Actually universal newline support seems to be covered by the following PEP 
and is present in the version of Python(2.3) I am running.
http://www.python.org/peps/pep-0278.txt
I would tend to agree with Hong Yuan that the problem exists in plpythonu's 
handling of newlines.

On Tuesday 18 January 2005 05:19 am, Tom Lane wrote:
> Michael Fuhr <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> > http://docs.python.org/ref/physical.html
> >
> > "A physical line ends in whatever the current platform's convention
> > is for terminating lines.  On Unix, this is the ASCII LF (linefeed)
> > character.  On Windows, it is the ASCII sequence CR LF (return
> > followed by linefeed).  On Macintosh, it is the ASCII CR (return)
> > character."
>
> Seems like Guido has missed a bet here: namely the case of a script
> generated on one platform and fed to an interpreter running on another.
> If I were designing it, I would say that any Python interpreter should
> take all three variants no matter which platform the interpreter itself
> is sitting on.  Or is cross-platform support not a Python goal?
>
> In short, any bug report on this ought to go to the Python project.
>
>                       regards, tom lane
>
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-- 
Adrian Klaver   
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

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