问题
We\'ve already gotten our code base running under Python 2.6. In order to prepare for Python 3.0, we\'ve started adding:
from __future__ import unicode_literals
into our .py
files (as we modify them). I\'m wondering if anyone else has been doing this and has run into any non-obvious gotchas (perhaps after spending a lot of time debugging).
回答1:
The main source of problems I've had working with unicode strings is when you mix utf-8 encoded strings with unicode ones.
For example, consider the following scripts.
two.py
# encoding: utf-8
name = 'helló wörld from two'
one.py
# encoding: utf-8
from __future__ import unicode_literals
import two
name = 'helló wörld from one'
print name + two.name
The output of running python one.py
is:
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "one.py", line 5, in <module>
print name + two.name
UnicodeDecodeError: 'ascii' codec can't decode byte 0xc3 in position 4: ordinal not in range(128)
In this example, two.name
is an utf-8 encoded string (not unicode) since it did not import unicode_literals
, and one.name
is an unicode string. When you mix both, python tries to decode the encoded string (assuming it's ascii) and convert it to unicode and fails. It would work if you did print name + two.name.decode('utf-8')
.
The same thing can happen if you encode a string and try to mix them later. For example, this works:
# encoding: utf-8
html = '<html><body>helló wörld</body></html>'
if isinstance(html, unicode):
html = html.encode('utf-8')
print 'DEBUG: %s' % html
Output:
DEBUG: <html><body>helló wörld</body></html>
But after adding the import unicode_literals
it does NOT:
# encoding: utf-8
from __future__ import unicode_literals
html = '<html><body>helló wörld</body></html>'
if isinstance(html, unicode):
html = html.encode('utf-8')
print 'DEBUG: %s' % html
Output:
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "test.py", line 6, in <module>
print 'DEBUG: %s' % html
UnicodeDecodeError: 'ascii' codec can't decode byte 0xc3 in position 16: ordinal not in range(128)
It fails because 'DEBUG: %s'
is an unicode string and therefore python tries to decode html
. A couple of ways to fix the print are either doing print str('DEBUG: %s') % html
or print 'DEBUG: %s' % html.decode('utf-8')
.
I hope this helps you understand the potential gotchas when using unicode strings.
回答2:
Also in 2.6 (before python 2.6.5 RC1+) unicode literals doesn't play nice with keyword arguments (issue4978):
The following code for example works without unicode_literals, but fails with TypeError: keywords must be string
if unicode_literals is used.
>>> def foo(a=None): pass
...
>>> foo(**{'a':1})
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module>
TypeError: foo() keywords must be strings
回答3:
I did find that if you add the unicode_literals
directive you should also add something like:
# -*- coding: utf-8
to the first or second line your .py file. Otherwise lines such as:
foo = "barré"
result in an an error such as:
SyntaxError: Non-ASCII character '\xc3' in file mumble.py on line 198, but no encoding declared; see http://www.python.org/peps/pep-0263.html for details
回答4:
Also take into account that unicode_literal
will affect eval()
but not repr()
(an asymmetric behavior which imho is a bug), i.e. eval(repr(b'\xa4'))
won't be equal to b'\xa4'
(as it would with Python 3).
Ideally, the following code would be an invariant, which should always work, for all combinations of unicode_literals
and Python {2.7, 3.x} usage:
from __future__ import unicode_literals
bstr = b'\xa4'
assert eval(repr(bstr)) == bstr # fails in Python 2.7, holds in 3.1+
ustr = '\xa4'
assert eval(repr(ustr)) == ustr # holds in Python 2.7 and 3.1+
The second assertion happens to work, since repr('\xa4')
evaluates to u'\xa4'
in Python 2.7.
回答5:
There are more.
There are libraries and builtins that expect strings that don't tolerate unicode.
Two examples:
builtin:
myenum = type('Enum', (), enum)
(slightly esotic) doesn't work with unicode_literals: type() expects a string.
library:
from wx.lib.pubsub import pub
pub.sendMessage("LOG MESSAGE", msg="no go for unicode literals")
doesn't work: the wx pubsub library expects a string message type.
The former is esoteric and easily fixed with
myenum = type(b'Enum', (), enum)
but the latter is devastating if your code is full of calls to pub.sendMessage() (which mine is).
Dang it, eh?!?
回答6:
Click will raise unicode exceptions all over the place if any module that has from __future__ import unicode_literals
is imported where you use click.echo
. It's a nightmare…
来源:https://stackoverflow.com/questions/809796/any-gotchas-using-unicode-literals-in-python-2-6