I've tried changing its encoding to 'utf-8' as well with chr(176).encode('utf-8'), but that just returns the same error. This doesn't make sense: if 'print chr(176)' works fine, why doesn't it work later on? In a nut shell, all I want to do is add the degree character to a string contained within a list. That doesn't seem hard at all, but I'm completely stumped.
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