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From: Matthieu B. <mat...@gm...> - 2008-02-01 16:26:21
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2008/2/1, Matthieu Brucher <mat...@gm...>: > > > 4. Make sure your editor is correctly saving the file in that > > specified encoding. This is perhaps the hardest step because editors > > all handle it a little differently. Some editors have an option > > somewhere to set the encoding that files are saved in. Others may > > automatically understand the "coding" comment line in the file. (Same > > goes for any terminal emulator you may be using for interactive > > plotting.) > > > > If you can't get step 4 to work successfully, you can write Unicode > > strings in Python using only ASCII characters using the "\u0000" escape > > sequence. > > > > u"Flamb\u00e9e" > > > > (Here, the Unicode code point for e with accent-aigu is 00E9). > > > > I think this may be the obvious problem (I don't how to change the > encoding in pycrust :|) > > > So, following all of the above, the attached works fine for me with .eps > > output on 0.91.2. (There were various Unicode issues in 0.90.x that > > were fixed.) If it still doesn't work for you, please let us know. > > > > I'll try this (I think the 3D stuff still works with this version, doesn't > it ?) > Seems to work fine know, thanks for the tips ;) Matthieu -- French PhD student Website : http://matthieu-brucher.developpez.com/ Blogs : http://matt.eifelle.com and http://blog.developpez.com/?blog=92 LinkedIn : http://www.linkedin.com/in/matthieubrucher |