Unicode entries on sys.path
"Martin v. Löwis"
martin at v.loewis.de
Sun Dec 26 19:24:27 EST 2004
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Sun Dec 26 19:24:27 EST 2004
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Just wrote: >>The real question here is: why does Python not support arbitrary >>Unicode strings on sys.path? It could, in principle, atleast on >>Windows NT+ (and also on OSX). Patches are welcome. > > > Works for me on OSX 10.3.6, as it should: prior to using the sys.path > entry, a unicode string is encoded with Py_FileSystemDefaultEncoding. > I'm not sure how well it works together with zipimport, though. As Vincent's message already implies, I'm asking for Windows patches. In a Windows system, there are path names which just *don't have* a representation in the file system default encoding. So you just can't use the standard file system API (open, read, write) to access those files - instead, you have to use specific Unicode variants of the file system API. The only operating system in active use that can reliably represent all file names in the standard API is OS X. Unix can do that as long as the locale is UTF-8; for all other systems, there are restrictions when you try to use the file system API to access files with "funny" characters. Regards, Martin
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