I am switched from Python 2.7 to Python 3.6.
I have scripts that deal with some non-English content.
I usually run scripts via Cron and also in Terminal.
It sounds like your locale is broken and have another bytes->Unicode issue. The thing you did for Python 2.7 is a hack that only masked the real problem (there's a reason why you have to reload sys
to make it work).
To fix your locale, try typing locale
from the command line. It should look something like:
LANG=en_GB.UTF-8
LC_CTYPE="en_US.UTF-8"
LC_NUMERIC="en_GB.UTF-8"
LC_TIME="en_GB.UTF-8"
LC_COLLATE="en_GB.UTF-8"
LC_MONETARY="en_GB.UTF-8"
LC_MESSAGES="en_GB.UTF-8"
LC_ALL=
locale
depends on LANG
being set properly. Python effectively uses locale
to work out what encoding to use when writing to stdout in. If it can't work it out, it defaults to ASCII.
You should first attempt to fix your locale. If locale
errors, make sure you've installed the correct language pack for your region.
If all else fails, you can always fix Python by setting PYTHONIOENCODING=UTF-8
. This should be used as a last resort as you'll be masking problems once again.
If Python is still throwing an error after setting PYTHONIOENCODING
then please update your question with the stacktrace. Chances are you've got an implied conversion going on.
I had this issue when using Python inside a Docker container based on Ubuntu 18.04. It appeared to be a locale issue, which was solved by adding the following to the Dockerfile:
ENV LANG C.UTF-8
Python 3 (including 3.6) is already Unicode supported. Here is the doc - https://docs.python.org/3/howto/unicode.html
So you don't need to force Unicode support like Python 2.7. Try to run your code normally. If you get any error reading a Unicode text file you need to use the encoding='utf-8'
parameter while reading the file.
For a Python-only solution you will have to recreate your sys.stdout
object:
import sys, codecs
sys.stdout = codecs.getwriter('utf-8')(sys.stdout.detach())
After this, a normal print("hello world")
should be encoded to UTF-8 automatically.
But you should try to find out why your terminal is set to such a strange encoding (which Python just tries to adopt to). Maybe your operating system is configured wrong somehow.
EDIT: In my tests unsetting the env variable LANG
produced this strange setting for the stdout encoding for me:
LANG= python3
import sys
sys.stdout.encoding
printed 'ANSI_X3.4-1968'
.
So I guess you might want to set your LANG
to something like
en_US.UTF-8
. Your terminal program doesn't seem to do this.
I mean you could write an custom function like this: (Not optimal i know)
import sys
def printUTF8(input):
print(input.encode("utf-8"))