On Mon, 21 Jun 2010 08:01:08 am Laurens Van Houtven wrote: > I think doing unicode/str properly in 2.x is very important, #python > stresses it quite often, I think Py3k's strictness is a good idea > because people very often write something that appears to work for a > long time, and then someone tries it using funny bytes, and > everything blows apart. Convincing people their software is wrong > when "everything worked five minutes ago" is really hard :-) Worse is when you have people who, when faced with their software failing to handle filenames containing non-ASCII characters ("those funny letters"), insist that the problem is the user for giving non-ASCII characters. Even when they're in the user's native (non-Latin) language. Even when the OS supports them. Gah. -- Steven D'Aprano
RetroSearch is an open source project built by @garambo | Open a GitHub Issue
Search and Browse the WWW like it's 1997 | Search results from DuckDuckGo
HTML:
3.2
| Encoding:
UTF-8
| Version:
0.7.4