Tom Christiansen <tchr...@perl.com> added the comment:

How does this work for modules that have filesystem names different from the 
one used for import? The issue I'm thinking about is that the Mac HSF+ 
filesystem keeps its Unicode filenames in (close to) NFD form. That means that 
a module named "caf\N{LATIN SMALL LETTER E WITH ACUTE}" with 4 graphemes and 4 
code points in its name winds up in the filesystem as "cafe\N{COMBINING ACUTE 
ACCENT}" still with 4 graphemes but now with 5 code points.

I believe (well, suspect; I have empirical evidence not proof) Python stores 
its own identifiers in NFD, so this may not be quite as much of a problem as it 
might otherwise be.  Nonetheless, I have had users complain about what HFS+ 
does with such filenames, although I am not quite sure why. I think it’s 
because they access a file with 4 chars but they need a 5-char fileglob to 
wildcard it, so touch "caf\N{LATIN SMALL LETTER E WITH ACUTE}" and then you 
need a wildcard of "?????" with an extra ? to find it. Kinda weird.

----------
nosy: +tchrist

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<http://bugs.python.org/issue11230>
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