On Wednesday, July 25, 2012 1:35:09 PM UTC+2, Philipp Hagemeister wrote: > Hi Jaroslav, > > you can catch a UnicodeDecodeError just like any other exception. Can > you provide a full example program that shows your problem? > > This works fine on my system: > > > import sys > open('tmp', 'wb').write(b'\xff\xff') > try: > buf = open('tmp', 'rb').read() > buf.decode('utf-8') > except UnicodeDecodeError as ude: > sys.exit("Found a bad char in file " + "tmp") >
Thank you. I got it. What I need to do is explicitly decode text. But I think trial and error with moving files around will in most cases be faster. Usually, such a problem occurs with some (usually complex) program that I wrote quite a long time ago. I don't like editing old and complex programs that work under all normal circumstances. What I am missing (especially for Python3) is something like: try: for line in sys.stdin: except UnicodeDecodeError: sys.exit("Encoding problem in line " + str(line_number)) I got the point that there is no such thing as encoding-independent lines. But if no line ending can be found, then the file simply has one single line. -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list