* [EMAIL PROTECTED] (2005-06-22 13:59 +0100)
> It works fine for me on NT. I think it has nothing to do with Python
> but with the way the file is created - what windows version are you on?
Windows uses UTF-16 since Windows 2000. Regedit offers the possibility
to export in the old Win9x/NT4 format
It works fine for me on NT. I think it has nothing to do with Python
but with the way the file is created - what windows version are you on?
Also note the possibility the '/' - I prefer a noatation like below to
avoid ambiguity.
Python 2.3.4 (#53, May 25 2004, 21:17:02) [MSC v.1200 32 bit (Intel)]
It works fine for me on NT. I think it has nothing to do with Python
but with the way the file is created - what windows version are you on?
Also note the possibility the '/' - I prefer a noatation like below to
avoid ambiguity.
Python 2.3.4 (#53, May 25 2004, 21:17:02) [MSC v.1200 32 bit (Intel)]
[George]
| Hi,
|
| I have exported some registry-keys using Regedit to a number of
| .reg-files. I can open these files using any text editor. Now
| I wanted
| to write a simple Python script to concatenate all these files to one
| output file. (Please note that I'm a newbie).
|
| However, if
Hi,
I have exported some registry-keys using Regedit to a number of
.reg-files. I can open these files using any text editor. Now I wanted
to write a simple Python script to concatenate all these files to one
output file. (Please note that I'm a newbie).
However, if I do something like:
>>>