173 lines
6.3 KiB
Plaintext
173 lines
6.3 KiB
Plaintext
PEP: 0263
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Title: Defining Python Source Code Encodings
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Version: $Revision$
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Author: mal@lemburg.com (Marc-André Lemburg),
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loewis@informatik.hu-berlin.de (Martin v. Löwis)
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Status: Final
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Type: Standards Track
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Python-Version: 2.3
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Created: 06-Jun-2001
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Last-Modified:
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Post-History:
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Abstract
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This PEP proposes to introduce a syntax to declare the encoding of
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a Python source file. The encoding information is then used by the
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Python parser to interpret the file using the given encoding. Most
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notably this enhances the interpretation of Unicode literals in
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the source code and makes it possible to write Unicode literals
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using e.g. UTF-8 directly in an Unicode aware editor.
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Problem
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In Python 2.1, Unicode literals can only be written using the
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Latin-1 based encoding "unicode-escape". This makes the
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programming environment rather unfriendly to Python users who live
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and work in non-Latin-1 locales such as many of the Asian
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countries. Programmers can write their 8-bit strings using the
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favorite encoding, but are bound to the "unicode-escape" encoding
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for Unicode literals.
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Proposed Solution
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I propose to make the Python source code encoding both visible and
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changeable on a per-source file basis by using a special comment
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at the top of the file to declare the encoding.
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To make Python aware of this encoding declaration a number of
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concept changes are necessary with respect to the handling of
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Python source code data.
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Defining the Encoding
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Python will default to ASCII as standard encoding if no other
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encoding hints are given.
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To define a source code encoding, a magic comment must
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be placed into the source files either as first or second
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line in the file:
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#!/usr/bin/python
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# -*- coding: <encoding name> -*-
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More precisely, the first or second line must match the regular
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expression "coding[:=]\s*([-\w.]+)". The first group of this
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expression is then interpreted as encoding name. If the encoding
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is unknown to Python, an error is raised during compilation. There
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must not be any Python statement on the line that contains the
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encoding declartation.
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To aid with platforms such as Windows, which add Unicode BOM marks
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to the beginning of Unicode files, the UTF-8 signature
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'\xef\xbb\xbf' will be interpreted as 'utf-8' encoding as well
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(even if no magic encoding comment is given).
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If a source file uses both the UTF-8 BOM mark signature and a
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magic encoding comment, the only allowed encoding for the comment
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is 'utf-8'. Any other encoding will cause an error.
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Concepts
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The PEP is based on the following concepts which would have to be
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implemented to enable usage of such a magic comment:
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1. The complete Python source file should use a single encoding.
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Embedding of differently encoded data is not allowed and will
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result in a decoding error during compilation of the Python
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source code.
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Any encoding which allows processing the first two lines in the
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way indicated above is allowed as source code encoding, this
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includes ASCII compatible encodings as well as certain
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multi-byte encodings such as Shift_JIS. It does not include
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encodings which use two or more bytes for all characters like
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e.g. UTF-16. The reason for this is to keep the encoding
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detection algorithm in the tokenizer simple.
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2. Handling of escape sequences should continue to work as it does
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now, but with all possible source code encodings, that is
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standard string literals (both 8-bit and Unicode) are subject to
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escape sequence expansion while raw string literals only expand
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a very small subset of escape sequences.
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3. Python's tokenizer/compiler combo will need to be updated to
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work as follows:
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1. read the file
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2. decode it into Unicode assuming a fixed per-file encoding
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3. convert it into a UTF-8 byte string
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4. tokenize the UTF-8 content
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5. compile it, creating Unicode objects from the given Unicode data
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and creating string objects from the Unicode literal data
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by first reencoding the UTF-8 data into 8-bit string data
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using the given file encoding
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Note that Python identifiers are restricted to the ASCII
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subset of the encoding, and thus need no further conversion
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after step 4.
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Implementation
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For backwards-compatibility with existing code which currently
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uses non-ASCII in string literals without declaring an encoding,
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the implementation will be introduced in two phases:
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1. Allow non-ASCII in string literals and comments, by internally
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treating a missing encoding declaration as a declaration of
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"iso-8859-1". This will cause arbitrary byte strings to
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correctly round-trip between step 2 and step 5 of the
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processing, and provide compatibility with Python 2.2 for
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Unicode literals that contain non-ASCII bytes.
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A warning will be issued if non-ASCII bytes are found in the
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input, once per improperly encoded input file.
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2. Remove the warning, and change the default encoding to "ascii".
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The builtin compile() API will be enhanced to accept Unicode as
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input. 8-bit string input is subject to the standard procedure for
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encoding detection as described above.
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SUZUKI Hisao is working on a patch; see [2] for details. A patch
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implementing only phase 1 is available at [1].
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Scope
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This PEP intends to provide an upgrade path from the current
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(more-or-less) undefined source code encoding situation to a more
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robust and portable definition.
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References
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[1] Phase 1 implementation:
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http://python.org/sf/526840
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[2] Phase 2 implementation:
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http://python.org/sf/534304
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History
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1.10 and above: see CVS history
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1.8: Added '.' to the coding RE.
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1.7: Added warnings to phase 1 implementation. Replaced the
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Latin-1 default encoding with the interpreter's default
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encoding. Added tweaks to compile().
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1.4 - 1.6: Minor tweaks
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1.3: Worked in comments by Martin v. Loewis:
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UTF-8 BOM mark detection, Emacs style magic comment,
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two phase approach to the implementation
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Copyright
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This document has been placed in the public domain.
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Local Variables:
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mode: indented-text
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indent-tabs-mode: nil
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End:
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