* Hello, SPSS friends, I'm writing automatically constructed syntax into a syntax window which works fine; However, I have problems with umlauts see example below; I also tried # -*- coding: utf-8 -*- but to no avail; any ideas?. BEGIN PROGRAM PYTHON. #!/usr/bin/env python # -*- coding: iso-8859-1 -*- syntax = '''/* Österreich (use German 'Oe')*/ FREQUENCIES q01. ''' # write syntax into new syntax window import SpssClient SpssClient.StartClient() NewSyntaxDoc = SpssClient.NewSyntaxDoc() NewSyntaxDoc.SetSyntax(syntax) NewSyntaxDoc.SetAsDesignatedSyntaxDoc() SpssClient.StopClient() END PROGRAM. * Result: /* Österreich (use German 'Oe')*/ FREQUENCIES q01. .
Mario Giesel
Munich, Germany |
FYI this code works for me (V22 on Windows) and the umlauts are written correctly in the new syntax window.
|
Thanks for your comment, Andy! I also use V22 on Windows (Server version). So it's probably no version issue. Mario Andy W <[hidden email]> schrieb am 17:26 Dienstag, 23.September 2014: FYI this code works for me (V22 on Windows) and the umlauts are written correctly in the new syntax window. ----- Andy W [hidden email] http://andrewpwheeler.wordpress.com/ -- View this message in context: http://spssx-discussion.1045642.n5.nabble.com/python-umlauts-problem-tp5727361p5727362.html Sent from the SPSSX Discussion mailing list archive at Nabble.com. ===================== To manage your subscription to SPSSX-L, send a message to [hidden email] (not to SPSSX-L), with no body text except the command. To leave the list, send the command SIGNOFF SPSSX-L For a list of commands to manage subscriptions, send the command INFO REFCARD
Mario Giesel
Munich, Germany |
In reply to this post by Mario Giesel
* 1. DATA LIST /country 1-1 gender 2-2. BEGIN DATA 12 21 END DATA. VALUE LABELS country 1 'Dänemark' 2 'Österreich'. VALUE LABELS gender 1 'Männlich' 2 'Weiblich'. CTABLES /TABLE gender by country /* umlauts are shown correctly, also with FREQUENCIES */. => country Dänemark Österreich Anzahl Anzahl gender Männlich 0 1 Weiblich 1 0 * 2. SHOW UNICODE /* result is Yes */. => Systemeinstellungen Schlüsselwort Beschreibung Einstellung UNICODE Angabe, ob der Prozessor im Unicodemodus betrieben wird Ja * 3. SHOW LOCALE. => Systemeinstellungen Schlüsselwort Beschreibung Einstellung LOCALE Land und Zeichensatz de_DE.windows-1252 (de_DE) Hope that helps, Jon. I'm in a two days vacation now. Thanks, Mario Jon K Peck <[hidden email]> schrieb am 16:01 Mittwoch, 24.September 2014: You can see the current setting via Edit
>Options. In V22 it is on the Language tab. You can also
run SHOW UNICODE, which might be better for Server.
Since there are no umlaut characters in the Python code, I expect that you would get the same behavior just running the Frequencies command directly. Is that what happens? If you want to send me the file, I can try this out. Let me know also what the output is for SHOW LOCALE. Jon Peck (no "h") aka Kim Senior Software Engineer, IBM [hidden email] phone: 720-342-5621 From: Mario Giesel <[hidden email]> To: Jon K Peck/Chicago/IBM@IBMUS Date: 09/24/2014 07:47 AM Subject: Re: [SPSSX-L] python umlauts problem Thanks, Jon, I don't know how to check for UNICODE mode. I use normal SPSS 22 on Windows server without changing a mode. Meanwhile I found out that all German umlauts are affected: /* Ä / Ö / Ü / ä / ö / ü / ß */ become /* Ä / Ö / Ãœ / ä ö ü ß */ Mario Jon K Peck <[hidden email]> schrieb am 23:17 Dienstag, 23.September 2014: This might be a different problem from the one I sent mail about earlier. Are you in Unicode mode? The mangled character looks like the utf-8 byte sequence for the umlauted character. I am traveling at the moment and can't check further, but the umlaut hotfix would still be a good idea. Jon Peck (no "h") aka Kim Senior Software Engineer, IBM [hidden email] phone: 720-342-5621 From: Mario Giesel <[hidden email]> To: [hidden email] Date: 09/23/2014 10:02 AM Subject: [SPSSX-L] python umlauts problem Sent by: "SPSSX(r) Discussion" <[hidden email]> * Hello, SPSS friends, I'm writing automatically constructed syntax into a syntax window which works fine; However, I have problems with umlauts see example below; I also tried # -*- coding: utf-8 -*- but to no avail; any ideas?. BEGIN PROGRAM PYTHON. #!/usr/bin/env python # -*- coding: iso-8859-1 -*- syntax = '''/* Österreich (use German 'Oe')*/ FREQUENCIES q01. ''' # write syntax into new syntax window import SpssClient SpssClient.StartClient() NewSyntaxDoc = SpssClient.NewSyntaxDoc() NewSyntaxDoc.SetSyntax(syntax) NewSyntaxDoc.SetAsDesignatedSyntaxDoc() SpssClient.StopClient() END PROGRAM. * Result: /* Österreich (use German 'Oe')*/ FREQUENCIES q01. . ===================== To manage your subscription to SPSSX-L, send a message to [hidden email] (not to SPSSX-L), with no body text except the command. To leave the list, send the command SIGNOFF SPSSX-L For a list of commands to manage subscriptions, send the command INFO REFCARD
Mario Giesel
Munich, Germany |
I see the problem. The following
version works. For a literal constant, as here, you could also just
use
syntax = u'''/* Österreich (use German 'Oe')*/ FREQUENCIES q01. ''' If the text in question is a variable, then the unicode function would be needed. BEGIN PROGRAM PYTHON. #!/usr/bin/env python syntax = unicode('''/* Österreich (use German 'Oe')*/ FREQUENCIES q01. ''') # write syntax into new syntax window import SpssClient SpssClient.StartClient() NewSyntaxDoc = SpssClient.NewSyntaxDoc() NewSyntaxDoc.SetSyntax(syntax) NewSyntaxDoc.SetAsDesignatedSyntaxDoc() SpssClient.StopClient() END PROGRAM. Jon Peck (no "h") aka Kim Senior Software Engineer, IBM [hidden email] phone: 720-342-5621 From: Mario Giesel <[hidden email]> To: [hidden email] Date: 09/24/2014 09:33 AM Subject: Re: [SPSSX-L] python umlauts problem Sent by: "SPSSX(r) Discussion" <[hidden email]> * 1. DATA LIST /country 1-1 gender 2-2. BEGIN DATA 12 21 END DATA. VALUE LABELS country 1 'Dänemark' 2 'Österreich'. VALUE LABELS gender 1 'Männlich' 2 'Weiblich'. CTABLES /TABLE gender by country /* umlauts are shown correctly, also with FREQUENCIES */. => country Dänemark Österreich Anzahl Anzahl gender Männlich 0 1 Weiblich 1 0 * 2. SHOW UNICODE /* result is Yes */. => Systemeinstellungen Schlüsselwort Beschreibung Einstellung UNICODE Angabe, ob der Prozessor im Unicodemodus betrieben wird Ja * 3. SHOW LOCALE. => Systemeinstellungen Schlüsselwort Beschreibung Einstellung LOCALE Land und Zeichensatz de_DE.windows-1252 (de_DE) Hope that helps, Jon. I'm in a two days vacation now. Thanks, Mario Jon K Peck <[hidden email]> schrieb am 16:01 Mittwoch, 24.September 2014: You can see the current setting via Edit >Options. In V22 it is on the Language tab. You can also run SHOW UNICODE, which might be better for Server. Since there are no umlaut characters in the Python code, I expect that you would get the same behavior just running the Frequencies command directly. Is that what happens? If you want to send me the file, I can try this out. Let me know also what the output is for SHOW LOCALE. Jon Peck (no "h") aka Kim Senior Software Engineer, IBM [hidden email] phone: 720-342-5621 From: Mario Giesel <[hidden email]> To: Jon K Peck/Chicago/IBM@IBMUS Date: 09/24/2014 07:47 AM Subject: Re: [SPSSX-L] python umlauts problem Thanks, Jon, I don't know how to check for UNICODE mode. I use normal SPSS 22 on Windows server without changing a mode. Meanwhile I found out that all German umlauts are affected: /* Ä / Ö / Ü / ä / ö / ü / ß */ become /* Ä / Ö / Ãœ / ä ö ü ß */ Mario Jon K Peck <[hidden email]> schrieb am 23:17 Dienstag, 23.September 2014: This might be a different problem from the one I sent mail about earlier. Are you in Unicode mode? The mangled character looks like the utf-8 byte sequence for the umlauted character. I am traveling at the moment and can't check further, but the umlaut hotfix would still be a good idea. Jon Peck (no "h") aka Kim Senior Software Engineer, IBM [hidden email] phone: 720-342-5621 From: Mario Giesel <[hidden email]> To: [hidden email] Date: 09/23/2014 10:02 AM Subject: [SPSSX-L] python umlauts problem Sent by: "SPSSX(r) Discussion" <[hidden email]> * Hello, SPSS friends, I'm writing automatically constructed syntax into a syntax window which works fine; However, I have problems with umlauts see example below; I also tried # -*- coding: utf-8 -*- but to no avail; any ideas?. BEGIN PROGRAM PYTHON. #!/usr/bin/env python # -*- coding: iso-8859-1 -*- syntax = '''/* Österreich (use German 'Oe')*/ FREQUENCIES q01. ''' # write syntax into new syntax window import SpssClient SpssClient.StartClient() NewSyntaxDoc = SpssClient.NewSyntaxDoc() NewSyntaxDoc.SetSyntax(syntax) NewSyntaxDoc.SetAsDesignatedSyntaxDoc() SpssClient.StopClient() END PROGRAM. * Result: /* Österreich (use German 'Oe')*/ FREQUENCIES q01. . ===================== To manage your subscription to SPSSX-L, send a message to LISTSERV@... (not to SPSSX-L), with no body text except the command. To leave the list, send the command SIGNOFF SPSSX-L For a list of commands to manage subscriptions, send the command INFO REFCARD ===================== To manage your subscription to SPSSX-L, send a message to LISTSERV@... (not to SPSSX-L), with no body text except the command. To leave the list, send the command SIGNOFF SPSSX-L For a list of commands to manage subscriptions, send the command INFO REFCARD ===================== To manage your subscription to SPSSX-L, send a message to [hidden email] (not to SPSSX-L), with no body text except the command. To leave the list, send the command SIGNOFF SPSSX-L For a list of commands to manage subscriptions, send the command INFO REFCARD |
Thanks Jon! Unicoding the string with u'''...''' works perfectly well. The function unicode('''...'''), however, did not produce a correct result. Thanks, again, Mario Jon K Peck <[hidden email]> schrieb am 19:16 Mittwoch, 24.September 2014: I see the problem. The following
version works. For a literal constant, as here, you could also just
use
syntax = u'''/* Österreich (use German 'Oe')*/ FREQUENCIES q01. ''' If the text in question is a variable, then the unicode function would be needed. BEGIN PROGRAM PYTHON. #!/usr/bin/env python syntax = unicode('''/* Österreich (use German 'Oe')*/ FREQUENCIES q01. ''') # write syntax into new syntax window import SpssClient SpssClient.StartClient() NewSyntaxDoc = SpssClient.NewSyntaxDoc() NewSyntaxDoc.SetSyntax(syntax) NewSyntaxDoc.SetAsDesignatedSyntaxDoc() SpssClient.StopClient() END PROGRAM. Jon Peck (no "h") aka Kim Senior Software Engineer, IBM [hidden email] phone: 720-342-5621 From: Mario Giesel <[hidden email]> To: [hidden email] Date: 09/24/2014 09:33 AM Subject: Re: [SPSSX-L] python umlauts problem Sent by: "SPSSX(r) Discussion" <[hidden email]> * 1. DATA LIST /country 1-1 gender 2-2. BEGIN DATA 12 21 END DATA. VALUE LABELS country 1 'Dänemark' 2 'Österreich'. VALUE LABELS gender 1 'Männlich' 2 'Weiblich'. CTABLES /TABLE gender by country /* umlauts are shown correctly, also with FREQUENCIES */. => country Dänemark Österreich Anzahl Anzahl gender Männlich 0 1 Weiblich 1 0 * 2. SHOW UNICODE /* result is Yes */. => Systemeinstellungen Schlüsselwort Beschreibung Einstellung UNICODE Angabe, ob der Prozessor im Unicodemodus betrieben wird Ja * 3. SHOW LOCALE. => Systemeinstellungen Schlüsselwort Beschreibung Einstellung LOCALE Land und Zeichensatz de_DE.windows-1252 (de_DE) Hope that helps, Jon. I'm in a two days vacation now. Thanks, Mario Jon K Peck <[hidden email]> schrieb am 16:01 Mittwoch, 24.September 2014: You can see the current setting via Edit >Options. In V22 it is on the Language tab. You can also run SHOW UNICODE, which might be better for Server. Since there are no umlaut characters in the Python code, I expect that you would get the same behavior just running the Frequencies command directly. Is that what happens? If you want to send me the file, I can try this out. Let me know also what the output is for SHOW LOCALE. Jon Peck (no "h") aka Kim Senior Software Engineer, IBM [hidden email] phone: 720-342-5621 From: Mario Giesel <[hidden email]> To: Jon K Peck/Chicago/IBM@IBMUS Date: 09/24/2014 07:47 AM Subject: Re: [SPSSX-L] python umlauts problem Thanks, Jon, I don't know how to check for UNICODE mode. I use normal SPSS 22 on Windows server without changing a mode. Meanwhile I found out that all German umlauts are affected: /* Ä / Ö / Ü / ä / ö / ü / ß */ become /* Ä / Ö / Ãœ / ä ö ü ß */ Mario Jon K Peck <[hidden email]> schrieb am 23:17 Dienstag, 23.September 2014: This might be a different problem from the one I sent mail about earlier. Are you in Unicode mode? The mangled character looks like the utf-8 byte sequence for the umlauted character. I am traveling at the moment and can't check further, but the umlaut hotfix would still be a good idea. Jon Peck (no "h") aka Kim Senior Software Engineer, IBM [hidden email] phone: 720-342-5621 From: Mario Giesel <[hidden email]> To: [hidden email] Date: 09/23/2014 10:02 AM Subject: [SPSSX-L] python umlauts problem Sent by: "SPSSX(r) Discussion" <[hidden email]> * Hello, SPSS friends, I'm writing automatically constructed syntax into a syntax window which works fine; However, I have problems with umlauts see example below; I also tried # -*- coding: utf-8 -*- but to no avail; any ideas?. BEGIN PROGRAM PYTHON. #!/usr/bin/env python # -*- coding: iso-8859-1 -*- syntax = '''/* Österreich (use German 'Oe')*/ FREQUENCIES q01. ''' # write syntax into new syntax window import SpssClient SpssClient.StartClient() NewSyntaxDoc = SpssClient.NewSyntaxDoc() NewSyntaxDoc.SetSyntax(syntax) NewSyntaxDoc.SetAsDesignatedSyntaxDoc() SpssClient.StopClient() END PROGRAM. * Result: /* Österreich (use German 'Oe')*/ FREQUENCIES q01. . ===================== To manage your subscription to SPSSX-L, send a message to [hidden email] (not to SPSSX-L), with no body text except the command. To leave the list, send the command SIGNOFF SPSSX-L For a list of commands to manage subscriptions, send the command INFO REFCARD ===================== To manage your subscription to SPSSX-L, send a message to [hidden email] (not to SPSSX-L), with no body text except the command. To leave the list, send the command SIGNOFF SPSSX-L For a list of commands to manage subscriptions, send the command INFO REFCARD ===================== To manage your subscription to SPSSX-L, send a message to [hidden email] (not to SPSSX-L), with no body text except the command. To leave the list, send the command SIGNOFF SPSSX-L For a list of commands to manage subscriptions, send the command INFO REFCARD
Mario Giesel
Munich, Germany |
In reply to this post by Mario Giesel
You have to tell unicode() which encoding to use, else sys.getdefaultencoding() is used (ascii). ------------------------------ On Mon, Sep 29, 2014 1:18 PM CEST Mario Giesel wrote: >Thanks Jon! > >Unicoding the string with u'''...''' works perfectly well. >The function unicode('''...'''), however, did not produce a correct result. > >Thanks, again, > Mario > > > >Jon K Peck <[hidden email]> schrieb am 19:16 Mittwoch, 24.September 2014: > > > >I see the problem. The following >version works. For a literal constant, as here, you could also just >use >syntax = u'''/* Österreich (use German >'Oe')*/ >FREQUENCIES q01. >''' >If the text in question is a variable, >then the unicode function would be needed. > > > >BEGIN PROGRAM PYTHON. >#!/usr/bin/env python >syntax = unicode('''/* Österreich (use >German 'Oe')*/ >FREQUENCIES q01. >''') ># write syntax into new syntax window >import SpssClient >SpssClient.StartClient() >NewSyntaxDoc = SpssClient.NewSyntaxDoc() >NewSyntaxDoc.SetSyntax(syntax) >NewSyntaxDoc.SetAsDesignatedSyntaxDoc() >SpssClient.StopClient() >END PROGRAM. > > >Jon Peck (no "h") aka Kim >Senior Software Engineer, IBM >[hidden email] >phone: 720-342-5621 > > > > >From: > Mario Giesel <[hidden email]> >To: > [hidden email] >Date: > 09/24/2014 09:33 AM >Subject: > Re: [SPSSX-L] >python umlauts problem >Sent by: > "SPSSX(r) >Discussion" <[hidden email]> >________________________________ > > > >* 1. >DATA LIST /country 1-1 gender 2-2. >BEGIN DATA >12 >21 >END DATA. >VALUE LABELS country 1 'Dänemark' 2 'Österreich'. >VALUE LABELS gender 1 'Männlich' 2 'Weiblich'. >CTABLES /TABLE gender by country /* umlauts are shown correctly, also with >FREQUENCIES */. >=> > country > Dänemark Österreich > Anzahl Anzahl >gender Männlich 0 1 > Weiblich 1 0 > >* 2. >SHOW UNICODE /* result is Yes */. >=> >Systemeinstellungen >Schlüsselwort Beschreibung Einstellung >UNICODE Angabe, ob der Prozessor im Unicodemodus betrieben >wird Ja > >* 3. >SHOW LOCALE. >=> >Systemeinstellungen >Schlüsselwort Beschreibung Einstellung >LOCALE Land und Zeichensatz de_DE.windows-1252 >(de_DE) > >Hope that helps, Jon. I'm in a two days >vacation now. > >Thanks, Mario > > > >Jon K Peck <[hidden email]> schrieb >am 16:01 Mittwoch, 24.September 2014: > > >You can see the current setting via >Edit >Options. In V22 it is on the Language tab. You can >also run SHOW UNICODE, which might be better for Server. > >Since there are no umlaut characters in the Python code, I expect that >you would get the same behavior just running the Frequencies command directly. > Is that what happens? > >If you want to send me the file, I can try this out. Let me know >also what the output is for SHOW LOCALE. > > >Jon Peck (no "h") aka Kim >Senior Software Engineer, IBM >[hidden email] >phone: 720-342-5621 > > > > >From: Mario >Giesel <[hidden email]> >To: Jon >K Peck/Chicago/IBM@IBMUS >Date: 09/24/2014 >07:47 AM >Subject: Re: >[SPSSX-L] python umlauts problem > >________________________________ > > > >Thanks, Jon, I don't know how to check for UNICODE mode. >I use normal SPSS 22 on Windows server without changing a mode. >Meanwhile I found out that all German umlauts are affected: > >/* Ä / Ö / Ü / ä / ö / ü / ß */ >become >/* Ä / Ö / Ãœ / ä ö ü ß */ > > > Mario > > >Jon K Peck <[hidden email]> schrieb am 23:17 Dienstag, 23.September >2014: > > >This might be a different problem from the one I sent mail about earlier. > Are you in Unicode mode? The mangled character looks like the >utf-8 byte sequence for the umlauted character. I am traveling at >the moment and can't check further, but the umlaut hotfix would still be >a good idea. > > >Jon Peck (no "h") aka Kim >Senior Software Engineer, IBM >[hidden email] >phone: 720-342-5621 > > > > >From: Mario >Giesel <[hidden email]> >To: [hidden email] >Date: 09/23/2014 >10:02 AM >Subject: [SPSSX-L] >python umlauts problem >Sent by: "SPSSX(r) >Discussion" <[hidden email]> > >________________________________ > > > >* Hello, SPSS friends, >I'm writing automatically constructed syntax into a syntax window which >works fine; >However, I have problems with umlauts see example below; >I also tried ># -*- coding: utf-8 -*- >but to no avail; >any ideas?. > >BEGIN PROGRAM PYTHON. >#!/usr/bin/env python ># -*- coding: iso-8859-1 -*- >syntax = '''/* Österreich (use German 'Oe')*/ >FREQUENCIES q01. >''' ># write syntax into new syntax window >import SpssClient >SpssClient.StartClient() >NewSyntaxDoc = SpssClient.NewSyntaxDoc() >NewSyntaxDoc.SetSyntax(syntax) >NewSyntaxDoc.SetAsDesignatedSyntaxDoc() >SpssClient.StopClient() >END PROGRAM. > >* Result: >/* Österreich (use German 'Oe')*/ >FREQUENCIES q01. > >. > >===================== To manage your subscription to SPSSX-L, send a message >to [hidden email](not to SPSSX-L), with no body text except the command. To leave the list, >send the command SIGNOFF SPSSX-L For a list of commands to manage subscriptions, >send the command INFO REFCARD > > > > > >===================== To manage your subscription to SPSSX-L, >send a message to [hidden email](not to SPSSX-L), with no body text except the command. To leave the list, >send the command SIGNOFF SPSSX-L For a list of commands to manage subscriptions, >send the command INFO REFCARD > >===================== >To manage your subscription to SPSSX-L, send a message to [hidden email] (not to SPSSX-L), with no body text except the >command. To leave the list, send the command >SIGNOFF SPSSX-L >For a list of commands to manage subscriptions, send the command >INFO REFCARD > >===================== >To manage your subscription to SPSSX-L, send a message to >[hidden email] (not to SPSSX-L), with no body text except the >command. To leave the list, send the command >SIGNOFF SPSSX-L >For a list of commands to manage subscriptions, send the command >INFO REFCARD ===================== To manage your subscription to SPSSX-L, send a message to [hidden email] (not to SPSSX-L), with no body text except the command. To leave the list, send the command SIGNOFF SPSSX-L For a list of commands to manage subscriptions, send the command INFO REFCARD |
Okay, Albert-Jan, good to know. Thanks for the additional remark. Mario Albert-Jan Roskam <[hidden email]> schrieb am 8:54 Dienstag, 30.September 2014: You have to tell unicode() which encoding to use, else sys.getdefaultencoding() is used (ascii). ------------------------------ On Mon, Sep 29, 2014 1:18 PM CEST Mario Giesel wrote: >Thanks Jon! > >Unicoding the string with u'''...''' works perfectly well. >The function unicode('''...'''), however, did not produce a correct result. > >Thanks, again, > Mario > > > >Jon K Peck <[hidden email]> schrieb am 19:16 Mittwoch, 24.September 2014: > > > >I see the problem. The following >version works. For a literal constant, as here, you could also just >use >syntax = u'''/* Österreich (use German >'Oe')*/ >FREQUENCIES q01. >''' >If the text in question is a variable, >then the unicode function would be needed. > > > >BEGIN PROGRAM PYTHON. >#!/usr/bin/env python >syntax = unicode('''/* Österreich (use >German 'Oe')*/ >FREQUENCIES q01. >''') ># write syntax into new syntax window >import SpssClient >SpssClient.StartClient() >NewSyntaxDoc = SpssClient.NewSyntaxDoc() >NewSyntaxDoc.SetSyntax(syntax) >NewSyntaxDoc.SetAsDesignatedSyntaxDoc() >SpssClient.StopClient() >END PROGRAM. > > >Jon Peck (no "h") aka Kim >Senior Software Engineer, IBM >[hidden email] >phone: 720-342-5621 > > > > >From: > Mario Giesel <[hidden email]> >To: > [hidden email] >Date: > 09/24/2014 09:33 AM >Subject: > Re: [SPSSX-L] >python umlauts problem >Sent by: > "SPSSX(r) >Discussion" <[hidden email]> >________________________________ > > > >* 1. >DATA LIST /country 1-1 gender 2-2. >BEGIN DATA >12 >21 >END DATA. >VALUE LABELS country 1 'Dänemark' 2 'Österreich'. >VALUE LABELS gender 1 'Männlich' 2 'Weiblich'. >CTABLES /TABLE gender by country /* umlauts are shown correctly, also with >FREQUENCIES */. >=> > country > Dänemark Österreich > Anzahl Anzahl >gender Männlich 0 1 > Weiblich 1 0 > >* 2. >SHOW UNICODE /* result is Yes */. >=> >Systemeinstellungen >Schlüsselwort Beschreibung Einstellung >UNICODE Angabe, ob der Prozessor im Unicodemodus betrieben >wird Ja > >* 3. >SHOW LOCALE. >=> >Systemeinstellungen >Schlüsselwort Beschreibung Einstellung >LOCALE Land und Zeichensatz de_DE.windows-1252 >(de_DE) > >Hope that helps, Jon. I'm in a two days >vacation now. > >Thanks, Mario > > > >Jon K Peck <[hidden email]> schrieb >am 16:01 Mittwoch, 24.September 2014: > > >You can see the current setting via >Edit >Options. In V22 it is on the Language tab. You can >also run SHOW UNICODE, which might be better for Server. > >Since there are no umlaut characters in the Python code, I expect that >you would get the same behavior just running the Frequencies command directly. > Is that what happens? > >If you want to send me the file, I can try this out. Let me know >also what the output is for SHOW LOCALE. > > >Jon Peck (no "h") aka Kim >Senior Software Engineer, IBM >[hidden email] >phone: 720-342-5621 > > > > >From: Mario >Giesel <[hidden email]> >To: Jon >K Peck/Chicago/[hidden email] >Date: 09/24/2014 >07:47 AM >Subject: Re: >[SPSSX-L] python umlauts problem > >________________________________ > > > >Thanks, Jon, I don't know how to check for UNICODE mode. >I use normal SPSS 22 on Windows server without changing a mode. >Meanwhile I found out that all German umlauts are affected: > >/* Ä / Ö / Ü / ä / ö / ü / ß */ >become >/* Ä / Ö / Ãœ / ä ö ü ß */ > > > Mario > > >Jon K Peck <[hidden email]> schrieb am 23:17 Dienstag, 23.September >2014: > > >This might be a different problem from the one I sent mail about earlier. > Are you in Unicode mode? The mangled character looks like the >utf-8 byte sequence for the umlauted character. I am traveling at >the moment and can't check further, but the umlaut hotfix would still be >a good idea. > > >Jon Peck (no "h") aka Kim >Senior Software Engineer, IBM >[hidden email] >phone: 720-342-5621 > > > > >From: Mario >Giesel <[hidden email]> >To: [hidden email] >Date: 09/23/2014 >10:02 AM >Subject: [SPSSX-L] >python umlauts problem >Sent by: "SPSSX(r) >Discussion" <[hidden email]> > >________________________________ > > > >* Hello, SPSS friends, >I'm writing automatically constructed syntax into a syntax window which >works fine; >However, I have problems with umlauts see example below; >I also tried ># -*- coding: utf-8 -*- >but to no avail; >any ideas?. > >BEGIN PROGRAM PYTHON. >#!/usr/bin/env python ># -*- coding: iso-8859-1 -*- >syntax = '''/* Österreich (use German 'Oe')*/ >FREQUENCIES q01. >''' ># write syntax into new syntax window >import SpssClient >SpssClient.StartClient() >NewSyntaxDoc = SpssClient.NewSyntaxDoc() >NewSyntaxDoc.SetSyntax(syntax) >NewSyntaxDoc.SetAsDesignatedSyntaxDoc() >SpssClient.StopClient() >END PROGRAM. > >* Result: >/* Österreich (use German 'Oe')*/ >FREQUENCIES q01. > >. > >===================== To manage your subscription to SPSSX-L, send a message >to [hidden email](not to SPSSX-L), with no body text except the command. To leave the list, >send the command SIGNOFF SPSSX-L For a list of commands to manage subscriptions, >send the command INFO REFCARD > > > > > >===================== To manage your subscription to SPSSX-L, >send a message to [hidden email](not to SPSSX-L), with no body text except the command. To leave the list, >send the command SIGNOFF SPSSX-L For a list of commands to manage subscriptions, >send the command INFO REFCARD > >===================== >To manage your subscription to SPSSX-L, send a message to [hidden email] (not to SPSSX-L), with no body text except the >command. To leave the list, send the command >SIGNOFF SPSSX-L >For a list of commands to manage subscriptions, send the command >INFO REFCARD > >===================== >To manage your subscription to SPSSX-L, send a message to >[hidden email] (not to SPSSX-L), with no body text except the >command. To leave the list, send the command >SIGNOFF SPSSX-L >For a list of commands to manage subscriptions, send the command >INFO REFCARD ===================== To manage your subscription to SPSSX-L, send a message to [hidden email] (not to SPSSX-L), with no body text except the command. To leave the list, send the command SIGNOFF SPSSX-L For a list of commands to manage subscriptions, send the command INFO REFCARD
Mario Giesel
Munich, Germany |
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