how can i write a hello world in chinese with python

kernel1983 kernel1983 at gmail.com
Sat Dec 16 10:18:59 EST 2006


thanks everyone
maybe this simple API doesn't fit the Chinese display
but thanks everybody!

At least I've got that what bundles is and maybe I can use Python to
write program

On 12月14日, 上午6时31分, "MRAB" <goo... at mrabarnett.plus.com>
wrote:
> Dennis Lee Bieber wrote:
> > On 12 Dec 2006 23:40:41 -0800, "kernel1983" <kernel1... at gmail.com>
> > declaimed the following in gmane.comp.python.general:
>
> > > and I tried unicode and utf-8
> > > I tried to both use unicode&utf-8 head just like "\xEF\xBB\xBF" and not
> > > to use
>
> >    "unicode" is a term covering many sins. "utf-8" is a specification
> > for encoding elements of specific unicode characters using 8-bit
> > elements (I believe by using certain codes x00 to x7F alone as "normal",
> > and then x80 to xFF to represent an "escape" to higher [16-bit] element
> > sets).
>
> >    "\xEF\xBB\xBF" is just a byte string with no identifier of what
> > encoding is in use (unless the first one or two are supposed to be
> > BOM)... In the "Windows: Western" character set, it is equivalent to
> > small-i-diaeresis/right-guillemot/upside-down? () In MS-DOS: Western
> > Europe, those same bytes represent an
> > acute-accent/double-down&left-box-drawing/solid-down&left
>
> >    I've not done any unicode work (iso-latin-1, or subset thereof, has
> > done for me). I also don't know Mac's, so I don't know if the windowing
> > API has specific calls for Unicode data... But you probably have to
> > encode or decod that bytestring into some compatible unicode
> > representation.When you save a textfile as UTF-8 in Notepad.exe (Windows) it puts the
> bytestring "\xEF\xBB\xBF" at the start to indicate that it's UTF-8 and
> not ANSI (ie 8-bit characters). The bytes are actually the BOM
> bytestring "\xFE\xFF" encoded in UTF-8.




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