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Python, Unicode, and the Windows console
13 answers
I'm working on a python application that can print text in multiple languages to the console in multiple platforms.
The program works well on all UNIX platforms, but in windows there are errors printing unicode strings in command-line.
There's already a relevant thread regarding this:
( Windows cmd encoding change causes Python crash )
but I couldn't find my specific answer there.
For example, for the following Asian text, in Linux, I can run:
>>> print u"\u5f15\u8d77\u7684\u6216".encode("utf-8")
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But in windows I get:
>>> print u"\u5f15\u8d77\u7684\u6216".encode("utf-8")
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I succeeded displaying the correct text with a message box when doing something like that:
>>> file("bla.vbs", "w").write(u'MsgBox "\u5f15\u8d77\u7684\u6216", 4, "MyTitle"'.encode("utf-16"))
>>> os.system("cscript //U //NoLogo bla.vbs")
But, I want to be able to do it in windows console, and preferably - without requiring too much configuration outside my python code (because my application will be distributed to many hosts).
Is this possible?
Edit: If it's not possible - I would be happy to accept some other suggestions of writing a console application in windows that displays unicode, e.g. a python implementation of an alternative windows console
There's a WriteConsoleW solution that provides a unicode argv and stdout (print) but not stdin: Windows cmd encoding change causes Python crash
The only thing I modified is sys.argv to keep it unicode. The original version utf-8 encoded it for some reason.
#!/usr/bin/env python
# -*- coding: utf-8 -*-
""" https://stackoverflow.com/questions/878972/windows-cmd-encoding-change-causes-python-crash#answer-3259271
"""
import sys
if sys.platform == "win32":
import codecs
from ctypes import WINFUNCTYPE, windll, POINTER, byref, c_int
from ctypes.wintypes import BOOL, HANDLE, DWORD, LPWSTR, LPCWSTR, LPVOID
original_stderr = sys.stderr
# If any exception occurs in this code, we'll probably try to print it on stderr,
# which makes for frustrating debugging if stderr is directed to our wrapper.
# So be paranoid about catching errors and reporting them to original_stderr,
# so that we can at least see them.
def _complain(message):
print >>original_stderr, message if isinstance(message, str) else repr(message)
# Work around <http://bugs.python.org/issue6058>.
codecs.register(lambda name: codecs.lookup('utf-8') if name == 'cp65001' else None)
# Make Unicode console output work independently of the current code page.
# This also fixes <http://bugs.python.org/issue1602>.
# Credit to Michael Kaplan <http://www.siao2.com/2010/04/07/9989346.aspx>
# and TZOmegaTZIOY
# <https://stackoverflow.com/questions/878972/windows-cmd-encoding-change-causes-python-crash/1432462#1432462>.
try:
# <http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/ms683231(VS.85).aspx>
# HANDLE WINAPI GetStdHandle(DWORD nStdHandle);
# returns INVALID_HANDLE_VALUE, NULL, or a valid handle
#
# <http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/aa364960(VS.85).aspx>
# DWORD WINAPI GetFileType(DWORD hFile);
#
# <http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/ms683167(VS.85).aspx>
# BOOL WINAPI GetConsoleMode(HANDLE hConsole, LPDWORD lpMode);
GetStdHandle = WINFUNCTYPE(HANDLE, DWORD)(("GetStdHandle", windll.kernel32))
STD_OUTPUT_HANDLE = DWORD(-11)
STD_ERROR_HANDLE = DWORD(-12)
GetFileType = WINFUNCTYPE(DWORD, DWORD)(("GetFileType", windll.kernel32))
FILE_TYPE_CHAR = 0x0002
FILE_TYPE_REMOTE = 0x8000
GetConsoleMode = WINFUNCTYPE(BOOL, HANDLE, POINTER(DWORD))(("GetConsoleMode", windll.kernel32))
INVALID_HANDLE_VALUE = DWORD(-1).value
def not_a_console(handle):
if handle == INVALID_HANDLE_VALUE or handle is None:
return True
return ((GetFileType(handle) & ~FILE_TYPE_REMOTE) != FILE_TYPE_CHAR
or GetConsoleMode(handle, byref(DWORD())) == 0)
old_stdout_fileno = None
old_stderr_fileno = None
if hasattr(sys.stdout, 'fileno'):
old_stdout_fileno = sys.stdout.fileno()
if hasattr(sys.stderr, 'fileno'):
old_stderr_fileno = sys.stderr.fileno()
STDOUT_FILENO = 1
STDERR_FILENO = 2
real_stdout = (old_stdout_fileno == STDOUT_FILENO)
real_stderr = (old_stderr_fileno == STDERR_FILENO)
if real_stdout:
hStdout = GetStdHandle(STD_OUTPUT_HANDLE)
if not_a_console(hStdout):
real_stdout = False
if real_stderr:
hStderr = GetStdHandle(STD_ERROR_HANDLE)
if not_a_console(hStderr):
real_stderr = False
if real_stdout or real_stderr:
# BOOL WINAPI WriteConsoleW(HANDLE hOutput, LPWSTR lpBuffer, DWORD nChars,
# LPDWORD lpCharsWritten, LPVOID lpReserved);
WriteConsoleW = WINFUNCTYPE(BOOL, HANDLE, LPWSTR, DWORD, POINTER(DWORD), LPVOID)(("WriteConsoleW", windll.kernel32))
class UnicodeOutput:
def __init__(self, hConsole, stream, fileno, name):
self._hConsole = hConsole
self._stream = stream
self._fileno = fileno
self.closed = False
self.softspace = False
self.mode = 'w'
self.encoding = 'utf-8'
self.name = name
self.flush()
def isatty(self):
return False
def close(self):
# don't really close the handle, that would only cause problems
self.closed = True
def fileno(self):
return self._fileno
def flush(self):
if self._hConsole is None:
try:
self._stream.flush()
except Exception as e:
_complain("%s.flush: %r from %r" % (self.name, e, self._stream))
raise
def write(self, text):
try:
if self._hConsole is None:
if isinstance(text, unicode):
text = text.encode('utf-8')
self._stream.write(text)
else:
if not isinstance(text, unicode):
text = str(text).decode('utf-8')
remaining = len(text)
while remaining:
n = DWORD(0)
# There is a shorter-than-documented limitation on the
# length of the string passed to WriteConsoleW (see
# <http://tahoe-lafs.org/trac/tahoe-lafs/ticket/1232>.
retval = WriteConsoleW(self._hConsole, text, min(remaining, 10000), byref(n), None)
if retval == 0 or n.value == 0:
raise IOError("WriteConsoleW returned %r, n.value = %r" % (retval, n.value))
remaining -= n.value
if not remaining:
break
text = text[n.value:]
except Exception as e:
_complain("%s.write: %r" % (self.name, e))
raise
def writelines(self, lines):
try:
for line in lines:
self.write(line)
except Exception as e:
_complain("%s.writelines: %r" % (self.name, e))
raise
if real_stdout:
sys.stdout = UnicodeOutput(hStdout, None, STDOUT_FILENO, '<Unicode console stdout>')
else:
sys.stdout = UnicodeOutput(None, sys.stdout, old_stdout_fileno, '<Unicode redirected stdout>')
if real_stderr:
sys.stderr = UnicodeOutput(hStderr, None, STDERR_FILENO, '<Unicode console stderr>')
else:
sys.stderr = UnicodeOutput(None, sys.stderr, old_stderr_fileno, '<Unicode redirected stderr>')
except Exception as e:
_complain("exception %r while fixing up sys.stdout and sys.stderr" % (e,))
# While we're at it, let's unmangle the command-line arguments:
# This works around <http://bugs.python.org/issue2128>.
GetCommandLineW = WINFUNCTYPE(LPWSTR)(("GetCommandLineW", windll.kernel32))
CommandLineToArgvW = WINFUNCTYPE(POINTER(LPWSTR), LPCWSTR, POINTER(c_int))(("CommandLineToArgvW", windll.shell32))
argc = c_int(0)
argv_unicode = CommandLineToArgvW(GetCommandLineW(), byref(argc))
argv = [argv_unicode[i] for i in xrange(0, argc.value)]
# argv = [argv_unicode[i].encode('utf-8') for i in xrange(0, argc.value)]
if not hasattr(sys, 'frozen'):
# If this is an executable produced by py2exe or bbfreeze, then it will
# have been invoked directly. Otherwise, unicode_argv[0] is the Python
# interpreter, so skip that.
argv = argv[1:]
# Also skip option arguments to the Python interpreter.
while len(argv) > 0:
arg = argv[0]
if not arg.startswith(u"-") or arg == u"-":
break
argv = argv[1:]
if arg == u'-m':
# sys.argv[0] should really be the absolute path of the module source,
# but never mind
break
if arg == u'-c':
argv[0] = u'-c'
break
# if you like:
sys.argv = argv
Use a different console program. The following works in mintty, the default terminal emulator in Cygwin.
>>> print u"\u5f15\u8d77\u7684\u6216"
引起的或
There are other console alternatives available for Windows but I have not assessed their Unicode support.
It merely comes from that cmd and powershell consoel do not support variable-width fonts. Fixed fonts do not have Chinese script included. Cygwin is in the same case.
Putty is more advanced, supporting variable-width fonts with cyrillic, vietnamese, arabic scripts, but no chinese so far.
HTH
Can you try using the program iconv
on Windows, and piping your Python output through it? It'd go something like this:
python foo.py | iconv -f utf-8 -t utf-16
You might have to do a little work to get iconv
on Windows--it's part of Cygwin but you may be able to build it separately somehow if needed.
The question is answered in the PrintFails article.
By default, the console in Microsoft Windows only displays 256
characters (cp437, of Code page 437, the original IBM-PC 1981 extended ASCII character
set.)
For Russia this means CP866, other countries use their own codepages too. This means that to read Python output in Windows console correctly you should have windows configuration with native codepage configured to display printed symbols.
I suggest you to always print Unicode text without any encoding to ensure maximum compatibility with various platforms.
If you try to print unprintable character you will get UnicodeEncodeError or see distorted text.
In some cases, if Python fails to determine output encoding correctly you might try to set PYTHONIOENCODING environment variable, do note however, that this probably won't work for your example, as your console is unable to present Asian text in current configuration.
To reconfigure console use Control Panel->Language and Regional settings->Advanced(tab)->Non Unicode programs language(section). Note that menu names are translated by me from Russian.
See also answers for the very similar question.