I wrote a small example of the issue for everybody to see what's going on using Python 2.7 and Django 1.10.8
# -*- coding: utf-8 -*-
from __future__ import absolute_import, division, unicode_literals, print_function
import time
from django import setup
setup()
from django.contrib.auth.models import Group
group = Group(name='schön')
print(type(repr(group)))
print(type(str(group)))
print(type(unicode(group)))
print(group)
print(repr(group))
print(str(group))
print(unicode(group))
time.sleep(1.0)
print('%s' % group)
print('%r' % group) # fails
print('%s' % [group]) # fails
print('%r' % [group]) # fails
Exits with the following output + traceback
$ python .PyCharmCE2017.2/config/scratches/scratch.py
<type 'str'>
<type 'str'>
<type 'unicode'>
schön
<Group: schön>
schön
schön
schön
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "/home/srkunze/.PyCharmCE2017.2/config/scratches/scratch.py", line 22, in <module>
print('%r' % group) # fails
UnicodeDecodeError: 'ascii' codec can't decode byte 0xc3 in position 11: ordinal not in range(128)
Has somebody an idea what's going on here?
I am not familiar with Django. Your issue seems to be representing text data in ASCI which is actually in unicode. Please try unidecode module in Python.
Refer Unidecode
If it's the case then we need to override the unicode method with our customised method. Try below code. It will work. I have tested it.
Reference: https://docs.python.org/2/howto/unicode.html
I think the real issue is in the django code.
It was reported six years ago:
https://code.djangoproject.com/ticket/18063
I think patch to django would solve it:
I think the repr() method should return "7 bit ascii".
I had a hard time finding general solution to your problem.
__repr__()
is what I understand supposed to return str, any efforts to change that seems to cause new problems.Regarding the fact that the
__repr__()
method is defined outside the project, you are able to overload methods. For exampleThe only solution I can find, that works is to explicitly tell the interpreter how to handle the strings.
Working with strings in python 2.x is a mess. Hope this brings some light into how to work around (which is the only way I can find) the problem.
At issue here is that you are interpolating UTF-8 bytestrings into a Unicode string. Your
'%r'
string is a Unicode string because you usedfrom __future__ import unicode_literals
, butrepr(group)
(used by the%r
placeholder) returns a bytestring. For Django models,repr()
can include Unicode data in the representation, encoded to a bytestring using UTF-8. Such representations are not ASCII safe.For your specific example,
repr()
on yourGroup
instance produces the bytestring'<Group: sch\xc3\xb6n>'
. Interpolating that into a Unicode string triggers the implicit decoding:Note that I did not use
from __future__ import unicode_literals
in my Python session, so the'<Group: sch\xc3\xb6n>'
string is not aunicode
object, it is astr
bytestring object!In Python 2, you should avoid mixing Unicode and byte strings. Always explicitly normalise your data (encoding Unicode to bytes or decoding bytes to Unicode).
If you must use
from __future__ import unicode_literals
, you can still create bytestrings by using ab
prefix: