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Home/ Questions/Q 7950825
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: June 4, 20262026-06-04T02:23:03+00:00 2026-06-04T02:23:03+00:00

I have a lookup table hard-coded in python at the moment that looks something

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I have a lookup table hard-coded in python at the moment that looks something like:

   lookup = {
       "\x85": u'...', # ...
       "\x91": u"'",
       ...
   }

I would like to move the mapping to an external file to make it easier to manage, but have not been able to find a way to store x-escaped character codes and read them back in. Instead of ‘\x85’, I end up with ‘\x85’.

Any ideas?

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-06-04T02:23:05+00:00Added an answer on June 4, 2026 at 2:23 am

    If you format the file like so:

    {
           "\x85": u'...',
           "\x91": u"'"
    }
    

    Then you can use ast.literal_eval() to get the lookup table into your program:

    In [10]: ast.literal_eval(open('lookup.txt').read())
    Out[10]: {'\x85': u'...', '\x91': u"'"}
    

    If you want to employ a custom format, you could just store the hex ASCII codes for the keys (e.g. 85, 91 etc), and convert them while reading:

    In [17]: chr(int('91', 16))
    Out[17]: '\x91'
    
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