In <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, fidtz wrote: >>>> import codecs >>>> testASCII = file("c:\\temp\\test1.txt",'w') >>>> testASCII.write("\n") >>>> testASCII.close() >>>> testASCII = file("c:\\temp\\test1.txt",'r') >>>> testASCII.read() > '\n' > Bit pattern on disk : \0x0D\0x0A >>>> testASCII.seek(0) >>>> testUNI = codecs.open("c:\\temp\\test2.txt",'w','utf16') >>>> testUNI.write(testASCII.read()) >>>> testUNI.close() >>>> testUNI = file("c:\\temp\\test2.txt",'r') >>>> testUNI.read() > '\xff\xfe\n\x00' > Bit pattern on disk:\0xff\0xfe\0x0a\0x00 > Bit pattern I was expecting:\0xff\0xfe\0x0d\0x00\0x0a\0x00 >>>> testUNI.close()
Files opened with `codecs.open()` are always opened in binary mode. So if you want '\n' to be translated into a platform specific character sequence you have to do it yourself. Ciao, Marc 'BlackJack' Rintsch -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list