Christian Ergh wrote:
flag = true
for char in data:
    if 127 < ord(char) < 128:
        flag = false
if flag:
    try:
        data = data.encode('latin-1')
    except:
        pass

A little OT, but (assuming I got your indentation right[1]) this kind of loop is exactly what the else clause of a for-loop is for:


for char in data:
    if 127 < ord(char) < 128:
        break
else:
    try:
        data = data.encode('latin-1')
    except:
        pass

Only saves you one line of code, but you don't have to keep track of a 'flag' variable. Generally, I find that when I want to set a 'flag' variable, I can usually do it with a for/else instead.

Steve

[1] Messed up indentation happens in a lot of clients if you have tabs in your code. If you can replace tabs with spaces before posting, this usually solves the problem.
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list




Reply via email to