Version 22 (modified by Malcolm Tredinnick, 18 years ago) ( diff )

Removed "things to consider", since it's in the documentation now.

TOC

The unicode branch

This branch aims to make Django's internals fully Unicode-aware.

How to get the branch

svn co http://code.djangoproject.com/svn/django/branches/unicode/

See our branch policy for full information on how to use a branch.

Goals

The main goals of this branch are:

  • Make it easier for developers to work with non-ASCII character data when working with Django.
  • Be more consistent in our string handling behaviour inside Django (see StringEncoding for details on this).

Upon completion, you will be able to pass around unicode strings anywhere inside Django (or between Django and developer applications).

Note that we are not trying to switch to forcing everybody to only use unicode strings. You will also be able to pass around bytestrings and Django will assume they are UTF-8 encoded (we have to make an assumption because there is no way to tell what the encoding is otherwise). This feature means that a large chunk of existing code that uses Django will continue to work unchanged.

Status

The branch was created on April 7, 2007.

Reported bugs from trunk that have been fixed and will be closed once the branch is merged back into trunk can be viewed here.

Todo Items

The various pieces will be converted in roughly the following order:

  1. Template rendering (Done in [4971])
  2. Database I/O (Done in [4971] for postgresql, postgresql_psycopg2, mysql, mysql_old and sqlite backends)
    • Needs testing for servers/tables that are not in UTF-8 or ASCII encoding. The theory is that the client connection for each backend should be automatically converting everything to UTF-8 or Unicode objects (depends on backend), but this needs verifying. (Ivan Sagalaev and Malcolm have tested this feature a fair bit with various database servers, but more stress tests would be nice.)
  3. Model class support (Done in [5057])
  4. Form input encoding (Done in [5192])
  5. Other output methods:
    • syndication (Done in [5251])
    • serialization (Done in [5248])
    • Google sitemaps (Done in [5277])
  6. Audit other contrib modules (not all will require changes) (all Done as of [5274]).
  7. Verifying and fixing all bugs mentioned in Trac.
    • This includes the 9 tickets that were merged in #2489 (all Done, except for upgrading slug generation to be a little more useful with some foreign character sets.)

We also need to look at the i18n support functions (in django.utils.translation):

  • Decide on usage of gettext() versus ugettext() in a number of places (Done. Recommended to use ugettext() and friends everywhere. In [5230] this change has been made throughout the framework).
  • Look at fixing ugettext_lazy() so that it acts as a better string and unicode proxy. (Done: lots of fixes over a few commits to get this right, but it seems to be working well now, as least as s a unicode proxy, which is what is important.)

Finally, some documentation needs to be written describing good practices for creating unicode-aware Django apps.

Porting Applications (The Quick Checklist)

One of the design goals of the Unicode branch is that very little significant changes to existing third-party code should be required. However, there are some things that developers should be aware of when writing applications designed to handle international input.

A detailed list of things you might wish to think about when writing your code is in the unicode.txt file in the documentation directory. For the programmer on a deadline, here is the cheatsheet version (if you only use ASCII strings, none of these changes are necessary):

  1. Change the __str__ methods on your models to be __unicode__ methods. Just change the name. Usually, nothing else will be needed.
  1. Look for any str() calls in your code that operate on model fields. These should almost always be changed to smart_unicode() calls (which is imported from django.utils.encoding).
  1. Use the unicode versions of the django.utils.translation.* functions. Replace gettext and ngettext with ugettext and ungettext respectively. There are also ugettext_lazy and ungettext_lazy functions if you use the lazy versions.
  1. Make sure your database can store all the data you will send to it. Usually, this means ensuring it is using UTF-8 (or similar) encoding internally.
  1. Use the FILE_CHARSET setting if your on-disk template files are not UTF-8 encoded.

That is all. Enjoy!

Note: See TracWiki for help on using the wiki.
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