Hi all, I've been reading about unicode in general and using it in Python in particular lately as this turns out to be not so straightforward actually. I wanted to aks two questions:
1) I'm writing a program that interacts with the user through wxPython (unicode build) and stores & retrieves data using PySQLite. As fas as I know now, both packages are capable of handling Python unicode objects (wxPython returns the values of text controls etc. by default as Python unicode objects and "TEXT" columns in PySQLite have unicode entries) and since of course both interface with me through Python unicode objects I should be able to use each others generated unicode objects without any fear in each other functions, right?? 2) How do I get a representation of a unic. object in terms of Unicode code points? repr() doesn't do that, it sometimes parses or encodes the code points right: >>> s=u"\u0040\u0166\u00e6" >>> s u'@\u0166\xe6' (does this latter \xe6 have to do with the internal representation of unic. objects, maybe with this UCS-2 encoding?) Thanks in advance! - Kees -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list