mal> Please see Lib/site.py for details on how to enable all these mal> goodies -- it's all there, just disabled and meant for super-u= sers mal> only ;-) Okay, I found the encoding section. I changed the encoding variable assignment to be encoding =3D "latin1" and now the degree sign print works. What other side-effects will that= have besides on printed representations? It appears I can create (but not s= ee properly?) variable names containing latin1 characters: >>> =FCmlaut =3D "=FCmlaut" >>> print locals().keys() ['orca', 'dir', '__doc__', 'rlcompleter', 'missionb', 'version', 'dirpa= t', 'xmlrpclib', 'belugab', '__builtin__', 'beluga', 'readline', '__nam= e__', 'orcab', 'addpath', 'Writer', 'atexit', 'sys', 'dolphinb', 'missi= on', 'pprint', 'dolphin', '__builtins__', 'mlaut', 'help'] I am having trouble printing some strings containing latin1 characters:= >>> print =FCmlaut mlaut >>> type("=FCmlaut") <type 'string'> >>> type(string.letters) <type 'string'> >>> print "=FCmlaut" mlaut >>> print string.letters abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz=B5=DF=E0=E1=E2=E3=E4=E5=E6=E7=E8=E9=EA=EB=EC= =ED=EE=EF=F0=F1=F2=F3=F4=F5=F6=F8=F9=FA=FB=FC=FD=FE=FFABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQ= RSTUVWXYZ=C0=C1=C2=C3=C4=C5=C6=C7=C8=C9=CA=CB=CC=CD=CE=CF=D0=D1=D2=D3=D4= =D5=D6=D8=D9=DA=DB=DC=DD=DE >>> print string.letters[55:] =FC=FD=FE=FFABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ=C0=C1=C2=C3=C4=C5=C6=C7=C8=C9=CA= =CB=CC=CD=CE=CF=D0=D1=D2=D3=D4=D5=D6=D8=D9=DA=DB=DC=DD=DE The above was pasted from Python running in a shell session in XEmacs, = which is certainly latin1-aware. Why did I have trouble seeing the =FC in so= me situations, but not in others? Are the ramifications of all this encoding stuff documented somewhere? Skip
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