Unicode Objects and Codecs¶
Unicode Objects¶
Unicode Type¶
These are the basic Unicode object types used for the Unicode implementation in Python:
-
type
Py_UNICODE
¶ This type represents the storage type which is used by Python internally as basis for holding Unicode ordinals. Python’s default builds use a 16-bit type for
Py_UNICODE
and store Unicode values internally as UCS2. It is also possible to build a UCS4 version of Python (most recent Linux distributions come with UCS4 builds of Python). These builds then use a 32-bit type forPy_UNICODE
and store Unicode data internally as UCS4. On platforms wherewchar_t
is available and compatible with the chosen Python Unicode build variant,Py_UNICODE
is a typedef alias forwchar_t
to enhance native platform compatibility. On all other platforms,Py_UNICODE
is a typedef alias for eitherunsigned short
(UCS2) orunsigned long
(UCS4).
Note that UCS2 and UCS4 Python builds are not binary compatible. Please keep this in mind when writing extensions or interfaces.
-
PyTypeObject
PyUnicode_Type
¶ This instance of
PyTypeObject
represents the Python Unicode type. It is exposed to Python code asunicode
andtypes.UnicodeType
.
The following APIs are really C macros and can be used to do fast checks and to access internal read-only data of Unicode objects:
-
int
PyUnicode_Check
(PyObject *o)¶ Return true if the object o is a Unicode object or an instance of a Unicode subtype.
Changed in version 2.2: Allowed subtypes to be accepted.
-
int
PyUnicode_CheckExact
(PyObject *o)¶ Return true if the object o is a Unicode object, but not an instance of a subtype.
New in version 2.2.
-
Py_ssize_t
PyUnicode_GET_SIZE
(PyObject *o)¶ Return the size of the object. o has to be a
PyUnicodeObject
(not checked).Changed in version 2.5: This function returned an
int
type. This might require changes in your code for properly supporting 64-bit systems.
-
Py_ssize_t
PyUnicode_GET_DATA_SIZE
(PyObject *o)¶ Return the size of the object’s internal buffer in bytes. o has to be a
PyUnicodeObject
(not checked).Changed in version 2.5: This function returned an
int
type. This might require changes in your code for properly supporting 64-bit systems.
-
Py_UNICODE *
PyUnicode_AS_UNICODE
(PyObject *o)¶ Return a pointer to the internal
Py_UNICODE
buffer of the object. o has to be aPyUnicodeObject
(not checked).
-
const char *
PyUnicode_AS_DATA
(PyObject *o)¶ Return a pointer to the internal buffer of the object. o has to be a
PyUnicodeObject
(not checked).
-
int
PyUnicode_ClearFreeList
()¶ Clear the free list. Return the total number of freed items.
New in version 2.6.
Unicode Character Properties¶
Unicode provides many different character properties. The most often needed ones are available through these macros which are mapped to C functions depending on the Python configuration.
-
int
Py_UNICODE_ISSPACE
(Py_UNICODE ch)¶ Return
1
or0
depending on whether ch is a whitespace character.
-
int
Py_UNICODE_ISLOWER
(Py_UNICODE ch)¶ Return
1
or0
depending on whether ch is a lowercase character.
-
int
Py_UNICODE_ISUPPER
(Py_UNICODE ch)¶ Return
1
or0
depending on whether ch is an uppercase character.
-
int
Py_UNICODE_ISTITLE
(Py_UNICODE ch)¶ Return
1
or0
depending on whether ch is a titlecase character.
-
int
Py_UNICODE_ISLINEBREAK
(Py_UNICODE ch)¶ Return
1
or0
depending on whether ch is a linebreak character.
-
int
Py_UNICODE_ISDECIMAL
(Py_UNICODE ch)¶ Return
1
or0
depending on whether ch is a decimal character.
-
int
Py_UNICODE_ISDIGIT
(Py_UNICODE ch)¶ Return
1
or0
depending on whether ch is a digit character.
-
int
Py_UNICODE_ISNUMERIC
(Py_UNICODE ch)¶ Return
1
or0
depending on whether ch is a numeric character.
-
int
Py_UNICODE_ISALPHA
(Py_UNICODE ch)¶ Return
1
or0
depending on whether ch is an alphabetic character.
-
int
Py_UNICODE_ISALNUM
(Py_UNICODE ch)¶ Return
1
or0
depending on whether ch is an alphanumeric character.
These APIs can be used for fast direct character conversions:
-
Py_UNICODE
Py_UNICODE_TOLOWER
(Py_UNICODE ch)¶ Return the character ch converted to lower case.
-
Py_UNICODE
Py_UNICODE_TOUPPER
(Py_UNICODE ch)¶ Return the character ch converted to upper case.
-
Py_UNICODE
Py_UNICODE_TOTITLE
(Py_UNICODE ch)¶ Return the character ch converted to title case.
-
int
Py_UNICODE_TODECIMAL
(Py_UNICODE ch)¶ Return the character ch converted to a decimal positive integer. Return
-1
if this is not possible. This macro does not raise exceptions.
-
int
Py_UNICODE_TODIGIT
(Py_UNICODE ch)¶ Return the character ch converted to a single digit integer. Return
-1
if this is not possible. This macro does not raise exceptions.
-
double
Py_UNICODE_TONUMERIC
(Py_UNICODE ch)¶ Return the character ch converted to a double. Return
-1.0
if this is not possible. This macro does not raise exceptions.
Plain Py_UNICODE¶
To create Unicode objects and access their basic sequence properties, use these APIs:
-
PyObject *
PyUnicode_FromUnicode
(const Py_UNICODE *u, Py_ssize_t size)¶ Create a Unicode object from the Py_UNICODE buffer u of the given size. u may be NULL which causes the contents to be undefined. It is the user’s responsibility to fill in the needed data. The buffer is copied into the new object. If the buffer is not NULL, the return value might be a shared object. Therefore, modification of the resulting Unicode object is only allowed when u is NULL.
Changed in version 2.5: This function used an
int
type for size. This might require changes in your code for properly supporting 64-bit systems.
-
PyObject *
PyUnicode_FromStringAndSize
(const char *u, Py_ssize_t size)¶ Create a Unicode object from the char buffer u. The bytes will be interpreted as being UTF-8 encoded. u may also be NULL which causes the contents to be undefined. It is the user’s responsibility to fill in the needed data. The buffer is copied into the new object. If the buffer is not NULL, the return value might be a shared object. Therefore, modification of the resulting Unicode object is only allowed when u is NULL.
New in version 2.6.
-
PyObject *
PyUnicode_FromString
(const char *u)¶ Create a Unicode object from a UTF-8 encoded null-terminated char buffer u.
New in version 2.6.
-
PyObject *
PyUnicode_FromFormat
(const char *format, ...)¶ Take a C
printf()
-style format string and a variable number of arguments, calculate the size of the resulting Python unicode string and return a string with the values formatted into it. The variable arguments must be C types and must correspond exactly to the format characters in the format string. The following format characters are allowed:Format Characters
Type
Comment
%%
n/a
The literal % character.
%c
int
A single character, represented as a C int.
%d
int
Exactly equivalent to
printf("%d")
.%u
unsigned int
Exactly equivalent to
printf("%u")
.%ld
long
Exactly equivalent to
printf("%ld")
.%lu
unsigned long
Exactly equivalent to
printf("%lu")
.%zd
Py_ssize_t
Exactly equivalent to
printf("%zd")
.%zu
size_t
Exactly equivalent to
printf("%zu")
.%i
int
Exactly equivalent to
printf("%i")
.%x
int
Exactly equivalent to
printf("%x")
.%s
char*
A null-terminated C character array.
%p
void*
The hex representation of a C pointer. Mostly equivalent to
printf("%p")
except that it is guaranteed to start with the literal0x
regardless of what the platform’sprintf
yields.%U
PyObject*
A unicode object.
%V
PyObject*, char *
A unicode object (which may be NULL) and a null-terminated C character array as a second parameter (which will be used, if the first parameter is NULL).
%S
PyObject*
The result of calling
PyObject_Unicode()
.%R
PyObject*
The result of calling
PyObject_Repr()
.An unrecognized format character causes all the rest of the format string to be copied as-is to the result string, and any extra arguments discarded.
New in version 2.6.
-
PyObject *
PyUnicode_FromFormatV
(const char *format, va_list vargs)¶ Identical to
PyUnicode_FromFormat()
except that it takes exactly two arguments.New in version 2.6.
-
Py_UNICODE *
PyUnicode_AsUnicode
(PyObject *unicode)¶ Return a read-only pointer to the Unicode object’s internal
Py_UNICODE
buffer, NULL if unicode is not a Unicode object. Note that the resultingPy_UNICODE*
string may contain embedded null characters, which would cause the string to be truncated when used in most C functions.
-
Py_ssize_t
PyUnicode_GetSize
(PyObject *unicode)¶ Return the length of the Unicode object.
Changed in version 2.5: This function returned an
int
type. This might require changes in your code for properly supporting 64-bit systems.
-
PyObject *
PyUnicode_FromEncodedObject
(PyObject *obj, const char *encoding, const char *errors)¶ Coerce an encoded object obj to a Unicode object and return a reference with incremented refcount.
String and other char buffer compatible objects are decoded according to the given encoding and using the error handling defined by errors. Both can be NULL to have the interface use the default values (see the next section for details).
All other objects, including Unicode objects, cause a
TypeError
to be set.The API returns NULL if there was an error. The caller is responsible for decref’ing the returned objects.
-
PyObject *
PyUnicode_FromObject
(PyObject *obj)¶ Shortcut for
PyUnicode_FromEncodedObject(obj, NULL, "strict")
which is used throughout the interpreter whenever coercion to Unicode is needed.
If the platform supports wchar_t
and provides a header file wchar.h,
Python can interface directly to this type using the following functions.
Support is optimized if Python’s own Py_UNICODE
type is identical to
the system’s wchar_t
.
wchar_t Support¶
wchar_t
support for platforms which support it:
-
PyObject *
PyUnicode_FromWideChar
(const wchar_t *w, Py_ssize_t size)¶ Create a Unicode object from the
wchar_t
buffer w of the given size. Return NULL on failure.Changed in version 2.5: This function used an
int
type for size. This might require changes in your code for properly supporting 64-bit systems.
-
Py_ssize_t
PyUnicode_AsWideChar
(PyUnicodeObject *unicode, wchar_t *w, Py_ssize_t size)¶ Copy the Unicode object contents into the
wchar_t
buffer w. At most sizewchar_t
characters are copied (excluding a possibly trailing 0-termination character). Return the number ofwchar_t
characters copied or-1
in case of an error. Note that the resultingwchar_t
string may or may not be 0-terminated. It is the responsibility of the caller to make sure that thewchar_t
string is 0-terminated in case this is required by the application. Also, note that thewchar_t*
string might contain null characters, which would cause the string to be truncated when used with most C functions.Changed in version 2.5: This function returned an
int
type and used anint
type for size. This might require changes in your code for properly supporting 64-bit systems.
Built-in Codecs¶
Python provides a set of built-in codecs which are written in C for speed. All of these codecs are directly usable via the following functions.
Many of the following APIs take two arguments encoding and errors, and they
have the same semantics as the ones of the built-in unicode()
Unicode
object constructor.
Setting encoding to NULL causes the default encoding to be used which is
ASCII. The file system calls should use Py_FileSystemDefaultEncoding
as the encoding for file names. This variable should be treated as read-only: on
some systems, it will be a pointer to a static string, on others, it will change
at run-time (such as when the application invokes setlocale).
Error handling is set by errors which may also be set to NULL meaning to use
the default handling defined for the codec. Default error handling for all
built-in codecs is “strict” (ValueError
is raised).
The codecs all use a similar interface. Only deviation from the following generic ones are documented for simplicity.
Generic Codecs¶
These are the generic codec APIs:
-
PyObject *
PyUnicode_Decode
(const char *s, Py_ssize_t size, const char *encoding, const char *errors)¶ Create a Unicode object by decoding size bytes of the encoded string s. encoding and errors have the same meaning as the parameters of the same name in the
unicode()
built-in function. The codec to be used is looked up using the Python codec registry. Return NULL if an exception was raised by the codec.Changed in version 2.5: This function used an
int
type for size. This might require changes in your code for properly supporting 64-bit systems.
-
PyObject *
PyUnicode_Encode
(const Py_UNICODE *s, Py_ssize_t size, const char *encoding, const char *errors)¶ Encode the
Py_UNICODE
buffer s of the given size and return a Python string object. encoding and errors have the same meaning as the parameters of the same name in the Unicodeencode()
method. The codec to be used is looked up using the Python codec registry. Return NULL if an exception was raised by the codec.Changed in version 2.5: This function used an
int
type for size. This might require changes in your code for properly supporting 64-bit systems.
-
PyObject *
PyUnicode_AsEncodedString
(PyObject *unicode, const char *encoding, const char *errors)¶ Encode a Unicode object and return the result as Python string object. encoding and errors have the same meaning as the parameters of the same name in the Unicode
encode()
method. The codec to be used is looked up using the Python codec registry. Return NULL if an exception was raised by the codec.
UTF-8 Codecs¶
These are the UTF-8 codec APIs:
-
PyObject *
PyUnicode_DecodeUTF8
(const char *s, Py_ssize_t size, const char *errors)¶ Create a Unicode object by decoding size bytes of the UTF-8 encoded string s. Return NULL if an exception was raised by the codec.
Changed in version 2.5: This function used an
int
type for size. This might require changes in your code for properly supporting 64-bit systems.
-
PyObject *
PyUnicode_DecodeUTF8Stateful
(const char *s, Py_ssize_t size, const char *errors, Py_ssize_t *consumed)¶ If consumed is NULL, behave like
PyUnicode_DecodeUTF8()
. If consumed is not NULL, trailing incomplete UTF-8 byte sequences will not be treated as an error. Those bytes will not be decoded and the number of bytes that have been decoded will be stored in consumed.New in version 2.4.
Changed in version 2.5: This function used an
int
type for size. This might require changes in your code for properly supporting 64-bit systems.
-
PyObject *
PyUnicode_EncodeUTF8
(const Py_UNICODE *s, Py_ssize_t size, const char *errors)¶ Encode the
Py_UNICODE
buffer s of the given size using UTF-8 and return a Python string object. Return NULL if an exception was raised by the codec.Changed in version 2.5: This function used an
int
type for size. This might require changes in your code for properly supporting 64-bit systems.
UTF-32 Codecs¶
These are the UTF-32 codec APIs:
-
PyObject *
PyUnicode_DecodeUTF32
(const char *s, Py_ssize_t size, const char *errors, int *byteorder)¶ Decode size bytes from a UTF-32 encoded buffer string and return the corresponding Unicode object. errors (if non-NULL) defines the error handling. It defaults to “strict”.
If byteorder is non-NULL, the decoder starts decoding using the given byte order:
*byteorder == -1: little endian *byteorder == 0: native order *byteorder == 1: big endian
If
*byteorder
is zero, and the first four bytes of the input data are a byte order mark (BOM), the decoder switches to this byte order and the BOM is not copied into the resulting Unicode string. If*byteorder
is-1
or1
, any byte order mark is copied to the output.After completion, *byteorder is set to the current byte order at the end of input data.
In a narrow build code points outside the BMP will be decoded as surrogate pairs.
If byteorder is NULL, the codec starts in native order mode.
Return NULL if an exception was raised by the codec.
New in version 2.6.
-
PyObject *
PyUnicode_DecodeUTF32Stateful
(const char *s, Py_ssize_t size, const char *errors, int *byteorder, Py_ssize_t *consumed)¶ If consumed is NULL, behave like
PyUnicode_DecodeUTF32()
. If consumed is not NULL,PyUnicode_DecodeUTF32Stateful()
will not treat trailing incomplete UTF-32 byte sequences (such as a number of bytes not divisible by four) as an error. Those bytes will not be decoded and the number of bytes that have been decoded will be stored in consumed.New in version 2.6.
-
PyObject *
PyUnicode_EncodeUTF32
(const Py_UNICODE *s, Py_ssize_t size, const char *errors, int byteorder)¶ Return a Python bytes object holding the UTF-32 encoded value of the Unicode data in s. Output is written according to the following byte order:
byteorder == -1: little endian byteorder == 0: native byte order (writes a BOM mark) byteorder == 1: big endian
If byteorder is
0
, the output string will always start with the Unicode BOM mark (U+FEFF). In the other two modes, no BOM mark is prepended.If Py_UNICODE_WIDE is not defined, surrogate pairs will be output as a single code point.
Return NULL if an exception was raised by the codec.
New in version 2.6.
UTF-16 Codecs¶
These are the UTF-16 codec APIs:
-
PyObject *
PyUnicode_DecodeUTF16
(const char *s, Py_ssize_t size, const char *errors, int *byteorder)¶ Decode size bytes from a UTF-16 encoded buffer string and return the corresponding Unicode object. errors (if non-NULL) defines the error handling. It defaults to “strict”.
If byteorder is non-NULL, the decoder starts decoding using the given byte order:
*byteorder == -1: little endian *byteorder == 0: native order *byteorder == 1: big endian
If
*byteorder
is zero, and the first two bytes of the input data are a byte order mark (BOM), the decoder switches to this byte order and the BOM is not copied into the resulting Unicode string. If*byteorder
is-1
or1
, any byte order mark is copied to the output (where it will result in either a\ufeff
or a\ufffe
character).After completion, *byteorder is set to the current byte order at the end of input data.
If byteorder is NULL, the codec starts in native order mode.
Return NULL if an exception was raised by the codec.
Changed in version 2.5: This function used an
int
type for size. This might require changes in your code for properly supporting 64-bit systems.
-
PyObject *
PyUnicode_DecodeUTF16Stateful
(const char *s, Py_ssize_t size, const char *errors, int *byteorder, Py_ssize_t *consumed)¶ If consumed is NULL, behave like
PyUnicode_DecodeUTF16()
. If consumed is not NULL,PyUnicode_DecodeUTF16Stateful()
will not treat trailing incomplete UTF-16 byte sequences (such as an odd number of bytes or a split surrogate pair) as an error. Those bytes will not be decoded and the number of bytes that have been decoded will be stored in consumed.New in version 2.4.
Changed in version 2.5: This function used an
int
type for size and anint *
type for consumed. This might require changes in your code for properly supporting 64-bit systems.
-
PyObject *
PyUnicode_EncodeUTF16
(const Py_UNICODE *s, Py_ssize_t size, const char *errors, int byteorder)¶ Return a Python string object holding the UTF-16 encoded value of the Unicode data in s. Output is written according to the following byte order:
byteorder == -1: little endian byteorder == 0: native byte order (writes a BOM mark) byteorder == 1: big endian
If byteorder is
0
, the output string will always start with the Unicode BOM mark (U+FEFF). In the other two modes, no BOM mark is prepended.If Py_UNICODE_WIDE is defined, a single
Py_UNICODE
value may get represented as a surrogate pair. If it is not defined, eachPy_UNICODE
values is interpreted as a UCS-2 character.Return NULL if an exception was raised by the codec.
Changed in version 2.5: This function used an
int
type for size. This might require changes in your code for properly supporting 64-bit systems.
UTF-7 Codecs¶
These are the UTF-7 codec APIs:
-
PyObject *
PyUnicode_DecodeUTF7
(const char *s, Py_ssize_t size, const char *errors)¶ Create a Unicode object by decoding size bytes of the UTF-7 encoded string s. Return NULL if an exception was raised by the codec.
-
PyObject *
PyUnicode_DecodeUTF7Stateful
(const char *s, Py_ssize_t size, const char *errors, Py_ssize_t *consumed)¶ If consumed is NULL, behave like
PyUnicode_DecodeUTF7()
. If consumed is not NULL, trailing incomplete UTF-7 base-64 sections will not be treated as an error. Those bytes will not be decoded and the number of bytes that have been decoded will be stored in consumed.
-
PyObject *
PyUnicode_EncodeUTF7
(const Py_UNICODE *s, Py_ssize_t size, int base64SetO, int base64WhiteSpace, const char *errors)¶ Encode the
Py_UNICODE
buffer of the given size using UTF-7 and return a Python bytes object. Return NULL if an exception was raised by the codec.If base64SetO is nonzero, “Set O” (punctuation that has no otherwise special meaning) will be encoded in base-64. If base64WhiteSpace is nonzero, whitespace will be encoded in base-64. Both are set to zero for the Python “utf-7” codec.
Unicode-Escape Codecs¶
These are the “Unicode Escape” codec APIs:
-
PyObject *
PyUnicode_DecodeUnicodeEscape
(const char *s, Py_ssize_t size, const char *errors)¶ Create a Unicode object by decoding size bytes of the Unicode-Escape encoded string s. Return NULL if an exception was raised by the codec.
Changed in version 2.5: This function used an
int
type for size. This might require changes in your code for properly supporting 64-bit systems.
-
PyObject *
PyUnicode_EncodeUnicodeEscape
(const Py_UNICODE *s, Py_ssize_t size)¶ Encode the
Py_UNICODE
buffer of the given size using Unicode-Escape and return a Python string object. Return NULL if an exception was raised by the codec.Changed in version 2.5: This function used an
int
type for size. This might require changes in your code for properly supporting 64-bit systems.
Raw-Unicode-Escape Codecs¶
These are the “Raw Unicode Escape” codec APIs:
-
PyObject *
PyUnicode_DecodeRawUnicodeEscape
(const char *s, Py_ssize_t size, const char *errors)¶ Create a Unicode object by decoding size bytes of the Raw-Unicode-Escape encoded string s. Return NULL if an exception was raised by the codec.
Changed in version 2.5: This function used an
int
type for size. This might require changes in your code for properly supporting 64-bit systems.
-
PyObject *
PyUnicode_EncodeRawUnicodeEscape
(const Py_UNICODE *s, Py_ssize_t size, const char *errors)¶ Encode the
Py_UNICODE
buffer of the given size using Raw-Unicode-Escape and return a Python string object. Return NULL if an exception was raised by the codec.Changed in version 2.5: This function used an
int
type for size. This might require changes in your code for properly supporting 64-bit systems.
Latin-1 Codecs¶
These are the Latin-1 codec APIs: Latin-1 corresponds to the first 256 Unicode ordinals and only these are accepted by the codecs during encoding.
-
PyObject *
PyUnicode_DecodeLatin1
(const char *s, Py_ssize_t size, const char *errors)¶ Create a Unicode object by decoding size bytes of the Latin-1 encoded string s. Return NULL if an exception was raised by the codec.
Changed in version 2.5: This function used an
int
type for size. This might require changes in your code for properly supporting 64-bit systems.
-
PyObject *
PyUnicode_EncodeLatin1
(const Py_UNICODE *s, Py_ssize_t size, const char *errors)¶ Encode the
Py_UNICODE
buffer of the given size using Latin-1 and return a Python string object. Return NULL if an exception was raised by the codec.Changed in version 2.5: This function used an
int
type for size. This might require changes in your code for properly supporting 64-bit systems.
ASCII Codecs¶
These are the ASCII codec APIs. Only 7-bit ASCII data is accepted. All other codes generate errors.
-
PyObject *
PyUnicode_DecodeASCII
(const char *s, Py_ssize_t size, const char *errors)¶ Create a Unicode object by decoding size bytes of the ASCII encoded string s. Return NULL if an exception was raised by the codec.
Changed in version 2.5: This function used an
int
type for size. This might require changes in your code for properly supporting 64-bit systems.
-
PyObject *
PyUnicode_EncodeASCII
(const Py_UNICODE *s, Py_ssize_t size, const char *errors)¶ Encode the
Py_UNICODE
buffer of the given size using ASCII and return a Python string object. Return NULL if an exception was raised by the codec.Changed in version 2.5: This function used an
int
type for size. This might require changes in your code for properly supporting 64-bit systems.
Character Map Codecs¶
This codec is special in that it can be used to implement many different codecs
(and this is in fact what was done to obtain most of the standard codecs
included in the encodings
package). The codec uses mapping to encode and
decode characters.
Decoding mappings must map single string characters to single Unicode
characters, integers (which are then interpreted as Unicode ordinals) or None
(meaning “undefined mapping” and causing an error).
Encoding mappings must map single Unicode characters to single string
characters, integers (which are then interpreted as Latin-1 ordinals) or None
(meaning “undefined mapping” and causing an error).
The mapping objects provided must only support the __getitem__ mapping interface.
If a character lookup fails with a LookupError, the character is copied as-is meaning that its ordinal value will be interpreted as Unicode or Latin-1 ordinal resp. Because of this, mappings only need to contain those mappings which map characters to different code points.
These are the mapping codec APIs:
-
PyObject *
PyUnicode_DecodeCharmap
(const char *s, Py_ssize_t size, PyObject *mapping, const char *errors)¶ Create a Unicode object by decoding size bytes of the encoded string s using the given mapping object. Return NULL if an exception was raised by the codec. If mapping is NULL latin-1 decoding will be done. Else it can be a dictionary mapping byte or a unicode string, which is treated as a lookup table. Byte values greater that the length of the string and U+FFFE “characters” are treated as “undefined mapping”.
Changed in version 2.4: Allowed unicode string as mapping argument.
Changed in version 2.5: This function used an
int
type for size. This might require changes in your code for properly supporting 64-bit systems.
-
PyObject *
PyUnicode_EncodeCharmap
(const Py_UNICODE *s, Py_ssize_t size, PyObject *mapping, const char *errors)¶ Encode the
Py_UNICODE
buffer of the given size using the given mapping object and return a Python string object. Return NULL if an exception was raised by the codec.Changed in version 2.5: This function used an
int
type for size. This might require changes in your code for properly supporting 64-bit systems.
-
PyObject *
PyUnicode_AsCharmapString
(PyObject *unicode, PyObject *mapping)¶ Encode a Unicode object using the given mapping object and return the result as Python string object. Error handling is “strict”. Return NULL if an exception was raised by the codec.
The following codec API is special in that maps Unicode to Unicode.
-
PyObject *
PyUnicode_TranslateCharmap
(const Py_UNICODE *s, Py_ssize_t size, PyObject *table, const char *errors)¶ Translate a
Py_UNICODE
buffer of the given size by applying a character mapping table to it and return the resulting Unicode object. Return NULL when an exception was raised by the codec.The mapping table must map Unicode ordinal integers to Unicode ordinal integers or
None
(causing deletion of the character).Mapping tables need only provide the
__getitem__()
interface; dictionaries and sequences work well. Unmapped character ordinals (ones which cause aLookupError
) are left untouched and are copied as-is.Changed in version 2.5: This function used an
int
type for size. This might require changes in your code for properly supporting 64-bit systems.
MBCS codecs for Windows¶
These are the MBCS codec APIs. They are currently only available on Windows and use the Win32 MBCS converters to implement the conversions. Note that MBCS (or DBCS) is a class of encodings, not just one. The target encoding is defined by the user settings on the machine running the codec.
-
PyObject *
PyUnicode_DecodeMBCS
(const char *s, Py_ssize_t size, const char *errors)¶ Create a Unicode object by decoding size bytes of the MBCS encoded string s. Return NULL if an exception was raised by the codec.
Changed in version 2.5: This function used an
int
type for size. This might require changes in your code for properly supporting 64-bit systems.
-
PyObject *
PyUnicode_DecodeMBCSStateful
(const char *s, int size, const char *errors, int *consumed)¶ If consumed is NULL, behave like
PyUnicode_DecodeMBCS()
. If consumed is not NULL,PyUnicode_DecodeMBCSStateful()
will not decode trailing lead byte and the number of bytes that have been decoded will be stored in consumed.New in version 2.5.
-
PyObject *
PyUnicode_EncodeMBCS
(const Py_UNICODE *s, Py_ssize_t size, const char *errors)¶ Encode the
Py_UNICODE
buffer of the given size using MBCS and return a Python string object. Return NULL if an exception was raised by the codec.Changed in version 2.5: This function used an
int
type for size. This might require changes in your code for properly supporting 64-bit systems.
Methods & Slots¶
Methods and Slot Functions¶
The following APIs are capable of handling Unicode objects and strings on input (we refer to them as strings in the descriptions) and return Unicode objects or integers as appropriate.
They all return NULL or -1
if an exception occurs.
-
PyObject *
PyUnicode_Concat
(PyObject *left, PyObject *right)¶ Concat two strings giving a new Unicode string.
-
PyObject *
PyUnicode_Split
(PyObject *s, PyObject *sep, Py_ssize_t maxsplit)¶ Split a string giving a list of Unicode strings. If sep is NULL, splitting will be done at all whitespace substrings. Otherwise, splits occur at the given separator. At most maxsplit splits will be done. If negative, no limit is set. Separators are not included in the resulting list.
Changed in version 2.5: This function used an
int
type for maxsplit. This might require changes in your code for properly supporting 64-bit systems.
-
PyObject *
PyUnicode_Splitlines
(PyObject *s, int keepend)¶ Split a Unicode string at line breaks, returning a list of Unicode strings. CRLF is considered to be one line break. If keepend is
0
, the Line break characters are not included in the resulting strings.
-
PyObject *
PyUnicode_Translate
(PyObject *str, PyObject *table, const char *errors)¶ Translate a string by applying a character mapping table to it and return the resulting Unicode object.
The mapping table must map Unicode ordinal integers to Unicode ordinal integers or
None
(causing deletion of the character).Mapping tables need only provide the
__getitem__()
interface; dictionaries and sequences work well. Unmapped character ordinals (ones which cause aLookupError
) are left untouched and are copied as-is.errors has the usual meaning for codecs. It may be NULL which indicates to use the default error handling.
-
PyObject *
PyUnicode_Join
(PyObject *separator, PyObject *seq)¶ Join a sequence of strings using the given separator and return the resulting Unicode string.
-
Py_ssize_t
PyUnicode_Tailmatch
(PyObject *str, PyObject *substr, Py_ssize_t start, Py_ssize_t end, int direction)¶ Return
1
if substr matchesstr[start:end]
at the given tail end (direction ==-1
means to do a prefix match, direction ==1
a suffix match),0
otherwise. Return-1
if an error occurred.Changed in version 2.5: This function used an
int
type for start and end. This might require changes in your code for properly supporting 64-bit systems.
-
Py_ssize_t
PyUnicode_Find
(PyObject *str, PyObject *substr, Py_ssize_t start, Py_ssize_t end, int direction)¶ Return the first position of substr in
str[start:end]
using the given direction (direction ==1
means to do a forward search, direction ==-1
a backward search). The return value is the index of the first match; a value of-1
indicates that no match was found, and-2
indicates that an error occurred and an exception has been set.Changed in version 2.5: This function used an
int
type for start and end. This might require changes in your code for properly supporting 64-bit systems.
-
Py_ssize_t
PyUnicode_Count
(PyObject *str, PyObject *substr, Py_ssize_t start, Py_ssize_t end)¶ Return the number of non-overlapping occurrences of substr in
str[start:end]
. Return-1
if an error occurred.Changed in version 2.5: This function returned an
int
type and used anint
type for start and end. This might require changes in your code for properly supporting 64-bit systems.
-
PyObject *
PyUnicode_Replace
(PyObject *str, PyObject *substr, PyObject *replstr, Py_ssize_t maxcount)¶ Replace at most maxcount occurrences of substr in str with replstr and return the resulting Unicode object. maxcount ==
-1
means replace all occurrences.Changed in version 2.5: This function used an
int
type for maxcount. This might require changes in your code for properly supporting 64-bit systems.
-
int
PyUnicode_Compare
(PyObject *left, PyObject *right)¶ Compare two strings and return
-1
,0
,1
for less than, equal, and greater than, respectively.
-
int
PyUnicode_RichCompare
(PyObject *left, PyObject *right, int op)¶ Rich compare two unicode strings and return one of the following:
NULL
in case an exception was raisedPy_True
orPy_False
for successful comparisonsPy_NotImplemented
in case the type combination is unknown
Note that
Py_EQ
andPy_NE
comparisons can cause aUnicodeWarning
in case the conversion of the arguments to Unicode fails with aUnicodeDecodeError
.Possible values for op are
Py_GT
,Py_GE
,Py_EQ
,Py_NE
,Py_LT
, andPy_LE
.