O/S: Win2K Vsn of Python: 2.4 Here is copy/paste from interactive window of pythonwin:
>>> x = "Joe's desk" >>> y = 'Joe\x92s desk' >>> type(x) <type 'str'> >>> type(y) <type 'str'> >>> print x Joe's desk >>> print y Joe's desk >>> if x == y: ... print 'equal' ... else: ... print 'not equal' ... not equal >>> len(x) 10 >>> len(y) 10 >>> ord(x[3]) 39 >>> ord(y[3]) 146 >>> My questions are: 1) is the 'x' character within the variable y a signal that what follows is a hex value? 2) is it more than just a coincidence that 146 (the result of ord(y[3])) is the decimal equivalent of the hex number 92? 3) is there any character set in which 146 represents the single-quote/apostrophe character? if so, which character set? 4) what is the role/function of the backslash character in the variable y? 5) how did the print statement know to transform the contents of y ('Joe\x92s desk') to something that gets displayed as: Joe's desk ? 6) Would it be correct to infer that the print statement is aware of characters beyond the 128 characters in the ascii character set? -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list