exarkun at twistedmatrix.com wrote: > The ability to change the default encoding is a misfeature. There's > essentially no way to write correct Python code in the presence of this > feature. How so? If every single piece of text in your project is encoded in a superset of ascii (such as utf-8), why would this be a problem? Even if you were evil/stupid and mixed encodings, surely all you'd get is different unicode errors or mayvbe the odd strange character during display? > It may be a major task, but the best thing you can do is find each str > and unicode operation in the software you're working with and make them > correct with respect to your inputs and outputs. Flipping a giant > switch for the entire process is just going to change which things are > wrong. Well, flipping that giant switch has worked in production for the past 5 years, so I'm afraid I'll respectfully disagree. I'd suspect the pragmatics of real world software are with that function even exists, and it's extremely useful when used correctly... Chris -- Simplistix - Content Management, Batch Processing & Python Consulting - http://www.simplistix.co.uk
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