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Home/ Questions/Q 3274882
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 17, 20262026-05-17T19:05:09+00:00 2026-05-17T19:05:09+00:00

How do I specify a range of unicode characters from ‘ ‘ (space) to

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How do I specify a range of unicode characters from ' ' (space) to \u00D7FF?

I have a regular expression like r'[\u0020-\u00D7FF]' and it won’t compile saying that it’s a bad range. I am new to Unicode regular expressions so I haven’t had this problem before.

Is there a way to make this compile or a regular expression that I’m forgetting or haven’t learned yet?

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-17T19:05:09+00:00Added an answer on May 17, 2026 at 7:05 pm

    The syntax of your unicode range will not do what you expect.

    1. The raw r'' string prevents \u escapes from being parsed, and the regex engine will not do this. The only range in this set is [0-\]:

      >>> re.compile(r'[\u0020-\u00d7ff]', re.DEBUG)
      in
        literal 117
        literal 48
        literal 48
        literal 50
        range (48, 117)
        literal 48
        literal 48
        literal 100
        literal 55
        literal 102
        literal 102
      
    2. Making it a Unicode literal causes \u parsing while leaving other backslashes alone (although that’s not a concern here), but the leading zeroes are messing it up. The syntax is \uxxxx or \Uxxxxxxxx, so it’s parsed as “\u00d7, f, f“.

      >>> re.compile(ur'[\u0020-\u00d7ff]', re.DEBUG)
      in
        range (32, 215)
        literal 102
        literal 102
      
    3. Removing the leading zeroes or switching to \U0000d7ff will fix it:

      >>> re.compile(ur'[\u0020-\ud7ff]', re.DEBUG)
      in
        range (32, 55295)
      
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