Sounds reasonable..but since Py_ParseTuple() only applies to function arguments it can not be used to convert a unicode object to UCS-2. So what is the easiest way to get the UCS-2 representation? PyUnicode_AS_DATA() returns for u'computer' a char * with strlen()==1, however PyUnicode_GET_DATA_SIZE() on the same string returns 16 (looks fine for the two byes encoding of UCS-2). Am I missing something? Andreas ----- Original Message ----- From: "M.-A. Lemburg" <mal@lemburg.com> To: "Andreas Jung" <andreas@andreas-jung.com> Cc: <python-dev@python.org> Sent: Sunday, May 19, 2002 09:25 Subject: Re: [Python-Dev] getting the UCS-2 representation of a unicode object > Andreas Jung wrote: > > Py_BuildValue() allows the usage of "u" or "u#" to convert UCS-2 > > data into a Python unicode object, however Py_ParseTuple() converts > > a unicode object to UTF-16. Is this an error in the documentation > > or why is there a asymmmetry in the API? > > Sounds like a documentation bug: it should be UCS-2 since that's > what's used as internal data represenation in narrow Unicode > builds (the default). > > -- > Marc-Andre Lemburg > CEO eGenix.com Software GmbH > ______________________________________________________________________ > Company & Consulting: http://www.egenix.com/ > Python Software: http://www.egenix.com/files/python/ >
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