atsuo ishimoto <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> added the comment: > I think this has potential, but it is too liberal. There are many more > characters that cannot be assumed printable, e.g. many of the Latin-1 > characters in the range 0x80 through 0x9F. Isn't there some Unicode > data table that shows code points that are safely printable?
As Michael Urman pointed out, we can use Unicode properties. Or we can define a set of non-printable characters (e.g. sys.nonprintablechars). > OTOH there are other potential use cases where it would be nice to see > the \u escapes, e.g. when one is concerned about sequences that print > the same but don't have the same content (e.g. pre-normalization). For such cases, print(s.encode("ascii", "backslashreplace")) might work. __________________________________ Tracker <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> <http://bugs.python.org/issue2630> __________________________________ _______________________________________________ Python-bugs-list mailing list Unsubscribe: http://mail.python.org/mailman/options/python-bugs-list/archive%40mail-archive.com