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pythonwindowsunicodeutf-8python-2.x

Getting python to print in UTF8 on Windows XP with the console


I would like to configure my console on Windows XP to support UTF8 and to have python detect that and work with it.

So far, my attempts:

C:\Documents and Settings\Philippe>C:\Python25\python.exe
Python 2.5.2 (r252:60911, Feb 21 2008, 13:11:45) [MSC v.1310 32 bit (Intel)] on win32
Type "help", "copyright", "credits" or "license" for more information.
>>> print u'é'
é
>>> import sys
>>> sys.stdout.encoding
'cp437'
>>> quit()

So, by default I am in cp437 and python detects that just fine.

C:\Documents and Settings\Philippe>chcp 65001
Active code page: 65001

C:\Documents and Settings\Philippe>python
Python 2.5.2 (r252:60911, Feb 21 2008, 13:11:45) [MSC v.1310 32 bit (Intel)] on win32
Type "help", "copyright", "credits" or "license" for more information.
>>> import sys
>>> sys.stdout.encoding
'cp65001'
>>> print u'é'
C:\Documents and Settings\Philippe>

It seems like printing in UTF8 makes python crash now...


Solution

  • I would like to configure my console on Windows XP to support UTF8

    I don't think it's going to happen.

    The 65001 code page is buggy; some stdio calls behave incorrectly and break many tools. Whilst you can register cp65001 as an encoding manually:

    def cp65001(name):
        if name.lower()=='cp65001':
            return codecs.lookup('utf-8')
    
    codecs.register(cp65001)
    

    and this allows you to print u'some unicode string', it doesn't allow you to write non-ASCII characters in that Unicode string. You get the same odd errors (IOError 0 et al) that you do when you try to write non-ASCII UTF-8 sequences directly as byte strings.

    Unfortunately UTF-8 is a second-class citizen under Windows. NT's Unicode model was drawn up before UTF-8 existed and consequently you're expected to use two-byte-per-code-unit encodings (UTF-16, originally UCS-2) anywhere you want consistent Unicode. Using byte strings, like many portable apps and languages (such as Python) written with C's stdio, doesn't fit that model.

    And rewriting Python to use the Windows Unicode console calls (like WriteConsoleW) instead of the portable C stdio ones doesn't play well with shell tricks like piping and redirecting to a file. (Not to mention that you still have to change from the default terminal font to a TTF one before you can see the results working at all...)

    Ultimately if you need a command line with working UTF-8 support for stdio-based apps, you'd probably be better off using an alternative to the Windows Console that deliberately supports it, such as Cygwin's, or Python's IDLE or pywin32's PythonWin.