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UnicodeDecodeError with output from Windows OS command

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  • jsulmJ jsulm

    @JNBarchan Are you sure your data is utf-8?

    JonBJ Offline
    JonBJ Offline
    JonB
    wrote on last edited by JonB
    #8

    @jsulm
    No, I'm not. You tell me: what's the output returned from an OS command under Windows? See the thread of mine https://forum.qt.io/topic/85064/python3-pyqt5-x-qbytearray-to-string [BTW, this particular OS command --- not that it should matter --- is robocopy under a purely UK Windows. I really would not expect anything "funny" to be going on here, character-wise. And the solution required is a generic one, to work with any arbitrary command (assuming it basically outputs "text", I'm not interested if it were genuinely to return arbitrary binary bytes, that won't happen).]

    The whole point to my way of thinking is, as I have said above, I have written code under, say, Windows many times in the past to grab & display output from a sub-process and have never had to know/guess/call anything to do with encoding, so I don't see why I should have to here.

    As I wrote and am asking, I have always simply accepted the raw bytes from the command output and shoved them into an edit/text control for display to the user and have never had a problem.

    I don't know what's going with Qt's QByteArray and need to turn it into QString as I need to with the Qt calls and/or the PyQt/Python issue. See the final paragraph in my previous post. I don't want to know about encoding, I don't want to do any decoding, and I don't see why I should have to so I would never get such an error as I'm stuck on now?

    jsulmJ 1 Reply Last reply
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    • JonBJ JonB

      @jsulm
      No, I'm not. You tell me: what's the output returned from an OS command under Windows? See the thread of mine https://forum.qt.io/topic/85064/python3-pyqt5-x-qbytearray-to-string [BTW, this particular OS command --- not that it should matter --- is robocopy under a purely UK Windows. I really would not expect anything "funny" to be going on here, character-wise. And the solution required is a generic one, to work with any arbitrary command (assuming it basically outputs "text", I'm not interested if it were genuinely to return arbitrary binary bytes, that won't happen).]

      The whole point to my way of thinking is, as I have said above, I have written code under, say, Windows many times in the past to grab & display output from a sub-process and have never had to know/guess/call anything to do with encoding, so I don't see why I should have to here.

      As I wrote and am asking, I have always simply accepted the raw bytes from the command output and shoved them into an edit/text control for display to the user and have never had a problem.

      I don't know what's going with Qt's QByteArray and need to turn it into QString as I need to with the Qt calls and/or the PyQt/Python issue. See the final paragraph in my previous post. I don't want to know about encoding, I don't want to do any decoding, and I don't see why I should have to so I would never get such an error as I'm stuck on now?

      jsulmJ Offline
      jsulmJ Offline
      jsulm
      Lifetime Qt Champion
      wrote on last edited by
      #9

      @JNBarchan As far as I know Windows uses 16 bit Unicode (UTF-16).

      https://forum.qt.io/topic/113070/qt-code-of-conduct

      JonBJ 1 Reply Last reply
      1
      • jsulmJ jsulm

        @JNBarchan As far as I know Windows uses 16 bit Unicode (UTF-16).

        JonBJ Offline
        JonBJ Offline
        JonB
        wrote on last edited by
        #10

        @jsulm
        Hmm, I really don't think so? That would mean 2 bytes per character, is that right?? If under Windows you just go echo hello > file, and then inspect the file, it's 1 byte per character? I did say, I have never claimed to understand this encoding and UTF-8/16 stuff....

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        • SGaistS Offline
          SGaistS Offline
          SGaist
          Lifetime Qt Champion
          wrote on last edited by
          #11

          Hi,

          AFAIK @jsulm is right.

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          Please read the Qt Code of Conduct - https://forum.qt.io/topic/113070/qt-code-of-conduct

          JonBJ 1 Reply Last reply
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          • SGaistS SGaist

            Hi,

            AFAIK @jsulm is right.

            JonBJ Offline
            JonBJ Offline
            JonB
            wrote on last edited by JonB
            #12

            @SGaist
            OK, when you & @jsulm say something it's usually right. We must be talking about different things. What do you two mean/understand by:

            As far as I know Windows uses 16 bit Unicode (UTF-16).

            Windows uses utf-16 for what? I have been talking about the output from running a command, which is what I'm trying to read in, or the contents of a file if you like. And that certainly is not 16-bit representation for characters, so are you talking about something else?

            [EDIT: OK, I knew you guys knew your stuff... I'm reading https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Unicode_in_Microsoft_Windows to understand what this is all about...]

            Look, please, guys. I asked earlier:

            1.I am using QByteArray QProcess::readAllStandardOutput() to read the output from the spawned program.
            2.I wish to output those bytes to a QTextEdit, so using QTextEdit::setText(const QString &text).
            3.This means I need to convert a QByteArray to a QString.
            4.How would you do this from C++ ??

            Could you just tell me what tiny piece of code you would use to convert the QByteArray to a QString in the above circumstance?

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            • SGaistS Offline
              SGaistS Offline
              SGaist
              Lifetime Qt Champion
              wrote on last edited by
              #13

              In C++, you would just make: myTextEdit->setText(myProcess->readAllStandardOutput());

              Interested in AI ? www.idiap.ch
              Please read the Qt Code of Conduct - https://forum.qt.io/topic/113070/qt-code-of-conduct

              JonBJ 2 Replies Last reply
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              • SGaistS SGaist

                In C++, you would just make: myTextEdit->setText(myProcess->readAllStandardOutput());

                JonBJ Offline
                JonBJ Offline
                JonB
                wrote on last edited by JonB
                #14

                @SGaist
                Wow! That's what I've waiting to hear for ages.

                Then that's all I'm trying to do from Python/PyQt, isn't it?! But you can't, I thought it was the very first thing I tried, and it complained that myProcess->readAllStandardOutput() returns QByteArray while myTextEdit->setText() only accepts QString? How does void QTextEdit::setText(const QString &text) accept QByteArray QProcess::readAllStandardOutput() in your C++?

                I said I never wanted to have to write any "decoding" code if I didn't need to. What you've written is just what I would always have loved. But I thought this is where the PyQt behaviour of not letting us use QByteArray or QString directly means we have to go through native Python bytes & str conversions, and then the decode() is required. That was the whole point of my related post at https://forum.qt.io/topic/85064/python3-pyqt5-x-qbytearray-to-string

                I'm so confused by all this, it really shouldn't be this hard to know how to write code to copy the output of an arbitrary OS command into a text control to show to the user, but from Python/PyQt....

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                • SGaistS Offline
                  SGaistS Offline
                  SGaist
                  Lifetime Qt Champion
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #15

                  Because of the QString constructor taking a QByteArray as parameter.

                  Did you try with textEdit.setText(u'{}'.format(ba.data())) ?

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                  Please read the Qt Code of Conduct - https://forum.qt.io/topic/113070/qt-code-of-conduct

                  JonBJ 1 Reply Last reply
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                  • SGaistS SGaist

                    Because of the QString constructor taking a QByteArray as parameter.

                    Did you try with textEdit.setText(u'{}'.format(ba.data())) ?

                    JonBJ Offline
                    JonBJ Offline
                    JonB
                    wrote on last edited by JonB
                    #16

                    @SGaist
                    OK, we're getting somewhere!

                    Because of the QString constructor taking a QByteArray as parameter.

                    Yeah, that makes sense. As I understand it, Python str does not accept a bytes implicitly, you have to specify a decode() with a named encoding, which is exactly what I've been struggling with in all these posts. :(

                    [This may all be to do with https://riverbankcomputing.com/pipermail/pyqt/2010-January/025564.html]

                    Did you try with textEdit.setText(u'{}'.format(ba.data())) ?

                    No, 'coz nobody has suggested anything like that! In the other thread a visiting PyQt expert said to use decode('utf-8'), and that's where I've been getting the exception with the £ character from. I shall certainly try your suggestion tomorrow.

                    Thank you so much for your time!

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                    • SGaistS SGaist

                      In C++, you would just make: myTextEdit->setText(myProcess->readAllStandardOutput());

                      JonBJ Offline
                      JonBJ Offline
                      JonB
                      wrote on last edited by JonB
                      #17

                      @SGaist said in UnicodeDecodeError with output from Windows OS command:

                      In C++, you would just make: myTextEdit->setText(myProcess->readAllStandardOutput());

                      For the record, a PyQt expert is telling me this will suffer from the same problem (though it may not report it explicitly), in that without being told an encoding it will use utf-8, and it won't know what to do with that £ character. Do you know what this would actually show when the output contains a £/byte value of 0x9c ?

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                      • JonBJ Offline
                        JonBJ Offline
                        JonB
                        wrote on last edited by JonB
                        #18

                        [This post cross-posted to https://forum.qt.io/topic/85064/qbytearray-to-string/27 ]

                        For the record, I have done exhaustive investigation, and there is only one solution which "correctly" displays the £ character under Windows. I am exhausted so will keep this brief:

                        1. To create a file name with a £ in it: Go into, say, Notepad and use its Save to name a file like abc£.txt. This is in the UK, using a UK keyboard and a standard UK-configured Windows.

                        2. Note that at this point if you view the filename in either Explorer or, say, via dir you do see a £, not some other character. That's what my user will want to see in the output of the command he will run.

                        3. Run an OS command like robocopy or even dir, which will include the filename in its output.

                        4. Read the output with QProcess.readAllStandardOutput(). I'm saying the £ character will arrive as a single byte of value 0x9c.

                        5. For the required Python/PyQt decoding bytes->str (QByteArray->QString) line, the only thing which works (does not raise an exception) AND represents the character as a £ is: ba.bytes().decode("cp850").

                        That is the "Code Page 850", used in UK/Western Europe (so I'm told). It is the result output of you open a Command Prompt and execute just chcp.

                        Any other decoding either raises UnicodeDecodeError (e.g. if utf-8) or decodes but represents it with another character (e.g. if windows_1252 or cp1252).

                        I still haven't found a way of getting that cp850 encoding name programatically from anywhere --- if you ask Python for, say, the "system encoding" or "user's preferred encoding" you get the cp1252 --- so I've had to hard-code it. [EDIT: If you want it, it's ctypes.cdll.kernel32.GetConsoleOutputCP().]

                        So there you are. I don't have C++ as opposed to Python for Qt, but I have a suspicion that if anyone tries it using the straight C++ Qt way of text = QString(process.readAllStandardOutput()) they'll find they do not actually get to see the £ symbol....

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