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Groups > comp.lang.python > #107873
| From | MRAB <python@mrabarnett.plus.com> |
|---|---|
| Newsgroups | comp.lang.python |
| Subject | Re: about special characters |
| Date | 2016-04-30 01:32 +0100 |
| Message-ID | <mailman.237.1461976370.32212.python-list@python.org> (permalink) |
| References | <CAJ7mry+o=PRGtM46HPGdNVqaowy3tmheJKu38nRy4y_QEjqV-w@mail.gmail.com> <85zischt1i.fsf@benfinney.id.au> <77665750-2d18-c0a0-1777-40139a5132c3@mrabarnett.plus.com> |
On 2016-04-30 00:52, Ben Finney wrote: > Jianling Fan <fanjianling@gmail.com> writes: > >> I am trying to use python 27 copying some of my folders and files to >> another directory. > > (There has never been a Python 27. I assume Python 2.7 is what you meant.) > >> My code works good for other files but I have some problem to copy >> files that have some special characters in the filename. like >> filenames contain Greek "δ" or latin "š". > > You may already know that Python 2 handles international text a lot less > consistently than Python 3. > > Is it at all feasible for you to use Python 3 instead? Text handling is > specifically a big advantage of Python 3. > >> it always gave a error that "No such file or directory:" > > Please give a complete, small example: > > * The actual filenames. > > * The exact filesystem encoding that filesystem uses. Be sure to verify that! > > * A very small, but complete, Python program which exhibits the > behaviour. We will need to be able to run the same program. > > * The complete error output (the full traceback). > It might be a Unicode problem, i.e. trying to work with bytestrings (str) instead of Unicode strings (unicode) and using the wrong encoding.
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Re: about special characters MRAB <python@mrabarnett.plus.com> - 2016-04-30 01:32 +0100
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