This stopped working on Windows, due to a reference to the non-existent

_locale.getdefaultlocale.  Guessing a leading underscore was intended,
but don't really understood this stuff (locale looks like Spanish for
the opposite of global to me <wink>).
This commit is contained in:
Tim Peters 2002-11-05 03:49:09 +00:00
parent bc5e3cc34f
commit a326f47a13
1 changed files with 1 additions and 1 deletions

View File

@ -397,7 +397,7 @@ if sys.platform in ('win32', 'darwin', 'mac'):
def getpreferredencoding(do_setlocale = True): def getpreferredencoding(do_setlocale = True):
"""Return the charset that the user is likely using.""" """Return the charset that the user is likely using."""
import _locale import _locale
return _locale.getdefaultlocale()[1] return _locale._getdefaultlocale()[1]
else: else:
# On Unix, if CODESET is available, use that. # On Unix, if CODESET is available, use that.
try: try: