Thanks for your replies, It worked.

On Mar 8, 6:16 pm, Malcolm Tredinnick <malc...@pointy-stick.com>
wrote:
> On Sun, 2009-03-08 at 18:01 -0700, juanefren wrote:
> > Right I would mean 1.1 alpha. Looking with more details I found that
> > error only appears when I use my class __str__ method, for example in
> > my Address Class I have
>
> > class MyClass(models.Model):
> >     string1 = models.CharField(max_length = 100, null=True)
> >     string2 = models.CharField(max_length = 100, null=True)
> >     def __str__(self) :
> >         return self.string1  +'  -  ' + self.string2
>
> > If in my template I use {{ myclass.string1 }} -  {{ myclass.string2 }}
> > Works fine. But if I use {{ myclass }} and either string1 or string2
> > has non ascci char, Error appears.
>
> That's expected. The __str__ method is only intended to handle ASCII --
> it returns a Python "str" object, not a "unicode" object. That's a
> Python thing, nothing specific to Django. You should use a __unicode__
> method instead. That's why all the examples in the documentation do
> that, for example.
>
> See also,
>
> http://docs.djangoproject.com/en/dev/ref/models/instances/#django.db....
>
> and
>
> http://docs.djangoproject.com/en/dev/ref/unicode/
>
> Regards,
> Malcolm
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