On Sun, 28 Jul 2013 12:23:04 -0700, wxjmfauth wrote: > Do not forget that à la "FSR" mechanism for a non-ascii user is > *irrelevant*.
You have been told repeatedly, Python's internals are *full* of ASCII- only strings. py> dir(list) ['__add__', '__class__', '__contains__', '__delattr__', '__delitem__', '__dir__', '__doc__', '__eq__', '__format__', '__ge__', '__getattribute__', '__getitem__', '__gt__', '__hash__', '__iadd__', '__imul__', '__init__', '__iter__', '__le__', '__len__', '__lt__', '__mul__', '__ne__', '__new__', '__reduce__', '__reduce_ex__', '__repr__', '__reversed__', '__rmul__', '__setattr__', '__setitem__', '__sizeof__', '__str__', '__subclasshook__', 'append', 'clear', 'copy', 'count', 'extend', 'index', 'insert', 'pop', 'remove', 'reverse', 'sort'] There's 45 ASCII-only strings right there, in only one built-in type, out of dozens. There are dozens, hundreds of ASCII-only strings in Python: builtin functions and classes, attributes, exceptions, internal attributes, variable names, and so on. You already know this, and yet you persist in repeating nonsense. -- Steven -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list