On Aug 3, 2006, at 9:34 PM, Josiah Carlson wrote: > > Bob Ippolito <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: >> On Aug 3, 2006, at 6:51 PM, Greg Ewing wrote: >> >>> M.-A. Lemburg wrote: >>> >>>> Perhaps we ought to add an exception to the dict lookup mechanism >>>> and continue to silence UnicodeErrors ?! >>> >>> Seems to be that comparison of unicode and non-unicode >>> strings for equality shouldn't raise exceptions in the >>> first place. >> >> Seems like a slightly better idea than having dictionaries suppress >> exceptions. Still not ideal though because sticking non-ASCII strings >> that are supposed to be text and unicode in the same data structures >> is *probably* still an error. > > If/when 'python -U -c "import test.testall"' runs without unexpected > error (I doubt it will happen prior to the "all strings are unicode" > conversion), then I think that we can say that there aren't any > use-cases for strings and unicode being in the same dictionary. > > As an alternate idea, rather than attempting to .decode('ascii') when > strings and unicode compare, why not .decode('latin-1')? We lose the > unicode decoding error, but "the right thing" happens (in my opinion) > when u'\xa1' and '\xa1' compare.
Well, in this case it would cause different behavior if u'\xa1' and '\xa1' compared equal. It'd just be an even more subtle error. -bob _______________________________________________ Python-Dev mailing list Python-Dev@python.org http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-dev Unsubscribe: http://mail.python.org/mailman/options/python-dev/archive%40mail-archive.com