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107 lines
4.5 KiB
107 lines
4.5 KiB
Unicode in Flask |
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================ |
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Flask, like Jinja2 and Werkzeug, is totally Unicode based when it comes to |
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text. Not only these libraries, also the majority of web related Python |
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libraries that deal with text. If you don't know Unicode so far, you |
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should probably read `The Absolute Minimum Every Software Developer |
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Absolutely, Positively Must Know About Unicode and Character Sets |
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<https://www.joelonsoftware.com/articles/Unicode.html>`_. This part of the |
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documentation just tries to cover the very basics so that you have a |
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pleasant experience with Unicode related things. |
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Automatic Conversion |
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-------------------- |
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Flask has a few assumptions about your application (which you can change |
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of course) that give you basic and painless Unicode support: |
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- the encoding for text on your website is UTF-8 |
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- internally you will always use Unicode exclusively for text except |
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for literal strings with only ASCII character points. |
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- encoding and decoding happens whenever you are talking over a protocol |
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that requires bytes to be transmitted. |
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So what does this mean to you? |
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HTTP is based on bytes. Not only the protocol, also the system used to |
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address documents on servers (so called URIs or URLs). However HTML which |
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is usually transmitted on top of HTTP supports a large variety of |
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character sets and which ones are used, are transmitted in an HTTP header. |
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To not make this too complex Flask just assumes that if you are sending |
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Unicode out you want it to be UTF-8 encoded. Flask will do the encoding |
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and setting of the appropriate headers for you. |
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The same is true if you are talking to databases with the help of |
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SQLAlchemy or a similar ORM system. Some databases have a protocol that |
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already transmits Unicode and if they do not, SQLAlchemy or your other ORM |
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should take care of that. |
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The Golden Rule |
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--------------- |
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So the rule of thumb: if you are not dealing with binary data, work with |
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Unicode. What does working with Unicode in Python 2.x mean? |
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- as long as you are using ASCII charpoints only (basically numbers, |
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some special characters of latin letters without umlauts or anything |
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fancy) you can use regular string literals (``'Hello World'``). |
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- if you need anything else than ASCII in a string you have to mark |
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this string as Unicode string by prefixing it with a lowercase `u`. |
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(like ``u'Hänsel und Gretel'``) |
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- if you are using non-Unicode characters in your Python files you have |
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to tell Python which encoding your file uses. Again, I recommend |
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UTF-8 for this purpose. To tell the interpreter your encoding you can |
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put the ``# -*- coding: utf-8 -*-`` into the first or second line of |
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your Python source file. |
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- Jinja is configured to decode the template files from UTF-8. So make |
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sure to tell your editor to save the file as UTF-8 there as well. |
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Encoding and Decoding Yourself |
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------------------------------ |
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If you are talking with a filesystem or something that is not really based |
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on Unicode you will have to ensure that you decode properly when working |
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with Unicode interface. So for example if you want to load a file on the |
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filesystem and embed it into a Jinja2 template you will have to decode it |
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from the encoding of that file. Here the old problem that text files do |
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not specify their encoding comes into play. So do yourself a favour and |
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limit yourself to UTF-8 for text files as well. |
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Anyways. To load such a file with Unicode you can use the built-in |
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:meth:`str.decode` method:: |
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def read_file(filename, charset='utf-8'): |
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with open(filename, 'r') as f: |
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return f.read().decode(charset) |
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To go from Unicode into a specific charset such as UTF-8 you can use the |
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:meth:`unicode.encode` method:: |
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def write_file(filename, contents, charset='utf-8'): |
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with open(filename, 'w') as f: |
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f.write(contents.encode(charset)) |
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Configuring Editors |
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------------------- |
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Most editors save as UTF-8 by default nowadays but in case your editor is |
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not configured to do this you have to change it. Here some common ways to |
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set your editor to store as UTF-8: |
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- Vim: put ``set enc=utf-8`` to your ``.vimrc`` file. |
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- Emacs: either use an encoding cookie or put this into your ``.emacs`` |
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file:: |
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(prefer-coding-system 'utf-8) |
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(setq default-buffer-file-coding-system 'utf-8) |
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- Notepad++: |
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1. Go to *Settings -> Preferences ...* |
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2. Select the "New Document/Default Directory" tab |
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3. Select "UTF-8 without BOM" as encoding |
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It is also recommended to use the Unix newline format, you can select |
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it in the same panel but this is not a requirement.
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