>>> s = 'auszuschließen'
>>> print(s.encode('ascii', errors='xmlcharrefreplace'))
b'auszuschließen'
>>> print(str(s.encode('ascii', errors='xmlcharrefreplace'), 'ascii'))
auszuschließen
Is there a prettier way to print any string without the b''?
EDIT:
I’m just trying to print escaped characters from Python, and my only gripe is that Python adds “b”” when i do that.
If i wanted to see the actual character in a dumb terminal like Windows 7’s, then i get this:
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "Mailgen.py", line 378, in <module>
marked_copy = mark_markup(language_column, item_row)
File "Mailgen.py", line 210, in mark_markup
print("TP: %r" % "".join(to_print))
File "c:\python32\lib\encodings\cp437.py", line 19, in encode
return codecs.charmap_encode(input,self.errors,encoding_map)[0]
UnicodeEncodeError: 'charmap' codec can't encode character '\u2026' in position 29: character maps to <undefined>
You start out with a Unicode string. Encoding it to
asciicreates abytesobject with the characters you want. Python won’t print it without converting it back into a string and the default conversion puts in theband quotes. Usingdecodeexplicitly converts it back to a string; the default encoding isutf-8, and since yourbytesonly consist ofasciiwhich is a subset ofutf-8it is guaranteed to work.