How to find out if Python is compiled with UCS-2 or UCS-4?

Just what the title says.

$ ./configure --help | grep -i ucs
  --enable-unicode[=ucs[24]]

Searching the official documentation, I found this:

sys.maxunicode: An integer giving the
largest supported code point for a
Unicode character. The value of this
depends on the configuration option
that specifies whether Unicode
characters are stored as UCS-2 or
UCS-4.

What is not clear here is – which value(s) correspond to UCS-2 and UCS-4.

The code is expected to work on Python 2.6+.

Answers:

Thank you for visiting the Q&A section on Magenaut. Please note that all the answers may not help you solve the issue immediately. So please treat them as advisements. If you found the post helpful (or not), leave a comment & I’ll get back to you as soon as possible.

Method 1

When built with –enable-unicode=ucs4:

>>> import sys
>>> print sys.maxunicode
1114111

When built with –enable-unicode=ucs2:

>>> import sys
>>> print sys.maxunicode
65535

Method 2

It’s 0xFFFF (or 65535) for UCS-2, and 0x10FFFF (or 1114111) for UCS-4:

Py_UNICODE
PyUnicode_GetMax(void)
{
#ifdef Py_UNICODE_WIDE
    return 0x10FFFF;
#else
    /* This is actually an illegal character, so it should
       not be passed to unichr. */
    return 0xFFFF;
#endif
}

The maximum character in UCS-4 mode is defined by the maxmimum value representable in UTF-16.

Method 3

I had this same issue once. I documented it for myself on my wiki at

http://arcoleo.org/dsawiki/Wiki.jsp?page=Python%20UTF%20-%20UCS2%20or%20UCS4

I wrote –

import sys
sys.maxunicode > 65536 and 'UCS4' or 'UCS2'

Method 4

sysconfig will tell the unicode size from the configuration variables of python.

The buildflags can be queried like this.

Python 2.7:

import sysconfig
sysconfig.get_config_var('Py_UNICODE_SIZE')

Python 2.6:

import distutils
distutils.sysconfig.get_config_var('Py_UNICODE_SIZE')

Method 5

I had the same issue and found a semi-official piece of code that does exactly that and may be interesting for people with the same issue: https://bitbucket.org/pypa/wheel/src/cf4e2d98ecb1f168c50a6de496959b4a10c6b122/wheel/pep425tags.py?at=default&fileviewer=file-view-default#pep425tags.py-83:89.

It comes from the wheel project which needs to check if the python is compiled with ucs-2 or ucs-4 because it will change the name of the binary file generated.

Method 6

Another way is to create an Unicode array and look at the itemsize:

import array
bytes_per_char = array.array('u').itemsize

Quote from the array docs:

The 'u' typecode corresponds to Python’s unicode character. On narrow Unicode builds this is 2-bytes, on wide builds this is 4-bytes.

Note that the distinction between narrow and wide Unicode builds is dropped from Python 3.3 onward, see PEP393. The 'u' typecode for array is deprecated since 3.3 and scheduled for removal in Python 4.0.

Method 7

65535 is UCS-2:

Thus code point U+0000 is encoded as the number 0, and U+FFFF is encoded as 65535 (which is FFFF16 in hexadecimal).


All methods was sourced from stackoverflow.com or stackexchange.com, is licensed under cc by-sa 2.5, cc by-sa 3.0 and cc by-sa 4.0

0 0 votes
Article Rating
Subscribe
Notify of
guest

0 Comments
Oldest
Newest Most Voted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
0
Would love your thoughts, please comment.x
()
x