many_years_after wrote: > John Machin wrote: > > many_years_after wrote: > > > Hi,everyone: > > > > > > Have you any ideas? > > > > > > Say whatever you know about this. > > > > > > > Perhaps you had better explain what you mean by "ascii code of Chinese > > characters". Chinese characters ("hanzi") can be represented in many > > ways on a computer, in Unicode as well as many different "legacy" > > encodings, such as GB, GBK, big5, two different 4-digit telegraph > > codes, etc etc. They can also be spelled out in "roman" letters with or > > without tone indications (digits or "accents") in the pinyin system -- > > is that what you mean by "ascii code"? > > > > Perhaps you might like to tell us what you want to do in Python with > > hanzi and "ascii codes", so that we can give you a specific answer. > > With examples, please -- like what are the "ascii codes" for the two > > characters in the common greeting that comes across in toneless pinyin > > as "ni hao"? > > > > Cheers, > > John
> hi: > > what I want to do is just to make numbers as people input some Chinese > character(hanzi,i mean).The same character will create the same > number.So I think ascii code can do this very well. > *What* characters make *what* numbers? Stop thinking and give us some *examples* -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list