# SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-3.0-only from ftfy.badness import sequence_weirdness def is_nfc(field): """Utility function to check whether a string is using normalized Unicode. Python's built-in unicodedata library has the is_normalized() function, but it was only introduced in Python 3.8. By using a simple utility function we are able to run on Python >= 3.6 again. See: https://docs.python.org/3/library/unicodedata.html Return boolean. """ from unicodedata import normalize return field == normalize("NFC", field) def is_mojibake(field): """Determines whether a string contains mojibake. We commonly deal with CSV files that were *encoded* in UTF-8, but decoded as something else like CP-1252 (Windows Latin). This manifests in the form of "mojibake", for example: - CIAT Publicaçao - CIAT Publicación This uses the excellent "fixes text for you" (ftfy) library to determine whether a string contains characters that have been encoded in one encoding and decoded in another. Inspired by this code snippet from Martijn Pieters on StackOverflow: https://stackoverflow.com/questions/29071995/identify-garbage-unicode-string-using-python Return boolean. """ if not sequence_weirdness(field): # Nothing weird, should be okay return False try: field.encode("sloppy-windows-1252") except UnicodeEncodeError: # Not CP-1252 encodable, probably fine return False else: # Encodable as CP-1252, Mojibake alert level high return True