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    如何在Python 中使用UTF-8 编码 && Python 使用 注释,Python ,UTF-8 编码 , Python  注释

    PIP

    $ pip install beautifulsoup4
    

    $ python -m pip install --upgrade pip
    

     

    PyCharm 设置 Python Script 模板内容:
    创建.py文件时自动添加 #coding utf8 文件头
    File > Settings > Editor > File and Code Templates > Python Script>
    #coding utf8

    参考图片:http://img.imooc.com/57d6c0eb0001d66d05000305.jpg
    参考链接:http://www.imooc.com/qadetail/127992

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    python spider demo:

    # coding:utf8
    __author__ = 'xray'
    import urllib2
    import cookielib
    
    url = "https://rollbar.com/docs/"
    
    print '第一种方法'
    response1 = urllib2.urlopen(url)
    print response1.getcode()
    print len(response1.read())
    
    print '第二种方法'
    request = urllib2.Request(url)
    request.add_header("user-agent", "Mozilla/5.0")
    response2 = urllib2.urlopen(request)
    print response2.getcode()
    print response2.read()
    
    print '第三种方法'
    cj = cookielib.CookiJar()
    opener = urllib2.build_opener(urllib2.HTTPCookieProcessor(cj))
    urllib2.install_opener(opener)
    response3 = urllib2.urlopen(url)
    print response3.getcode()
    print cj
    print response3.read()
    

     

    zh-CN error:

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    如何在Python 中使用UTF-8 编码 && Python 使用 注释

    PEP 263 -- Defining Python Source Code Encodings

    PEP: 263
    Title: Defining Python Source Code Encodings
    Author: Marc-André Lemburg <mal at lemburg.com>, Martin von Löwis <martin at v.loewis.de>
    Status: Final
    Type: Standards Track
    Created: 06-Jun-2001
    Python-Version: 2.3
    Post-History:  

    Abstract

        This PEP proposes to introduce a syntax to declare the encoding of
        a Python source file. The encoding information is then used by the
        Python parser to interpret the file using the given encoding. Most
        notably this enhances the interpretation of Unicode literals in
        the source code and makes it possible to write Unicode literals
        using e.g. UTF-8 directly in an Unicode aware editor.
    
    

    Problem

        In Python 2.1, Unicode literals can only be written using the
        Latin-1 based encoding "unicode-escape". This makes the
        programming environment rather unfriendly to Python users who live
        and work in non-Latin-1 locales such as many of the Asian 
        countries. Programmers can write their 8-bit strings using the
        favorite encoding, but are bound to the "unicode-escape" encoding
        for Unicode literals.
    
    

    Proposed Solution

        I propose to make the Python source code encoding both visible and
        changeable on a per-source file basis by using a special comment
        at the top of the file to declare the encoding.
    
        To make Python aware of this encoding declaration a number of
        concept changes are necessary with respect to the handling of
        Python source code data.
    
    

    Defining the Encoding

        Python will default to ASCII as standard encoding if no other
        encoding hints are given.
    
        To define a source code encoding, a magic comment must
        be placed into the source files either as first or second
        line in the file, such as:
    
              # coding=<encoding name>
    
        or (using formats recognized by popular editors)
    
              #!/usr/bin/python
    # -*- coding: <encoding name> -*- or #!/usr/bin/python # vim: set fileencoding=<encoding name> : More precisely, the first or second line must match the regular expression "^[ v]*#.*?coding[:=][ ]*([-_.a-zA-Z0-9]+)". The first group of this expression is then interpreted as encoding name. If the encoding is unknown to Python, an error is raised during compilation. There must not be any Python statement on the line that contains the encoding declaration. If the first line matches the second line is ignored. To aid with platforms such as Windows, which add Unicode BOM marks to the beginning of Unicode files, the UTF-8 signature 'xefxbbxbf' will be interpreted as 'utf-8' encoding as well (even if no magic encoding comment is given). If a source file uses both the UTF-8 BOM mark signature and a magic encoding comment, the only allowed encoding for the comment is 'utf-8'. Any other encoding will cause an error.

    Examples

        These are some examples to clarify the different styles for
        defining the source code encoding at the top of a Python source
        file:
    
        1. With interpreter binary and using Emacs style file encoding
           comment:
    
              #!/usr/bin/python
              # -*- coding: latin-1 -*-
              import os, sys
              ...
    
              #!/usr/bin/python
              # -*- coding: iso-8859-15 -*-
              import os, sys
              ...
    
              #!/usr/bin/python
              # -*- coding: ascii -*-
              import os, sys
              ...
    
        2. Without interpreter line, using plain text:
    
              # This Python file uses the following encoding: utf-8
              import os, sys
              ...
    
        3. Text editors might have different ways of defining the file's
           encoding, e.g.
    
              #!/usr/local/bin/python
              # coding: latin-1
              import os, sys
              ...
    
        4. Without encoding comment, Python's parser will assume ASCII
           text:
    
              #!/usr/local/bin/python
              import os, sys
              ...
    
        5. Encoding comments which don't work:
    
           Missing "coding:" prefix:
    
              #!/usr/local/bin/python
              # latin-1
              import os, sys
              ...
    
           Encoding comment not on line 1 or 2:
    
              #!/usr/local/bin/python
              #
              # -*- coding: latin-1 -*-
              import os, sys
              ...
    
           Unsupported encoding:
    
              #!/usr/local/bin/python
              # -*- coding: utf-42 -*-
              import os, sys
              ...
    
    

    Concepts

        The PEP is based on the following concepts which would have to be
        implemented to enable usage of such a magic comment:
    
        1. The complete Python source file should use a single encoding.
           Embedding of differently encoded data is not allowed and will
           result in a decoding error during compilation of the Python
           source code.
    
           Any encoding which allows processing the first two lines in the
           way indicated above is allowed as source code encoding, this
           includes ASCII compatible encodings as well as certain
           multi-byte encodings such as Shift_JIS. It does not include
           encodings which use two or more bytes for all characters like
           e.g. UTF-16. The reason for this is to keep the encoding
           detection algorithm in the tokenizer simple.
    
        2. Handling of escape sequences should continue to work as it does 
           now, but with all possible source code encodings, that is
           standard string literals (both 8-bit and Unicode) are subject to 
           escape sequence expansion while raw string literals only expand
           a very small subset of escape sequences.
    
        3. Python's tokenizer/compiler combo will need to be updated to
           work as follows:
    
           1. read the file
    
           2. decode it into Unicode assuming a fixed per-file encoding
    
           3. convert it into a UTF-8 byte string
    
           4. tokenize the UTF-8 content
    
           5. compile it, creating Unicode objects from the given Unicode data
              and creating string objects from the Unicode literal data
              by first reencoding the UTF-8 data into 8-bit string data
              using the given file encoding
    
           Note that Python identifiers are restricted to the ASCII
           subset of the encoding, and thus need no further conversion
           after step 4.
    
    

    Implementation

        For backwards-compatibility with existing code which currently
        uses non-ASCII in string literals without declaring an encoding,
        the implementation will be introduced in two phases:
    
        1. Allow non-ASCII in string literals and comments, by internally
           treating a missing encoding declaration as a declaration of
           "iso-8859-1". This will cause arbitrary byte strings to
           correctly round-trip between step 2 and step 5 of the
           processing, and provide compatibility with Python 2.2 for
           Unicode literals that contain non-ASCII bytes.
    
           A warning will be issued if non-ASCII bytes are found in the
           input, once per improperly encoded input file.
    
        2. Remove the warning, and change the default encoding to "ascii".
    
        The builtin compile() API will be enhanced to accept Unicode as
        input. 8-bit string input is subject to the standard procedure for
        encoding detection as described above.
    
        If a Unicode string with a coding declaration is passed to compile(),
        a SyntaxError will be raised.
    
        SUZUKI Hisao is working on a patch; see [2] for details. A patch
        implementing only phase 1 is available at [1].
    
    

    Phases

        Implementation of steps 1 and 2 above were completed in 2.3,
        except for changing the default encoding to "ascii".
    
        The default encoding was set to "ascii" in version 2.5.
       
    

    Scope

        This PEP intends to provide an upgrade path from the current
        (more-or-less) undefined source code encoding situation to a more
        robust and portable definition.
    
    

    References

        [1] Phase 1 implementation:
            http://python.org/sf/526840
        [2] Phase 2 implementation:
            http://python.org/sf/534304
    
    

    History

        1.10 and above: see CVS history
        1.8: Added '.' to the coding RE.
        1.7: Added warnings to phase 1 implementation. Replaced the
             Latin-1 default encoding with the interpreter's default
             encoding. Added tweaks to compile().
        1.4 - 1.6: Minor tweaks
        1.3: Worked in comments by Martin v. Loewis: 
             UTF-8 BOM mark detection, Emacs style magic comment,
             two phase approach to the implementation
    
    

    Copyright

        This document has been placed in the public domain.
    
    
    

    Source: https://hg.python.org/peps/file/tip/pep-0263.txt

    demo:

    #!/usr/bin/python
    #  -*- coding: utf-8 -*-
    # from django.shortcuts import render
    from django.http import HttpResponse
    # Create your views here.
    def index(request):
        return HttpResponse('<h1>Hello, this is the first page of my Django(迪亚戈) Web App!</h1>')
    #   return HttpResponse('<h1>Hello, this is the first page of my Django(迪亚戈) Web App!</h1>')
    

    参考链接:

    http://www.crifan.com/python_head_meaning_for_usr_bin_python_coding_utf-8/

    https://www.python.org/dev/peps/pep-0263/

    https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xgqfrms/Python/master/DjangoApp/main_app/views.py

    https://github.com/xgqfrms/Python/blob/gh-pages/DjangoApp/main_app/views.py

    # How to get a DOM element's `::before` content with JavaScript?

    https://stackoverflow.com/questions/44342065/how-to-get-a-dom-elements-before-content-with-javascript

     

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  • 原文地址:https://www.cnblogs.com/xgqfrms/p/5745802.html
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