python jsonify dictionary in utf-8
Use the following config to add UTF-8 support:
app.config['JSON_AS_ASCII'] = False
Use the standard-library json
module instead, and set the ensure_ascii
keyword parameter to False when encoding, or do the same with flask.json.dumps()
:
>>> data = u'\u10e2\u10d4\u10e1\u10e2'
>>> import json
>>> json.dumps(data)
'"\\u10e2\\u10d4\\u10e1\\u10e2"'
>>> json.dumps(data, ensure_ascii=False)
u'"\u10e2\u10d4\u10e1\u10e2"'
>>> print json.dumps(data, ensure_ascii=False)
"ტესტ"
>>> json.dumps(data, ensure_ascii=False).encode('utf8')
'"\xe1\x83\xa2\xe1\x83\x94\xe1\x83\xa1\xe1\x83\xa2"'
Note that you still need to explicitly encode the result to UTF8 because the dumps()
function returns a unicode
object in that case.
You can make this the default (and use jsonify()
again) by setting JSON_AS_ASCII
to False in your Flask app config.
WARNING: do not include untrusted data in JSON that is not ASCII-safe, and then interpolate into a HTML template or use in a JSONP API, as you can cause syntax errors or open a cross-site scripting vulnerability this way. That's because JSON is not a strict subset of Javascript, and when disabling ASCII-safe encoding the U+2028 and U+2029 separators will not be escaped to \u2028
and \u2029
sequences.
If you still want to user flask's json and ensure the utf-8 encoding then you can do something like this:
from flask import json,Response
@app.route("/")
def hello():
my_list = []
my_list.append(u'ტესტ')
data = { "result" : my_list}
json_string = json.dumps(data,ensure_ascii = False)
#creating a Response object to set the content type and the encoding
response = Response(json_string,content_type="application/json; charset=utf-8" )
return response
#I hope this helps