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			1508 lines
		
	
	
		
			74 KiB
		
	
	
	
		
			ReStructuredText
		
	
	
	
| :mod:`codecs` --- Codec registry and base classes
 | ||
| =================================================
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| .. module:: codecs
 | ||
|    :synopsis: Encode and decode data and streams.
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| .. moduleauthor:: Marc-André Lemburg <mal@lemburg.com>
 | ||
| .. sectionauthor:: Marc-André Lemburg <mal@lemburg.com>
 | ||
| .. sectionauthor:: Martin v. Löwis <martin@v.loewis.de>
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| **Source code:** :source:`Lib/codecs.py`
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| .. index::
 | ||
|    single: Unicode
 | ||
|    single: Codecs
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|    pair: Codecs; encode
 | ||
|    pair: Codecs; decode
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|    single: streams
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|    pair: stackable; streams
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| --------------
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| This module defines base classes for standard Python codecs (encoders and
 | ||
| decoders) and provides access to the internal Python codec registry, which
 | ||
| manages the codec and error handling lookup process. Most standard codecs
 | ||
| are :term:`text encodings <text encoding>`, which encode text to bytes,
 | ||
| but there are also codecs provided that encode text to text, and bytes to
 | ||
| bytes. Custom codecs may encode and decode between arbitrary types, but some
 | ||
| module features are restricted to use specifically with
 | ||
| :term:`text encodings <text encoding>`, or with codecs that encode to
 | ||
| :class:`bytes`.
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| 
 | ||
| The module defines the following functions for encoding and decoding with
 | ||
| any codec:
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| 
 | ||
| .. function:: encode(obj, encoding='utf-8', errors='strict')
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| 
 | ||
|    Encodes *obj* using the codec registered for *encoding*.
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| 
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|    *Errors* may be given to set the desired error handling scheme. The
 | ||
|    default error handler is ``'strict'`` meaning that encoding errors raise
 | ||
|    :exc:`ValueError` (or a more codec specific subclass, such as
 | ||
|    :exc:`UnicodeEncodeError`). Refer to :ref:`codec-base-classes` for more
 | ||
|    information on codec error handling.
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| .. function:: decode(obj, encoding='utf-8', errors='strict')
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| 
 | ||
|    Decodes *obj* using the codec registered for *encoding*.
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| 
 | ||
|    *Errors* may be given to set the desired error handling scheme. The
 | ||
|    default error handler is ``'strict'`` meaning that decoding errors raise
 | ||
|    :exc:`ValueError` (or a more codec specific subclass, such as
 | ||
|    :exc:`UnicodeDecodeError`). Refer to :ref:`codec-base-classes` for more
 | ||
|    information on codec error handling.
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| The full details for each codec can also be looked up directly:
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| 
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| .. function:: lookup(encoding)
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| 
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|    Looks up the codec info in the Python codec registry and returns a
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|    :class:`CodecInfo` object as defined below.
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| 
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|    Encodings are first looked up in the registry's cache. If not found, the list of
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|    registered search functions is scanned. If no :class:`CodecInfo` object is
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|    found, a :exc:`LookupError` is raised. Otherwise, the :class:`CodecInfo` object
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|    is stored in the cache and returned to the caller.
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| 
 | ||
| .. class:: CodecInfo(encode, decode, streamreader=None, streamwriter=None, incrementalencoder=None, incrementaldecoder=None, name=None)
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| 
 | ||
|    Codec details when looking up the codec registry. The constructor
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|    arguments are stored in attributes of the same name:
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| 
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|    .. attribute:: name
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| 
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|       The name of the encoding.
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| 
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| 
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|    .. attribute:: encode
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|                   decode
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| 
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|       The stateless encoding and decoding functions. These must be
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|       functions or methods which have the same interface as
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|       the :meth:`~Codec.encode` and :meth:`~Codec.decode` methods of Codec
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|       instances (see :ref:`Codec Interface <codec-objects>`).
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|       The functions or methods are expected to work in a stateless mode.
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| 
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| 
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|    .. attribute:: incrementalencoder
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|                   incrementaldecoder
 | ||
| 
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|       Incremental encoder and decoder classes or factory functions.
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|       These have to provide the interface defined by the base classes
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|       :class:`IncrementalEncoder` and :class:`IncrementalDecoder`,
 | ||
|       respectively. Incremental codecs can maintain state.
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| 
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| 
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|    .. attribute:: streamwriter
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|                   streamreader
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| 
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|       Stream writer and reader classes or factory functions. These have to
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|       provide the interface defined by the base classes
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|       :class:`StreamWriter` and :class:`StreamReader`, respectively.
 | ||
|       Stream codecs can maintain state.
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| 
 | ||
| To simplify access to the various codec components, the module provides
 | ||
| these additional functions which use :func:`lookup` for the codec lookup:
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| .. function:: getencoder(encoding)
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| 
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|    Look up the codec for the given encoding and return its encoder function.
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| 
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|    Raises a :exc:`LookupError` in case the encoding cannot be found.
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| 
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| 
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| .. function:: getdecoder(encoding)
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| 
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|    Look up the codec for the given encoding and return its decoder function.
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| 
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|    Raises a :exc:`LookupError` in case the encoding cannot be found.
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| 
 | ||
| 
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| .. function:: getincrementalencoder(encoding)
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| 
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|    Look up the codec for the given encoding and return its incremental encoder
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|    class or factory function.
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| 
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|    Raises a :exc:`LookupError` in case the encoding cannot be found or the codec
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|    doesn't support an incremental encoder.
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| 
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| .. function:: getincrementaldecoder(encoding)
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| 
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|    Look up the codec for the given encoding and return its incremental decoder
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|    class or factory function.
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| 
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|    Raises a :exc:`LookupError` in case the encoding cannot be found or the codec
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|    doesn't support an incremental decoder.
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| 
 | ||
| 
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| .. function:: getreader(encoding)
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| 
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|    Look up the codec for the given encoding and return its :class:`StreamReader`
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|    class or factory function.
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| 
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|    Raises a :exc:`LookupError` in case the encoding cannot be found.
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| 
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| 
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| .. function:: getwriter(encoding)
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| 
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|    Look up the codec for the given encoding and return its :class:`StreamWriter`
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|    class or factory function.
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| 
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|    Raises a :exc:`LookupError` in case the encoding cannot be found.
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| 
 | ||
| Custom codecs are made available by registering a suitable codec search
 | ||
| function:
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| .. function:: register(search_function)
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| 
 | ||
|    Register a codec search function. Search functions are expected to take one
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|    argument, being the encoding name in all lower case letters with hyphens
 | ||
|    and spaces converted to underscores, and return a :class:`CodecInfo` object.
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|    In case a search function cannot find a given encoding, it should return
 | ||
|    ``None``.
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| 
 | ||
|    .. versionchanged:: 3.9
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|       Hyphens and spaces are converted to underscore.
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| 
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| .. function:: unregister(search_function)
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| 
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|    Unregister a codec search function and clear the registry's cache.
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|    If the search function is not registered, do nothing.
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| 
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|    .. versionadded:: 3.10
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| 
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| 
 | ||
| While the builtin :func:`open` and the associated :mod:`io` module are the
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| recommended approach for working with encoded text files, this module
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| provides additional utility functions and classes that allow the use of a
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| wider range of codecs when working with binary files:
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| 
 | ||
| .. function:: open(filename, mode='r', encoding=None, errors='strict', buffering=-1)
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| 
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|    Open an encoded file using the given *mode* and return an instance of
 | ||
|    :class:`StreamReaderWriter`, providing transparent encoding/decoding.
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|    The default file mode is ``'r'``, meaning to open the file in read mode.
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| 
 | ||
|    .. note::
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| 
 | ||
|       Underlying encoded files are always opened in binary mode.
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|       No automatic conversion of ``'\n'`` is done on reading and writing.
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|       The *mode* argument may be any binary mode acceptable to the built-in
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|       :func:`open` function; the ``'b'`` is automatically added.
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| 
 | ||
|    *encoding* specifies the encoding which is to be used for the file.
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|    Any encoding that encodes to and decodes from bytes is allowed, and
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|    the data types supported by the file methods depend on the codec used.
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| 
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|    *errors* may be given to define the error handling. It defaults to ``'strict'``
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|    which causes a :exc:`ValueError` to be raised in case an encoding error occurs.
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| 
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|    *buffering* has the same meaning as for the built-in :func:`open` function.
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|    It defaults to -1 which means that the default buffer size will be used.
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| 
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| 
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| .. function:: EncodedFile(file, data_encoding, file_encoding=None, errors='strict')
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| 
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|    Return a :class:`StreamRecoder` instance, a wrapped version of *file*
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|    which provides transparent transcoding. The original file is closed
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|    when the wrapped version is closed.
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| 
 | ||
|    Data written to the wrapped file is decoded according to the given
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|    *data_encoding* and then written to the original file as bytes using
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|    *file_encoding*. Bytes read from the original file are decoded
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|    according to *file_encoding*, and the result is encoded
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|    using *data_encoding*.
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| 
 | ||
|    If *file_encoding* is not given, it defaults to *data_encoding*.
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| 
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|    *errors* may be given to define the error handling. It defaults to
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|    ``'strict'``, which causes :exc:`ValueError` to be raised in case an encoding
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|    error occurs.
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| 
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| 
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| .. function:: iterencode(iterator, encoding, errors='strict', **kwargs)
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| 
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|    Uses an incremental encoder to iteratively encode the input provided by
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|    *iterator*. This function is a :term:`generator`.
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|    The *errors* argument (as well as any
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|    other keyword argument) is passed through to the incremental encoder.
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| 
 | ||
|    This function requires that the codec accept text :class:`str` objects
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|    to encode. Therefore it does not support bytes-to-bytes encoders such as
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|    ``base64_codec``.
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| 
 | ||
| 
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| .. function:: iterdecode(iterator, encoding, errors='strict', **kwargs)
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| 
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|    Uses an incremental decoder to iteratively decode the input provided by
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|    *iterator*. This function is a :term:`generator`.
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|    The *errors* argument (as well as any
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|    other keyword argument) is passed through to the incremental decoder.
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| 
 | ||
|    This function requires that the codec accept :class:`bytes` objects
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|    to decode. Therefore it does not support text-to-text encoders such as
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|    ``rot_13``, although ``rot_13`` may be used equivalently with
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|    :func:`iterencode`.
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| 
 | ||
| 
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| The module also provides the following constants which are useful for reading
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| and writing to platform dependent files:
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| 
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| 
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| .. data:: BOM
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|           BOM_BE
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|           BOM_LE
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|           BOM_UTF8
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|           BOM_UTF16
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|           BOM_UTF16_BE
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|           BOM_UTF16_LE
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|           BOM_UTF32
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|           BOM_UTF32_BE
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|           BOM_UTF32_LE
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| 
 | ||
|    These constants define various byte sequences,
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|    being Unicode byte order marks (BOMs) for several encodings. They are
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|    used in UTF-16 and UTF-32 data streams to indicate the byte order used,
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|    and in UTF-8 as a Unicode signature. :const:`BOM_UTF16` is either
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|    :const:`BOM_UTF16_BE` or :const:`BOM_UTF16_LE` depending on the platform's
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|    native byte order, :const:`BOM` is an alias for :const:`BOM_UTF16`,
 | ||
|    :const:`BOM_LE` for :const:`BOM_UTF16_LE` and :const:`BOM_BE` for
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|    :const:`BOM_UTF16_BE`. The others represent the BOM in UTF-8 and UTF-32
 | ||
|    encodings.
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| 
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| .. _codec-base-classes:
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| Codec Base Classes
 | ||
| ------------------
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| The :mod:`codecs` module defines a set of base classes which define the
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| interfaces for working with codec objects, and can also be used as the basis
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| for custom codec implementations.
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| 
 | ||
| Each codec has to define four interfaces to make it usable as codec in Python:
 | ||
| stateless encoder, stateless decoder, stream reader and stream writer. The
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| stream reader and writers typically reuse the stateless encoder/decoder to
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| implement the file protocols. Codec authors also need to define how the
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| codec will handle encoding and decoding errors.
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| 
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| .. _surrogateescape:
 | ||
| .. _error-handlers:
 | ||
| 
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| Error Handlers
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| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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| 
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| To simplify and standardize error handling,
 | ||
| codecs may implement different error handling schemes by
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| accepting the *errors* string argument. The following string values are
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| defined and implemented by all standard Python codecs:
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| 
 | ||
| .. tabularcolumns:: |l|L|
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| +-------------------------+-----------------------------------------------+
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| | Value                   | Meaning                                       |
 | ||
| +=========================+===============================================+
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| | ``'strict'``            | Raise :exc:`UnicodeError` (or a subclass);    |
 | ||
| |                         | this is the default. Implemented in           |
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| |                         | :func:`strict_errors`.                        |
 | ||
| +-------------------------+-----------------------------------------------+
 | ||
| | ``'ignore'``            | Ignore the malformed data and continue        |
 | ||
| |                         | without further notice. Implemented in        |
 | ||
| |                         | :func:`ignore_errors`.                        |
 | ||
| +-------------------------+-----------------------------------------------+
 | ||
| 
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| The following error handlers are only applicable to
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| :term:`text encodings <text encoding>`:
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| .. index::
 | ||
|    single: ? (question mark); replacement character
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|    single: \ (backslash); escape sequence
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|    single: \x; escape sequence
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|    single: \u; escape sequence
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|    single: \U; escape sequence
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|    single: \N; escape sequence
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| +-------------------------+-----------------------------------------------+
 | ||
| | Value                   | Meaning                                       |
 | ||
| +=========================+===============================================+
 | ||
| | ``'replace'``           | Replace with a suitable replacement           |
 | ||
| |                         | marker; Python will use the official          |
 | ||
| |                         | ``U+FFFD`` REPLACEMENT CHARACTER for the      |
 | ||
| |                         | built-in codecs on decoding, and '?' on       |
 | ||
| |                         | encoding. Implemented in                      |
 | ||
| |                         | :func:`replace_errors`.                       |
 | ||
| +-------------------------+-----------------------------------------------+
 | ||
| | ``'xmlcharrefreplace'`` | Replace with the appropriate XML character    |
 | ||
| |                         | reference (only for encoding). Implemented    |
 | ||
| |                         | in :func:`xmlcharrefreplace_errors`.          |
 | ||
| +-------------------------+-----------------------------------------------+
 | ||
| | ``'backslashreplace'``  | Replace with backslashed escape sequences.    |
 | ||
| |                         | Implemented in                                |
 | ||
| |                         | :func:`backslashreplace_errors`.              |
 | ||
| +-------------------------+-----------------------------------------------+
 | ||
| | ``'namereplace'``       | Replace with ``\N{...}`` escape sequences     |
 | ||
| |                         | (only for encoding). Implemented in           |
 | ||
| |                         | :func:`namereplace_errors`.                   |
 | ||
| +-------------------------+-----------------------------------------------+
 | ||
| | ``'surrogateescape'``   | On decoding, replace byte with individual     |
 | ||
| |                         | surrogate code ranging from ``U+DC80`` to     |
 | ||
| |                         | ``U+DCFF``. This code will then be turned     |
 | ||
| |                         | back into the same byte when the              |
 | ||
| |                         | ``'surrogateescape'`` error handler is used   |
 | ||
| |                         | when encoding the data. (See :pep:`383` for   |
 | ||
| |                         | more.)                                        |
 | ||
| +-------------------------+-----------------------------------------------+
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| In addition, the following error handler is specific to the given codecs:
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| +-------------------+------------------------+-------------------------------------------+
 | ||
| | Value             | Codecs                 | Meaning                                   |
 | ||
| +===================+========================+===========================================+
 | ||
| |``'surrogatepass'``| utf-8, utf-16, utf-32, | Allow encoding and decoding of surrogate  |
 | ||
| |                   | utf-16-be, utf-16-le,  | codes. These codecs normally treat the    |
 | ||
| |                   | utf-32-be, utf-32-le   | presence of surrogates as an error.       |
 | ||
| +-------------------+------------------------+-------------------------------------------+
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| .. versionadded:: 3.1
 | ||
|    The ``'surrogateescape'`` and ``'surrogatepass'`` error handlers.
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| .. versionchanged:: 3.4
 | ||
|    The ``'surrogatepass'`` error handlers now works with utf-16\* and utf-32\* codecs.
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| .. versionadded:: 3.5
 | ||
|    The ``'namereplace'`` error handler.
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| .. versionchanged:: 3.5
 | ||
|    The ``'backslashreplace'`` error handlers now works with decoding and
 | ||
|    translating.
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| The set of allowed values can be extended by registering a new named error
 | ||
| handler:
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| .. function:: register_error(name, error_handler)
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|    Register the error handling function *error_handler* under the name *name*.
 | ||
|    The *error_handler* argument will be called during encoding and decoding
 | ||
|    in case of an error, when *name* is specified as the errors parameter.
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|    For encoding, *error_handler* will be called with a :exc:`UnicodeEncodeError`
 | ||
|    instance, which contains information about the location of the error. The
 | ||
|    error handler must either raise this or a different exception, or return a
 | ||
|    tuple with a replacement for the unencodable part of the input and a position
 | ||
|    where encoding should continue. The replacement may be either :class:`str` or
 | ||
|    :class:`bytes`. If the replacement is bytes, the encoder will simply copy
 | ||
|    them into the output buffer. If the replacement is a string, the encoder will
 | ||
|    encode the replacement. Encoding continues on original input at the
 | ||
|    specified position. Negative position values will be treated as being
 | ||
|    relative to the end of the input string. If the resulting position is out of
 | ||
|    bound an :exc:`IndexError` will be raised.
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|    Decoding and translating works similarly, except :exc:`UnicodeDecodeError` or
 | ||
|    :exc:`UnicodeTranslateError` will be passed to the handler and that the
 | ||
|    replacement from the error handler will be put into the output directly.
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| Previously registered error handlers (including the standard error handlers)
 | ||
| can be looked up by name:
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| .. function:: lookup_error(name)
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|    Return the error handler previously registered under the name *name*.
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|    Raises a :exc:`LookupError` in case the handler cannot be found.
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| The following standard error handlers are also made available as module level
 | ||
| functions:
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| .. function:: strict_errors(exception)
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|    Implements the ``'strict'`` error handling: each encoding or
 | ||
|    decoding error raises a :exc:`UnicodeError`.
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| .. function:: replace_errors(exception)
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|    Implements the ``'replace'`` error handling (for :term:`text encodings
 | ||
|    <text encoding>` only): substitutes ``'?'`` for encoding errors
 | ||
|    (to be encoded by the codec), and ``'\ufffd'`` (the Unicode replacement
 | ||
|    character) for decoding errors.
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| .. function:: ignore_errors(exception)
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|    Implements the ``'ignore'`` error handling: malformed data is ignored and
 | ||
|    encoding or decoding is continued without further notice.
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| .. function:: xmlcharrefreplace_errors(exception)
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|    Implements the ``'xmlcharrefreplace'`` error handling (for encoding with
 | ||
|    :term:`text encodings <text encoding>` only): the
 | ||
|    unencodable character is replaced by an appropriate XML character reference.
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| .. function:: backslashreplace_errors(exception)
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|    Implements the ``'backslashreplace'`` error handling (for
 | ||
|    :term:`text encodings <text encoding>` only): malformed data is
 | ||
|    replaced by a backslashed escape sequence.
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| .. function:: namereplace_errors(exception)
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|    Implements the ``'namereplace'`` error handling (for encoding with
 | ||
|    :term:`text encodings <text encoding>` only): the
 | ||
|    unencodable character is replaced by a ``\N{...}`` escape sequence.
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|    .. versionadded:: 3.5
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| .. _codec-objects:
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| Stateless Encoding and Decoding
 | ||
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| The base :class:`Codec` class defines these methods which also define the
 | ||
| function interfaces of the stateless encoder and decoder:
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| .. method:: Codec.encode(input[, errors])
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|    Encodes the object *input* and returns a tuple (output object, length consumed).
 | ||
|    For instance, :term:`text encoding` converts
 | ||
|    a string object to a bytes object using a particular
 | ||
|    character set encoding (e.g., ``cp1252`` or ``iso-8859-1``).
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|    The *errors* argument defines the error handling to apply.
 | ||
|    It defaults to ``'strict'`` handling.
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|    The method may not store state in the :class:`Codec` instance. Use
 | ||
|    :class:`StreamWriter` for codecs which have to keep state in order to make
 | ||
|    encoding efficient.
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|    The encoder must be able to handle zero length input and return an empty object
 | ||
|    of the output object type in this situation.
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| .. method:: Codec.decode(input[, errors])
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|    Decodes the object *input* and returns a tuple (output object, length
 | ||
|    consumed). For instance, for a :term:`text encoding`, decoding converts
 | ||
|    a bytes object encoded using a particular
 | ||
|    character set encoding to a string object.
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|    For text encodings and bytes-to-bytes codecs,
 | ||
|    *input* must be a bytes object or one which provides the read-only
 | ||
|    buffer interface -- for example, buffer objects and memory mapped files.
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|    The *errors* argument defines the error handling to apply.
 | ||
|    It defaults to ``'strict'`` handling.
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|    The method may not store state in the :class:`Codec` instance. Use
 | ||
|    :class:`StreamReader` for codecs which have to keep state in order to make
 | ||
|    decoding efficient.
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|    The decoder must be able to handle zero length input and return an empty object
 | ||
|    of the output object type in this situation.
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| Incremental Encoding and Decoding
 | ||
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| The :class:`IncrementalEncoder` and :class:`IncrementalDecoder` classes provide
 | ||
| the basic interface for incremental encoding and decoding. Encoding/decoding the
 | ||
| input isn't done with one call to the stateless encoder/decoder function, but
 | ||
| with multiple calls to the
 | ||
| :meth:`~IncrementalEncoder.encode`/:meth:`~IncrementalDecoder.decode` method of
 | ||
| the incremental encoder/decoder. The incremental encoder/decoder keeps track of
 | ||
| the encoding/decoding process during method calls.
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| The joined output of calls to the
 | ||
| :meth:`~IncrementalEncoder.encode`/:meth:`~IncrementalDecoder.decode` method is
 | ||
| the same as if all the single inputs were joined into one, and this input was
 | ||
| encoded/decoded with the stateless encoder/decoder.
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| .. _incremental-encoder-objects:
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| IncrementalEncoder Objects
 | ||
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| The :class:`IncrementalEncoder` class is used for encoding an input in multiple
 | ||
| steps. It defines the following methods which every incremental encoder must
 | ||
| define in order to be compatible with the Python codec registry.
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| .. class:: IncrementalEncoder(errors='strict')
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|    Constructor for an :class:`IncrementalEncoder` instance.
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|    All incremental encoders must provide this constructor interface. They are free
 | ||
|    to add additional keyword arguments, but only the ones defined here are used by
 | ||
|    the Python codec registry.
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|    The :class:`IncrementalEncoder` may implement different error handling schemes
 | ||
|    by providing the *errors* keyword argument. See :ref:`error-handlers` for
 | ||
|    possible values.
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|    The *errors* argument will be assigned to an attribute of the same name.
 | ||
|    Assigning to this attribute makes it possible to switch between different error
 | ||
|    handling strategies during the lifetime of the :class:`IncrementalEncoder`
 | ||
|    object.
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|    .. method:: encode(object[, final])
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|       Encodes *object* (taking the current state of the encoder into account)
 | ||
|       and returns the resulting encoded object. If this is the last call to
 | ||
|       :meth:`encode` *final* must be true (the default is false).
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|    .. method:: reset()
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|       Reset the encoder to the initial state. The output is discarded: call
 | ||
|       ``.encode(object, final=True)``, passing an empty byte or text string
 | ||
|       if necessary, to reset the encoder and to get the output.
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|    .. method:: getstate()
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|       Return the current state of the encoder which must be an integer. The
 | ||
|       implementation should make sure that ``0`` is the most common
 | ||
|       state. (States that are more complicated than integers can be converted
 | ||
|       into an integer by marshaling/pickling the state and encoding the bytes
 | ||
|       of the resulting string into an integer.)
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|    .. method:: setstate(state)
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|       Set the state of the encoder to *state*. *state* must be an encoder state
 | ||
|       returned by :meth:`getstate`.
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| .. _incremental-decoder-objects:
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| IncrementalDecoder Objects
 | ||
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| The :class:`IncrementalDecoder` class is used for decoding an input in multiple
 | ||
| steps. It defines the following methods which every incremental decoder must
 | ||
| define in order to be compatible with the Python codec registry.
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| .. class:: IncrementalDecoder(errors='strict')
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|    Constructor for an :class:`IncrementalDecoder` instance.
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|    All incremental decoders must provide this constructor interface. They are free
 | ||
|    to add additional keyword arguments, but only the ones defined here are used by
 | ||
|    the Python codec registry.
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|    The :class:`IncrementalDecoder` may implement different error handling schemes
 | ||
|    by providing the *errors* keyword argument. See :ref:`error-handlers` for
 | ||
|    possible values.
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|    The *errors* argument will be assigned to an attribute of the same name.
 | ||
|    Assigning to this attribute makes it possible to switch between different error
 | ||
|    handling strategies during the lifetime of the :class:`IncrementalDecoder`
 | ||
|    object.
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|    .. method:: decode(object[, final])
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|       Decodes *object* (taking the current state of the decoder into account)
 | ||
|       and returns the resulting decoded object. If this is the last call to
 | ||
|       :meth:`decode` *final* must be true (the default is false). If *final* is
 | ||
|       true the decoder must decode the input completely and must flush all
 | ||
|       buffers. If this isn't possible (e.g. because of incomplete byte sequences
 | ||
|       at the end of the input) it must initiate error handling just like in the
 | ||
|       stateless case (which might raise an exception).
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|    .. method:: reset()
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|       Reset the decoder to the initial state.
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|    .. method:: getstate()
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|       Return the current state of the decoder. This must be a tuple with two
 | ||
|       items, the first must be the buffer containing the still undecoded
 | ||
|       input. The second must be an integer and can be additional state
 | ||
|       info. (The implementation should make sure that ``0`` is the most common
 | ||
|       additional state info.) If this additional state info is ``0`` it must be
 | ||
|       possible to set the decoder to the state which has no input buffered and
 | ||
|       ``0`` as the additional state info, so that feeding the previously
 | ||
|       buffered input to the decoder returns it to the previous state without
 | ||
|       producing any output. (Additional state info that is more complicated than
 | ||
|       integers can be converted into an integer by marshaling/pickling the info
 | ||
|       and encoding the bytes of the resulting string into an integer.)
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|    .. method:: setstate(state)
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|       Set the state of the decoder to *state*. *state* must be a decoder state
 | ||
|       returned by :meth:`getstate`.
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| Stream Encoding and Decoding
 | ||
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| The :class:`StreamWriter` and :class:`StreamReader` classes provide generic
 | ||
| working interfaces which can be used to implement new encoding submodules very
 | ||
| easily. See :mod:`encodings.utf_8` for an example of how this is done.
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| .. _stream-writer-objects:
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| StreamWriter Objects
 | ||
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| The :class:`StreamWriter` class is a subclass of :class:`Codec` and defines the
 | ||
| following methods which every stream writer must define in order to be
 | ||
| compatible with the Python codec registry.
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| .. class:: StreamWriter(stream, errors='strict')
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|    Constructor for a :class:`StreamWriter` instance.
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|    All stream writers must provide this constructor interface. They are free to add
 | ||
|    additional keyword arguments, but only the ones defined here are used by the
 | ||
|    Python codec registry.
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|    The *stream* argument must be a file-like object open for writing
 | ||
|    text or binary data, as appropriate for the specific codec.
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|    The :class:`StreamWriter` may implement different error handling schemes by
 | ||
|    providing the *errors* keyword argument. See :ref:`error-handlers` for
 | ||
|    the standard error handlers the underlying stream codec may support.
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|    The *errors* argument will be assigned to an attribute of the same name.
 | ||
|    Assigning to this attribute makes it possible to switch between different error
 | ||
|    handling strategies during the lifetime of the :class:`StreamWriter` object.
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|    .. method:: write(object)
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|       Writes the object's contents encoded to the stream.
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|    .. method:: writelines(list)
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|       Writes the concatenated iterable of strings to the stream (possibly by reusing
 | ||
|       the :meth:`write` method). Infinite or
 | ||
|       very large iterables are not supported. The standard bytes-to-bytes codecs
 | ||
|       do not support this method.
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|    .. method:: reset()
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|       Resets the codec buffers used for keeping internal state.
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|       Calling this method should ensure that the data on the output is put into
 | ||
|       a clean state that allows appending of new fresh data without having to
 | ||
|       rescan the whole stream to recover state.
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| In addition to the above methods, the :class:`StreamWriter` must also inherit
 | ||
| all other methods and attributes from the underlying stream.
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| .. _stream-reader-objects:
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| StreamReader Objects
 | ||
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| The :class:`StreamReader` class is a subclass of :class:`Codec` and defines the
 | ||
| following methods which every stream reader must define in order to be
 | ||
| compatible with the Python codec registry.
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| .. class:: StreamReader(stream, errors='strict')
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|    Constructor for a :class:`StreamReader` instance.
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|    All stream readers must provide this constructor interface. They are free to add
 | ||
|    additional keyword arguments, but only the ones defined here are used by the
 | ||
|    Python codec registry.
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|    The *stream* argument must be a file-like object open for reading
 | ||
|    text or binary data, as appropriate for the specific codec.
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|    The :class:`StreamReader` may implement different error handling schemes by
 | ||
|    providing the *errors* keyword argument. See :ref:`error-handlers` for
 | ||
|    the standard error handlers the underlying stream codec may support.
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|    The *errors* argument will be assigned to an attribute of the same name.
 | ||
|    Assigning to this attribute makes it possible to switch between different error
 | ||
|    handling strategies during the lifetime of the :class:`StreamReader` object.
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|    The set of allowed values for the *errors* argument can be extended with
 | ||
|    :func:`register_error`.
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|    .. method:: read([size[, chars, [firstline]]])
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|       Decodes data from the stream and returns the resulting object.
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|       The *chars* argument indicates the number of decoded
 | ||
|       code points or bytes to return. The :func:`read` method will
 | ||
|       never return more data than requested, but it might return less,
 | ||
|       if there is not enough available.
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|       The *size* argument indicates the approximate maximum
 | ||
|       number of encoded bytes or code points to read
 | ||
|       for decoding. The decoder can modify this setting as
 | ||
|       appropriate. The default value -1 indicates to read and decode as much as
 | ||
|       possible. This parameter is intended to
 | ||
|       prevent having to decode huge files in one step.
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|       The *firstline* flag indicates that
 | ||
|       it would be sufficient to only return the first
 | ||
|       line, if there are decoding errors on later lines.
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|       The method should use a greedy read strategy meaning that it should read
 | ||
|       as much data as is allowed within the definition of the encoding and the
 | ||
|       given size, e.g.  if optional encoding endings or state markers are
 | ||
|       available on the stream, these should be read too.
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|    .. method:: readline([size[, keepends]])
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|       Read one line from the input stream and return the decoded data.
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|       *size*, if given, is passed as size argument to the stream's
 | ||
|       :meth:`read` method.
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|       If *keepends* is false line-endings will be stripped from the lines
 | ||
|       returned.
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|    .. method:: readlines([sizehint[, keepends]])
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|       Read all lines available on the input stream and return them as a list of
 | ||
|       lines.
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|       Line-endings are implemented using the codec's :meth:`decode` method and
 | ||
|       are included in the list entries if *keepends* is true.
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|       *sizehint*, if given, is passed as the *size* argument to the stream's
 | ||
|       :meth:`read` method.
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|    .. method:: reset()
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|       Resets the codec buffers used for keeping internal state.
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|       Note that no stream repositioning should take place. This method is
 | ||
|       primarily intended to be able to recover from decoding errors.
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| In addition to the above methods, the :class:`StreamReader` must also inherit
 | ||
| all other methods and attributes from the underlying stream.
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| .. _stream-reader-writer:
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| StreamReaderWriter Objects
 | ||
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| The :class:`StreamReaderWriter` is a convenience class that allows wrapping
 | ||
| streams which work in both read and write modes.
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| The design is such that one can use the factory functions returned by the
 | ||
| :func:`lookup` function to construct the instance.
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| .. class:: StreamReaderWriter(stream, Reader, Writer, errors='strict')
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|    Creates a :class:`StreamReaderWriter` instance. *stream* must be a file-like
 | ||
|    object. *Reader* and *Writer* must be factory functions or classes providing the
 | ||
|    :class:`StreamReader` and :class:`StreamWriter` interface resp. Error handling
 | ||
|    is done in the same way as defined for the stream readers and writers.
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| :class:`StreamReaderWriter` instances define the combined interfaces of
 | ||
| :class:`StreamReader` and :class:`StreamWriter` classes. They inherit all other
 | ||
| methods and attributes from the underlying stream.
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| .. _stream-recoder-objects:
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| StreamRecoder Objects
 | ||
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| The :class:`StreamRecoder` translates data from one encoding to another,
 | ||
| which is sometimes useful when dealing with different encoding environments.
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| The design is such that one can use the factory functions returned by the
 | ||
| :func:`lookup` function to construct the instance.
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| .. class:: StreamRecoder(stream, encode, decode, Reader, Writer, errors='strict')
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|    Creates a :class:`StreamRecoder` instance which implements a two-way conversion:
 | ||
|    *encode* and *decode* work on the frontend — the data visible to
 | ||
|    code calling :meth:`read` and :meth:`write`, while *Reader* and *Writer*
 | ||
|    work on the backend — the data in *stream*.
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|    You can use these objects to do transparent transcodings, e.g., from Latin-1
 | ||
|    to UTF-8 and back.
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|    The *stream* argument must be a file-like object.
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|    The *encode* and *decode* arguments must
 | ||
|    adhere to the :class:`Codec` interface. *Reader* and
 | ||
|    *Writer* must be factory functions or classes providing objects of the
 | ||
|    :class:`StreamReader` and :class:`StreamWriter` interface respectively.
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|    Error handling is done in the same way as defined for the stream readers and
 | ||
|    writers.
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| :class:`StreamRecoder` instances define the combined interfaces of
 | ||
| :class:`StreamReader` and :class:`StreamWriter` classes. They inherit all other
 | ||
| methods and attributes from the underlying stream.
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| .. _encodings-overview:
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| Encodings and Unicode
 | ||
| ---------------------
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| Strings are stored internally as sequences of code points in
 | ||
| range ``0x0``--``0x10FFFF``. (See :pep:`393` for
 | ||
| more details about the implementation.)
 | ||
| Once a string object is used outside of CPU and memory, endianness
 | ||
| and how these arrays are stored as bytes become an issue. As with other
 | ||
| codecs, serialising a string into a sequence of bytes is known as *encoding*,
 | ||
| and recreating the string from the sequence of bytes is known as *decoding*.
 | ||
| There are a variety of different text serialisation codecs, which are
 | ||
| collectivity referred to as :term:`text encodings <text encoding>`.
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| The simplest text encoding (called ``'latin-1'`` or ``'iso-8859-1'``) maps
 | ||
| the code points 0--255 to the bytes ``0x0``--``0xff``, which means that a string
 | ||
| object that contains code points above ``U+00FF`` can't be encoded with this
 | ||
| codec. Doing so will raise a :exc:`UnicodeEncodeError` that looks
 | ||
| like the following (although the details of the error message may differ):
 | ||
| ``UnicodeEncodeError: 'latin-1' codec can't encode character '\u1234' in
 | ||
| position 3: ordinal not in range(256)``.
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| There's another group of encodings (the so called charmap encodings) that choose
 | ||
| a different subset of all Unicode code points and how these code points are
 | ||
| mapped to the bytes ``0x0``--``0xff``. To see how this is done simply open
 | ||
| e.g. :file:`encodings/cp1252.py` (which is an encoding that is used primarily on
 | ||
| Windows). There's a string constant with 256 characters that shows you which
 | ||
| character is mapped to which byte value.
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| All of these encodings can only encode 256 of the 1114112 code points
 | ||
| defined in Unicode. A simple and straightforward way that can store each Unicode
 | ||
| code point, is to store each code point as four consecutive bytes. There are two
 | ||
| possibilities: store the bytes in big endian or in little endian order. These
 | ||
| two encodings are called ``UTF-32-BE`` and ``UTF-32-LE`` respectively. Their
 | ||
| disadvantage is that if e.g. you use ``UTF-32-BE`` on a little endian machine you
 | ||
| will always have to swap bytes on encoding and decoding. ``UTF-32`` avoids this
 | ||
| problem: bytes will always be in natural endianness. When these bytes are read
 | ||
| by a CPU with a different endianness, then bytes have to be swapped though. To
 | ||
| be able to detect the endianness of a ``UTF-16`` or ``UTF-32`` byte sequence,
 | ||
| there's the so called BOM ("Byte Order Mark"). This is the Unicode character
 | ||
| ``U+FEFF``. This character can be prepended to every ``UTF-16`` or ``UTF-32``
 | ||
| byte sequence. The byte swapped version of this character (``0xFFFE``) is an
 | ||
| illegal character that may not appear in a Unicode text. So when the
 | ||
| first character in an ``UTF-16`` or ``UTF-32`` byte sequence
 | ||
| appears to be a ``U+FFFE`` the bytes have to be swapped on decoding.
 | ||
| Unfortunately the character ``U+FEFF`` had a second purpose as
 | ||
| a ``ZERO WIDTH NO-BREAK SPACE``: a character that has no width and doesn't allow
 | ||
| a word to be split. It can e.g. be used to give hints to a ligature algorithm.
 | ||
| With Unicode 4.0 using ``U+FEFF`` as a ``ZERO WIDTH NO-BREAK SPACE`` has been
 | ||
| deprecated (with ``U+2060`` (``WORD JOINER``) assuming this role). Nevertheless
 | ||
| Unicode software still must be able to handle ``U+FEFF`` in both roles: as a BOM
 | ||
| it's a device to determine the storage layout of the encoded bytes, and vanishes
 | ||
| once the byte sequence has been decoded into a string; as a ``ZERO WIDTH
 | ||
| NO-BREAK SPACE`` it's a normal character that will be decoded like any other.
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| There's another encoding that is able to encode the full range of Unicode
 | ||
| characters: UTF-8. UTF-8 is an 8-bit encoding, which means there are no issues
 | ||
| with byte order in UTF-8. Each byte in a UTF-8 byte sequence consists of two
 | ||
| parts: marker bits (the most significant bits) and payload bits. The marker bits
 | ||
| are a sequence of zero to four ``1`` bits followed by a ``0`` bit. Unicode characters are
 | ||
| encoded like this (with x being payload bits, which when concatenated give the
 | ||
| Unicode character):
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| +-----------------------------------+----------------------------------------------+
 | ||
| | Range                             | Encoding                                     |
 | ||
| +===================================+==============================================+
 | ||
| | ``U-00000000`` ... ``U-0000007F`` | 0xxxxxxx                                     |
 | ||
| +-----------------------------------+----------------------------------------------+
 | ||
| | ``U-00000080`` ... ``U-000007FF`` | 110xxxxx 10xxxxxx                            |
 | ||
| +-----------------------------------+----------------------------------------------+
 | ||
| | ``U-00000800`` ... ``U-0000FFFF`` | 1110xxxx 10xxxxxx 10xxxxxx                   |
 | ||
| +-----------------------------------+----------------------------------------------+
 | ||
| | ``U-00010000`` ... ``U-0010FFFF`` | 11110xxx 10xxxxxx 10xxxxxx 10xxxxxx          |
 | ||
| +-----------------------------------+----------------------------------------------+
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| The least significant bit of the Unicode character is the rightmost x bit.
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| As UTF-8 is an 8-bit encoding no BOM is required and any ``U+FEFF`` character in
 | ||
| the decoded string (even if it's the first character) is treated as a ``ZERO
 | ||
| WIDTH NO-BREAK SPACE``.
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| Without external information it's impossible to reliably determine which
 | ||
| encoding was used for encoding a string. Each charmap encoding can
 | ||
| decode any random byte sequence. However that's not possible with UTF-8, as
 | ||
| UTF-8 byte sequences have a structure that doesn't allow arbitrary byte
 | ||
| sequences. To increase the reliability with which a UTF-8 encoding can be
 | ||
| detected, Microsoft invented a variant of UTF-8 (that Python 2.5 calls
 | ||
| ``"utf-8-sig"``) for its Notepad program: Before any of the Unicode characters
 | ||
| is written to the file, a UTF-8 encoded BOM (which looks like this as a byte
 | ||
| sequence: ``0xef``, ``0xbb``, ``0xbf``) is written. As it's rather improbable
 | ||
| that any charmap encoded file starts with these byte values (which would e.g.
 | ||
| map to
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|    | LATIN SMALL LETTER I WITH DIAERESIS
 | ||
|    | RIGHT-POINTING DOUBLE ANGLE QUOTATION MARK
 | ||
|    | INVERTED QUESTION MARK
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| in iso-8859-1), this increases the probability that a ``utf-8-sig`` encoding can be
 | ||
| correctly guessed from the byte sequence. So here the BOM is not used to be able
 | ||
| to determine the byte order used for generating the byte sequence, but as a
 | ||
| signature that helps in guessing the encoding. On encoding the utf-8-sig codec
 | ||
| will write ``0xef``, ``0xbb``, ``0xbf`` as the first three bytes to the file. On
 | ||
| decoding ``utf-8-sig`` will skip those three bytes if they appear as the first
 | ||
| three bytes in the file. In UTF-8, the use of the BOM is discouraged and
 | ||
| should generally be avoided.
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| .. _standard-encodings:
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| Standard Encodings
 | ||
| ------------------
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| Python comes with a number of codecs built-in, either implemented as C functions
 | ||
| or with dictionaries as mapping tables. The following table lists the codecs by
 | ||
| name, together with a few common aliases, and the languages for which the
 | ||
| encoding is likely used. Neither the list of aliases nor the list of languages
 | ||
| is meant to be exhaustive. Notice that spelling alternatives that only differ in
 | ||
| case or use a hyphen instead of an underscore are also valid aliases; therefore,
 | ||
| e.g. ``'utf-8'`` is a valid alias for the ``'utf_8'`` codec.
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| .. impl-detail::
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|    Some common encodings can bypass the codecs lookup machinery to
 | ||
|    improve performance. These optimization opportunities are only
 | ||
|    recognized by CPython for a limited set of (case insensitive)
 | ||
|    aliases: utf-8, utf8, latin-1, latin1, iso-8859-1, iso8859-1, mbcs
 | ||
|    (Windows only), ascii, us-ascii, utf-16, utf16, utf-32, utf32, and
 | ||
|    the same using underscores instead of dashes. Using alternative
 | ||
|    aliases for these encodings may result in slower execution.
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|    .. versionchanged:: 3.6
 | ||
|       Optimization opportunity recognized for us-ascii.
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| Many of the character sets support the same languages. They vary in individual
 | ||
| characters (e.g. whether the EURO SIGN is supported or not), and in the
 | ||
| assignment of characters to code positions. For the European languages in
 | ||
| particular, the following variants typically exist:
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| * an ISO 8859 codeset
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| * a Microsoft Windows code page, which is typically derived from an 8859 codeset,
 | ||
|   but replaces control characters with additional graphic characters
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| * an IBM EBCDIC code page
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| * an IBM PC code page, which is ASCII compatible
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| .. tabularcolumns:: |l|p{0.3\linewidth}|p{0.3\linewidth}|
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| +-----------------+--------------------------------+--------------------------------+
 | ||
| | Codec           | Aliases                        | Languages                      |
 | ||
| +=================+================================+================================+
 | ||
| | ascii           | 646, us-ascii                  | English                        |
 | ||
| +-----------------+--------------------------------+--------------------------------+
 | ||
| | big5            | big5-tw, csbig5                | Traditional Chinese            |
 | ||
| +-----------------+--------------------------------+--------------------------------+
 | ||
| | big5hkscs       | big5-hkscs, hkscs              | Traditional Chinese            |
 | ||
| +-----------------+--------------------------------+--------------------------------+
 | ||
| | cp037           | IBM037, IBM039                 | English                        |
 | ||
| +-----------------+--------------------------------+--------------------------------+
 | ||
| | cp273           | 273, IBM273, csIBM273          | German                         |
 | ||
| |                 |                                |                                |
 | ||
| |                 |                                | .. versionadded:: 3.4          |
 | ||
| +-----------------+--------------------------------+--------------------------------+
 | ||
| | cp424           | EBCDIC-CP-HE, IBM424           | Hebrew                         |
 | ||
| +-----------------+--------------------------------+--------------------------------+
 | ||
| | cp437           | 437, IBM437                    | English                        |
 | ||
| +-----------------+--------------------------------+--------------------------------+
 | ||
| | cp500           | EBCDIC-CP-BE, EBCDIC-CP-CH,    | Western Europe                 |
 | ||
| |                 | IBM500                         |                                |
 | ||
| +-----------------+--------------------------------+--------------------------------+
 | ||
| | cp720           |                                | Arabic                         |
 | ||
| +-----------------+--------------------------------+--------------------------------+
 | ||
| | cp737           |                                | Greek                          |
 | ||
| +-----------------+--------------------------------+--------------------------------+
 | ||
| | cp775           | IBM775                         | Baltic languages               |
 | ||
| +-----------------+--------------------------------+--------------------------------+
 | ||
| | cp850           | 850, IBM850                    | Western Europe                 |
 | ||
| +-----------------+--------------------------------+--------------------------------+
 | ||
| | cp852           | 852, IBM852                    | Central and Eastern Europe     |
 | ||
| +-----------------+--------------------------------+--------------------------------+
 | ||
| | cp855           | 855, IBM855                    | Bulgarian, Byelorussian,       |
 | ||
| |                 |                                | Macedonian, Russian, Serbian   |
 | ||
| +-----------------+--------------------------------+--------------------------------+
 | ||
| | cp856           |                                | Hebrew                         |
 | ||
| +-----------------+--------------------------------+--------------------------------+
 | ||
| | cp857           | 857, IBM857                    | Turkish                        |
 | ||
| +-----------------+--------------------------------+--------------------------------+
 | ||
| | cp858           | 858, IBM858                    | Western Europe                 |
 | ||
| +-----------------+--------------------------------+--------------------------------+
 | ||
| | cp860           | 860, IBM860                    | Portuguese                     |
 | ||
| +-----------------+--------------------------------+--------------------------------+
 | ||
| | cp861           | 861, CP-IS, IBM861             | Icelandic                      |
 | ||
| +-----------------+--------------------------------+--------------------------------+
 | ||
| | cp862           | 862, IBM862                    | Hebrew                         |
 | ||
| +-----------------+--------------------------------+--------------------------------+
 | ||
| | cp863           | 863, IBM863                    | Canadian                       |
 | ||
| +-----------------+--------------------------------+--------------------------------+
 | ||
| | cp864           | IBM864                         | Arabic                         |
 | ||
| +-----------------+--------------------------------+--------------------------------+
 | ||
| | cp865           | 865, IBM865                    | Danish, Norwegian              |
 | ||
| +-----------------+--------------------------------+--------------------------------+
 | ||
| | cp866           | 866, IBM866                    | Russian                        |
 | ||
| +-----------------+--------------------------------+--------------------------------+
 | ||
| | cp869           | 869, CP-GR, IBM869             | Greek                          |
 | ||
| +-----------------+--------------------------------+--------------------------------+
 | ||
| | cp874           |                                | Thai                           |
 | ||
| +-----------------+--------------------------------+--------------------------------+
 | ||
| | cp875           |                                | Greek                          |
 | ||
| +-----------------+--------------------------------+--------------------------------+
 | ||
| | cp932           | 932, ms932, mskanji, ms-kanji  | Japanese                       |
 | ||
| +-----------------+--------------------------------+--------------------------------+
 | ||
| | cp949           | 949, ms949, uhc                | Korean                         |
 | ||
| +-----------------+--------------------------------+--------------------------------+
 | ||
| | cp950           | 950, ms950                     | Traditional Chinese            |
 | ||
| +-----------------+--------------------------------+--------------------------------+
 | ||
| | cp1006          |                                | Urdu                           |
 | ||
| +-----------------+--------------------------------+--------------------------------+
 | ||
| | cp1026          | ibm1026                        | Turkish                        |
 | ||
| +-----------------+--------------------------------+--------------------------------+
 | ||
| | cp1125          | 1125, ibm1125, cp866u, ruscii  | Ukrainian                      |
 | ||
| |                 |                                |                                |
 | ||
| |                 |                                | .. versionadded:: 3.4          |
 | ||
| +-----------------+--------------------------------+--------------------------------+
 | ||
| | cp1140          | ibm1140                        | Western Europe                 |
 | ||
| +-----------------+--------------------------------+--------------------------------+
 | ||
| | cp1250          | windows-1250                   | Central and Eastern Europe     |
 | ||
| +-----------------+--------------------------------+--------------------------------+
 | ||
| | cp1251          | windows-1251                   | Bulgarian, Byelorussian,       |
 | ||
| |                 |                                | Macedonian, Russian, Serbian   |
 | ||
| +-----------------+--------------------------------+--------------------------------+
 | ||
| | cp1252          | windows-1252                   | Western Europe                 |
 | ||
| +-----------------+--------------------------------+--------------------------------+
 | ||
| | cp1253          | windows-1253                   | Greek                          |
 | ||
| +-----------------+--------------------------------+--------------------------------+
 | ||
| | cp1254          | windows-1254                   | Turkish                        |
 | ||
| +-----------------+--------------------------------+--------------------------------+
 | ||
| | cp1255          | windows-1255                   | Hebrew                         |
 | ||
| +-----------------+--------------------------------+--------------------------------+
 | ||
| | cp1256          | windows-1256                   | Arabic                         |
 | ||
| +-----------------+--------------------------------+--------------------------------+
 | ||
| | cp1257          | windows-1257                   | Baltic languages               |
 | ||
| +-----------------+--------------------------------+--------------------------------+
 | ||
| | cp1258          | windows-1258                   | Vietnamese                     |
 | ||
| +-----------------+--------------------------------+--------------------------------+
 | ||
| | euc_jp          | eucjp, ujis, u-jis             | Japanese                       |
 | ||
| +-----------------+--------------------------------+--------------------------------+
 | ||
| | euc_jis_2004    | jisx0213, eucjis2004           | Japanese                       |
 | ||
| +-----------------+--------------------------------+--------------------------------+
 | ||
| | euc_jisx0213    | eucjisx0213                    | Japanese                       |
 | ||
| +-----------------+--------------------------------+--------------------------------+
 | ||
| | euc_kr          | euckr, korean, ksc5601,        | Korean                         |
 | ||
| |                 | ks_c-5601, ks_c-5601-1987,     |                                |
 | ||
| |                 | ksx1001, ks_x-1001             |                                |
 | ||
| +-----------------+--------------------------------+--------------------------------+
 | ||
| | gb2312          | chinese, csiso58gb231280,      | Simplified Chinese             |
 | ||
| |                 | euc-cn, euccn, eucgb2312-cn,   |                                |
 | ||
| |                 | gb2312-1980, gb2312-80,        |                                |
 | ||
| |                 | iso-ir-58                      |                                |
 | ||
| +-----------------+--------------------------------+--------------------------------+
 | ||
| | gbk             | 936, cp936, ms936              | Unified Chinese                |
 | ||
| +-----------------+--------------------------------+--------------------------------+
 | ||
| | gb18030         | gb18030-2000                   | Unified Chinese                |
 | ||
| +-----------------+--------------------------------+--------------------------------+
 | ||
| | hz              | hzgb, hz-gb, hz-gb-2312        | Simplified Chinese             |
 | ||
| +-----------------+--------------------------------+--------------------------------+
 | ||
| | iso2022_jp      | csiso2022jp, iso2022jp,        | Japanese                       |
 | ||
| |                 | iso-2022-jp                    |                                |
 | ||
| +-----------------+--------------------------------+--------------------------------+
 | ||
| | iso2022_jp_1    | iso2022jp-1, iso-2022-jp-1     | Japanese                       |
 | ||
| +-----------------+--------------------------------+--------------------------------+
 | ||
| | iso2022_jp_2    | iso2022jp-2, iso-2022-jp-2     | Japanese, Korean, Simplified   |
 | ||
| |                 |                                | Chinese, Western Europe, Greek |
 | ||
| +-----------------+--------------------------------+--------------------------------+
 | ||
| | iso2022_jp_2004 | iso2022jp-2004,                | Japanese                       |
 | ||
| |                 | iso-2022-jp-2004               |                                |
 | ||
| +-----------------+--------------------------------+--------------------------------+
 | ||
| | iso2022_jp_3    | iso2022jp-3, iso-2022-jp-3     | Japanese                       |
 | ||
| +-----------------+--------------------------------+--------------------------------+
 | ||
| | iso2022_jp_ext  | iso2022jp-ext, iso-2022-jp-ext | Japanese                       |
 | ||
| +-----------------+--------------------------------+--------------------------------+
 | ||
| | iso2022_kr      | csiso2022kr, iso2022kr,        | Korean                         |
 | ||
| |                 | iso-2022-kr                    |                                |
 | ||
| +-----------------+--------------------------------+--------------------------------+
 | ||
| | latin_1         | iso-8859-1, iso8859-1, 8859,   | Western Europe                 |
 | ||
| |                 | cp819, latin, latin1, L1       |                                |
 | ||
| +-----------------+--------------------------------+--------------------------------+
 | ||
| | iso8859_2       | iso-8859-2, latin2, L2         | Central and Eastern Europe     |
 | ||
| +-----------------+--------------------------------+--------------------------------+
 | ||
| | iso8859_3       | iso-8859-3, latin3, L3         | Esperanto, Maltese             |
 | ||
| +-----------------+--------------------------------+--------------------------------+
 | ||
| | iso8859_4       | iso-8859-4, latin4, L4         | Baltic languages               |
 | ||
| +-----------------+--------------------------------+--------------------------------+
 | ||
| | iso8859_5       | iso-8859-5, cyrillic           | Bulgarian, Byelorussian,       |
 | ||
| |                 |                                | Macedonian, Russian, Serbian   |
 | ||
| +-----------------+--------------------------------+--------------------------------+
 | ||
| | iso8859_6       | iso-8859-6, arabic             | Arabic                         |
 | ||
| +-----------------+--------------------------------+--------------------------------+
 | ||
| | iso8859_7       | iso-8859-7, greek, greek8      | Greek                          |
 | ||
| +-----------------+--------------------------------+--------------------------------+
 | ||
| | iso8859_8       | iso-8859-8, hebrew             | Hebrew                         |
 | ||
| +-----------------+--------------------------------+--------------------------------+
 | ||
| | iso8859_9       | iso-8859-9, latin5, L5         | Turkish                        |
 | ||
| +-----------------+--------------------------------+--------------------------------+
 | ||
| | iso8859_10      | iso-8859-10, latin6, L6        | Nordic languages               |
 | ||
| +-----------------+--------------------------------+--------------------------------+
 | ||
| | iso8859_11      | iso-8859-11, thai              | Thai languages                 |
 | ||
| +-----------------+--------------------------------+--------------------------------+
 | ||
| | iso8859_13      | iso-8859-13, latin7, L7        | Baltic languages               |
 | ||
| +-----------------+--------------------------------+--------------------------------+
 | ||
| | iso8859_14      | iso-8859-14, latin8, L8        | Celtic languages               |
 | ||
| +-----------------+--------------------------------+--------------------------------+
 | ||
| | iso8859_15      | iso-8859-15, latin9, L9        | Western Europe                 |
 | ||
| +-----------------+--------------------------------+--------------------------------+
 | ||
| | iso8859_16      | iso-8859-16, latin10, L10      | South-Eastern Europe           |
 | ||
| +-----------------+--------------------------------+--------------------------------+
 | ||
| | johab           | cp1361, ms1361                 | Korean                         |
 | ||
| +-----------------+--------------------------------+--------------------------------+
 | ||
| | koi8_r          |                                | Russian                        |
 | ||
| +-----------------+--------------------------------+--------------------------------+
 | ||
| | koi8_t          |                                | Tajik                          |
 | ||
| |                 |                                |                                |
 | ||
| |                 |                                | .. versionadded:: 3.5          |
 | ||
| +-----------------+--------------------------------+--------------------------------+
 | ||
| | koi8_u          |                                | Ukrainian                      |
 | ||
| +-----------------+--------------------------------+--------------------------------+
 | ||
| | kz1048          | kz_1048, strk1048_2002, rk1048 | Kazakh                         |
 | ||
| |                 |                                |                                |
 | ||
| |                 |                                | .. versionadded:: 3.5          |
 | ||
| +-----------------+--------------------------------+--------------------------------+
 | ||
| | mac_cyrillic    | maccyrillic                    | Bulgarian, Byelorussian,       |
 | ||
| |                 |                                | Macedonian, Russian, Serbian   |
 | ||
| +-----------------+--------------------------------+--------------------------------+
 | ||
| | mac_greek       | macgreek                       | Greek                          |
 | ||
| +-----------------+--------------------------------+--------------------------------+
 | ||
| | mac_iceland     | maciceland                     | Icelandic                      |
 | ||
| +-----------------+--------------------------------+--------------------------------+
 | ||
| | mac_latin2      | maclatin2, maccentraleurope,   | Central and Eastern Europe     |
 | ||
| |                 | mac_centeuro                   |                                |
 | ||
| +-----------------+--------------------------------+--------------------------------+
 | ||
| | mac_roman       | macroman, macintosh            | Western Europe                 |
 | ||
| +-----------------+--------------------------------+--------------------------------+
 | ||
| | mac_turkish     | macturkish                     | Turkish                        |
 | ||
| +-----------------+--------------------------------+--------------------------------+
 | ||
| | ptcp154         | csptcp154, pt154, cp154,       | Kazakh                         |
 | ||
| |                 | cyrillic-asian                 |                                |
 | ||
| +-----------------+--------------------------------+--------------------------------+
 | ||
| | shift_jis       | csshiftjis, shiftjis, sjis,    | Japanese                       |
 | ||
| |                 | s_jis                          |                                |
 | ||
| +-----------------+--------------------------------+--------------------------------+
 | ||
| | shift_jis_2004  | shiftjis2004, sjis_2004,       | Japanese                       |
 | ||
| |                 | sjis2004                       |                                |
 | ||
| +-----------------+--------------------------------+--------------------------------+
 | ||
| | shift_jisx0213  | shiftjisx0213, sjisx0213,      | Japanese                       |
 | ||
| |                 | s_jisx0213                     |                                |
 | ||
| +-----------------+--------------------------------+--------------------------------+
 | ||
| | utf_32          | U32, utf32                     | all languages                  |
 | ||
| +-----------------+--------------------------------+--------------------------------+
 | ||
| | utf_32_be       | UTF-32BE                       | all languages                  |
 | ||
| +-----------------+--------------------------------+--------------------------------+
 | ||
| | utf_32_le       | UTF-32LE                       | all languages                  |
 | ||
| +-----------------+--------------------------------+--------------------------------+
 | ||
| | utf_16          | U16, utf16                     | all languages                  |
 | ||
| +-----------------+--------------------------------+--------------------------------+
 | ||
| | utf_16_be       | UTF-16BE                       | all languages                  |
 | ||
| +-----------------+--------------------------------+--------------------------------+
 | ||
| | utf_16_le       | UTF-16LE                       | all languages                  |
 | ||
| +-----------------+--------------------------------+--------------------------------+
 | ||
| | utf_7           | U7, unicode-1-1-utf-7          | all languages                  |
 | ||
| +-----------------+--------------------------------+--------------------------------+
 | ||
| | utf_8           | U8, UTF, utf8, cp65001         | all languages                  |
 | ||
| +-----------------+--------------------------------+--------------------------------+
 | ||
| | utf_8_sig       |                                | all languages                  |
 | ||
| +-----------------+--------------------------------+--------------------------------+
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| .. versionchanged:: 3.4
 | ||
|    The utf-16\* and utf-32\* encoders no longer allow surrogate code points
 | ||
|    (``U+D800``--``U+DFFF``) to be encoded.
 | ||
|    The utf-32\* decoders no longer decode
 | ||
|    byte sequences that correspond to surrogate code points.
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| .. versionchanged:: 3.8
 | ||
|    ``cp65001`` is now an alias to ``utf_8``.
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| Python Specific Encodings
 | ||
| -------------------------
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| A number of predefined codecs are specific to Python, so their codec names have
 | ||
| no meaning outside Python. These are listed in the tables below based on the
 | ||
| expected input and output types (note that while text encodings are the most
 | ||
| common use case for codecs, the underlying codec infrastructure supports
 | ||
| arbitrary data transforms rather than just text encodings). For asymmetric
 | ||
| codecs, the stated meaning describes the encoding direction.
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| Text Encodings
 | ||
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| The following codecs provide :class:`str` to :class:`bytes` encoding and
 | ||
| :term:`bytes-like object` to :class:`str` decoding, similar to the Unicode text
 | ||
| encodings.
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| .. tabularcolumns:: |l|p{0.3\linewidth}|p{0.3\linewidth}|
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| +--------------------+---------+---------------------------+
 | ||
| | Codec              | Aliases | Meaning                   |
 | ||
| +====================+=========+===========================+
 | ||
| | idna               |         | Implement :rfc:`3490`,    |
 | ||
| |                    |         | see also                  |
 | ||
| |                    |         | :mod:`encodings.idna`.    |
 | ||
| |                    |         | Only ``errors='strict'``  |
 | ||
| |                    |         | is supported.             |
 | ||
| +--------------------+---------+---------------------------+
 | ||
| | mbcs               | ansi,   | Windows only: Encode the  |
 | ||
| |                    | dbcs    | operand according to the  |
 | ||
| |                    |         | ANSI codepage (CP_ACP).   |
 | ||
| +--------------------+---------+---------------------------+
 | ||
| | oem                |         | Windows only: Encode the  |
 | ||
| |                    |         | operand according to the  |
 | ||
| |                    |         | OEM codepage (CP_OEMCP).  |
 | ||
| |                    |         |                           |
 | ||
| |                    |         | .. versionadded:: 3.6     |
 | ||
| +--------------------+---------+---------------------------+
 | ||
| | palmos             |         | Encoding of PalmOS 3.5.   |
 | ||
| +--------------------+---------+---------------------------+
 | ||
| | punycode           |         | Implement :rfc:`3492`.    |
 | ||
| |                    |         | Stateful codecs are not   |
 | ||
| |                    |         | supported.                |
 | ||
| +--------------------+---------+---------------------------+
 | ||
| | raw_unicode_escape |         | Latin-1 encoding with     |
 | ||
| |                    |         | ``\uXXXX`` and            |
 | ||
| |                    |         | ``\UXXXXXXXX`` for other  |
 | ||
| |                    |         | code points. Existing     |
 | ||
| |                    |         | backslashes are not       |
 | ||
| |                    |         | escaped in any way.       |
 | ||
| |                    |         | It is used in the Python  |
 | ||
| |                    |         | pickle protocol.          |
 | ||
| +--------------------+---------+---------------------------+
 | ||
| | undefined          |         | Raise an exception for    |
 | ||
| |                    |         | all conversions, even     |
 | ||
| |                    |         | empty strings. The error  |
 | ||
| |                    |         | handler is ignored.       |
 | ||
| +--------------------+---------+---------------------------+
 | ||
| | unicode_escape     |         | Encoding suitable as the  |
 | ||
| |                    |         | contents of a Unicode     |
 | ||
| |                    |         | literal in ASCII-encoded  |
 | ||
| |                    |         | Python source code,       |
 | ||
| |                    |         | except that quotes are    |
 | ||
| |                    |         | not escaped. Decode       |
 | ||
| |                    |         | from Latin-1 source code. |
 | ||
| |                    |         | Beware that Python source |
 | ||
| |                    |         | code actually uses UTF-8  |
 | ||
| |                    |         | by default.               |
 | ||
| +--------------------+---------+---------------------------+
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| .. versionchanged:: 3.8
 | ||
|    "unicode_internal" codec is removed.
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| .. _binary-transforms:
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| Binary Transforms
 | ||
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| The following codecs provide binary transforms: :term:`bytes-like object`
 | ||
| to :class:`bytes` mappings. They are not supported by :meth:`bytes.decode`
 | ||
| (which only produces :class:`str` output).
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| .. tabularcolumns:: |l|L|L|L|
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| +----------------------+------------------+------------------------------+------------------------------+
 | ||
| | Codec                | Aliases          | Meaning                      | Encoder / decoder            |
 | ||
| +======================+==================+==============================+==============================+
 | ||
| | base64_codec [#b64]_ | base64, base_64  | Convert the operand to       | :meth:`base64.encodebytes` / |
 | ||
| |                      |                  | multiline MIME base64 (the   | :meth:`base64.decodebytes`   |
 | ||
| |                      |                  | result always includes a     |                              |
 | ||
| |                      |                  | trailing ``'\n'``).          |                              |
 | ||
| |                      |                  |                              |                              |
 | ||
| |                      |                  | .. versionchanged:: 3.4      |                              |
 | ||
| |                      |                  |    accepts any               |                              |
 | ||
| |                      |                  |    :term:`bytes-like object` |                              |
 | ||
| |                      |                  |    as input for encoding and |                              |
 | ||
| |                      |                  |    decoding                  |                              |
 | ||
| +----------------------+------------------+------------------------------+------------------------------+
 | ||
| | bz2_codec            | bz2              | Compress the operand using   | :meth:`bz2.compress` /       |
 | ||
| |                      |                  | bz2.                         | :meth:`bz2.decompress`       |
 | ||
| +----------------------+------------------+------------------------------+------------------------------+
 | ||
| | hex_codec            | hex              | Convert the operand to       | :meth:`binascii.b2a_hex` /   |
 | ||
| |                      |                  | hexadecimal                  | :meth:`binascii.a2b_hex`     |
 | ||
| |                      |                  | representation, with two     |                              |
 | ||
| |                      |                  | digits per byte.             |                              |
 | ||
| +----------------------+------------------+------------------------------+------------------------------+
 | ||
| | quopri_codec         | quopri,          | Convert the operand to MIME  | :meth:`quopri.encode` with   |
 | ||
| |                      | quotedprintable, | quoted printable.            | ``quotetabs=True`` /         |
 | ||
| |                      | quoted_printable |                              | :meth:`quopri.decode`        |
 | ||
| +----------------------+------------------+------------------------------+------------------------------+
 | ||
| | uu_codec             | uu               | Convert the operand using    | :meth:`uu.encode` /          |
 | ||
| |                      |                  | uuencode.                    | :meth:`uu.decode`            |
 | ||
| +----------------------+------------------+------------------------------+------------------------------+
 | ||
| | zlib_codec           | zip, zlib        | Compress the operand using   | :meth:`zlib.compress` /      |
 | ||
| |                      |                  | gzip.                        | :meth:`zlib.decompress`      |
 | ||
| +----------------------+------------------+------------------------------+------------------------------+
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| .. [#b64] In addition to :term:`bytes-like objects <bytes-like object>`,
 | ||
|    ``'base64_codec'`` also accepts ASCII-only instances of :class:`str` for
 | ||
|    decoding
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| .. versionadded:: 3.2
 | ||
|    Restoration of the binary transforms.
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| .. versionchanged:: 3.4
 | ||
|    Restoration of the aliases for the binary transforms.
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| .. _text-transforms:
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| Text Transforms
 | ||
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| The following codec provides a text transform: a :class:`str` to :class:`str`
 | ||
| mapping. It is not supported by :meth:`str.encode` (which only produces
 | ||
| :class:`bytes` output).
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| .. tabularcolumns:: |l|l|L|
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| +--------------------+---------+---------------------------+
 | ||
| | Codec              | Aliases | Meaning                   |
 | ||
| +====================+=========+===========================+
 | ||
| | rot_13             | rot13   | Return the Caesar-cypher  |
 | ||
| |                    |         | encryption of the         |
 | ||
| |                    |         | operand.                  |
 | ||
| +--------------------+---------+---------------------------+
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| .. versionadded:: 3.2
 | ||
|    Restoration of the ``rot_13`` text transform.
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| .. versionchanged:: 3.4
 | ||
|    Restoration of the ``rot13`` alias.
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| :mod:`encodings.idna` --- Internationalized Domain Names in Applications
 | ||
| ------------------------------------------------------------------------
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| .. module:: encodings.idna
 | ||
|    :synopsis: Internationalized Domain Names implementation
 | ||
| .. moduleauthor:: Martin v. Löwis
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| This module implements :rfc:`3490` (Internationalized Domain Names in
 | ||
| Applications) and :rfc:`3492` (Nameprep: A Stringprep Profile for
 | ||
| Internationalized Domain Names (IDN)). It builds upon the ``punycode`` encoding
 | ||
| and :mod:`stringprep`.
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| If you need the IDNA 2008 standard from :rfc:`5891` and :rfc:`5895`, use the
 | ||
| third-party `idna module <https://pypi.org/project/idna/>_`.
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| These RFCs together define a protocol to support non-ASCII characters in domain
 | ||
| names. A domain name containing non-ASCII characters (such as
 | ||
| ``www.Alliancefrançaise.nu``) is converted into an ASCII-compatible encoding
 | ||
| (ACE, such as ``www.xn--alliancefranaise-npb.nu``). The ACE form of the domain
 | ||
| name is then used in all places where arbitrary characters are not allowed by
 | ||
| the protocol, such as DNS queries, HTTP :mailheader:`Host` fields, and so
 | ||
| on. This conversion is carried out in the application; if possible invisible to
 | ||
| the user: The application should transparently convert Unicode domain labels to
 | ||
| IDNA on the wire, and convert back ACE labels to Unicode before presenting them
 | ||
| to the user.
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| Python supports this conversion in several ways:  the ``idna`` codec performs
 | ||
| conversion between Unicode and ACE, separating an input string into labels
 | ||
| based on the separator characters defined in :rfc:`section 3.1 of RFC 3490 <3490#section-3.1>`
 | ||
| and converting each label to ACE as required, and conversely separating an input
 | ||
| byte string into labels based on the ``.`` separator and converting any ACE
 | ||
| labels found into unicode. Furthermore, the :mod:`socket` module
 | ||
| transparently converts Unicode host names to ACE, so that applications need not
 | ||
| be concerned about converting host names themselves when they pass them to the
 | ||
| socket module. On top of that, modules that have host names as function
 | ||
| parameters, such as :mod:`http.client` and :mod:`ftplib`, accept Unicode host
 | ||
| names (:mod:`http.client` then also transparently sends an IDNA hostname in the
 | ||
| :mailheader:`Host` field if it sends that field at all).
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| When receiving host names from the wire (such as in reverse name lookup), no
 | ||
| automatic conversion to Unicode is performed: applications wishing to present
 | ||
| such host names to the user should decode them to Unicode.
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| The module :mod:`encodings.idna` also implements the nameprep procedure, which
 | ||
| performs certain normalizations on host names, to achieve case-insensitivity of
 | ||
| international domain names, and to unify similar characters. The nameprep
 | ||
| functions can be used directly if desired.
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| .. function:: nameprep(label)
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|    Return the nameprepped version of *label*. The implementation currently assumes
 | ||
|    query strings, so ``AllowUnassigned`` is true.
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| .. function:: ToASCII(label)
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|    Convert a label to ASCII, as specified in :rfc:`3490`. ``UseSTD3ASCIIRules`` is
 | ||
|    assumed to be false.
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| .. function:: ToUnicode(label)
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|    Convert a label to Unicode, as specified in :rfc:`3490`.
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| :mod:`encodings.mbcs` --- Windows ANSI codepage
 | ||
| -----------------------------------------------
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| .. module:: encodings.mbcs
 | ||
|    :synopsis: Windows ANSI codepage
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| This module implements the ANSI codepage (CP_ACP).
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| .. availability:: Windows only.
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| .. versionchanged:: 3.3
 | ||
|    Support any error handler.
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| .. versionchanged:: 3.2
 | ||
|    Before 3.2, the *errors* argument was ignored; ``'replace'`` was always used
 | ||
|    to encode, and ``'ignore'`` to decode.
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| :mod:`encodings.utf_8_sig` --- UTF-8 codec with BOM signature
 | ||
| -------------------------------------------------------------
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| .. module:: encodings.utf_8_sig
 | ||
|    :synopsis: UTF-8 codec with BOM signature
 | ||
| .. moduleauthor:: Walter Dörwald
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| This module implements a variant of the UTF-8 codec. On encoding, a UTF-8 encoded
 | ||
| BOM will be prepended to the UTF-8 encoded bytes. For the stateful encoder this
 | ||
| is only done once (on the first write to the byte stream). On decoding, an
 | ||
| optional UTF-8 encoded BOM at the start of the data will be skipped.
 |