On Wed, 2005-10-12 at 00:16 -0400, Mike Meyer wrote: [...] > It's not normal to write binary content to stdout - you normally write > it to a file. Open the file with open(name, 'wb') to write binaries. >
It is interesting that as a "Unix consultant" you should make that claim. Especially since >>> sys.stdout <open file '<stdout>', mode 'w' at 0x2aaaaaac9198> ^^^^ Indeed there would be a lot of broken Unix systems out there if that were not the case. As for the OP, you may want to check how stdout is opened on your system. In Windows there are two "write" modes for files, 'w', and 'wb' where apparently 'w' is text mode and 'wb' is binary. You may want to check what mode your stdout is in. I don't have a Windows box handy right now to verify. > There doesn't appear to be any way to retroactively change the mode on > a file. Which is probably a good thing. > > <mike-- > Mike Meyer <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> http://www.mired.org/home/mwm/ > Independent WWW/Perforce/FreeBSD/Unix consultant, email for more information. -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list