How to read Unicode characters from command-line arguments in Python on Windows
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by Craig McQueen
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Published on 2009-05-11T05:44:02Z
Indexed on
2010/03/16
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I want my Python script to be able to read Unicode command line arguments in Windows. But it appears that sys.argv is a string encoded in some local encoding, rather than Unicode. How can I read the command line in full Unicode?
Example code: argv.py
import sys
first_arg = sys.argv[1]
print first_arg
print type(first_arg)
print first_arg.encode("hex")
print open(first_arg)
On my PC set up for Japanese code page, I get:
C:\temp>argv.py "PC·??????08.09.24.doc"
PC·??????08.09.24.doc
<type 'str'>
50438145835c83748367905c90bf8f9130382e30392e32342e646f63
<open file 'PC·??????08.09.24.doc', mode 'r' at 0x00917D90>
That's Shift-JIS encoded I believe, and it "works" for that filename. But it breaks for filenames with characters that aren't in the Shift-JIS character set—the final "open" call fails:
C:\temp>argv.py Jörgen.txt
Jorgen.txt
<type 'str'>
4a6f7267656e2e747874
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "C:\temp\argv.py", line 7,
in <module>
print open(first_arg)
IOError: [Errno 2] No such file or directory: 'Jorgen.txt'
Note—I'm talking about Python 2.x, not Python 3.0. I've found that Python 3.0 gives sys.argv
as proper Unicode. But it's a bit early yet to transition to Python 3.0 (due to lack of 3rd party library support).
Update:
A few answers have said I should decode according to whatever the sys.argv
is encoded in. The problem with that is that it's not full Unicode, so some characters are not representable.
Here's the use case that gives me grief: I have enabled drag-and-drop of files onto .py files in Windows Explorer. I have file names with all sorts of characters, including some not in the system default code page. My Python script doesn't get the right Unicode filenames passed to it via sys.argv in all cases, when the characters aren't representable in the current code page encoding.
There is certainly some Windows API to read the command line with full Unicode (and Python 3.0 does it). I assume the Python 2.x interpreter is not using it.
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