# This Python file uses the following encoding: utf-8 ############################################################################# ## ## Copyright (C) 2018 The Qt Company Ltd. ## Contact: https://www.qt.io/licensing/ ## ## This file is part of Qt for Python. ## ## $QT_BEGIN_LICENSE:LGPL$ ## Commercial License Usage ## Licensees holding valid commercial Qt licenses may use this file in ## accordance with the commercial license agreement provided with the ## Software or, alternatively, in accordance with the terms contained in ## a written agreement between you and The Qt Company. For licensing terms ## and conditions see https://www.qt.io/terms-conditions. For further ## information use the contact form at https://www.qt.io/contact-us. ## ## GNU Lesser General Public License Usage ## Alternatively, this file may be used under the terms of the GNU Lesser ## General Public License version 3 as published by the Free Software ## Foundation and appearing in the file LICENSE.LGPL3 included in the ## packaging of this file. Please review the following information to ## ensure the GNU Lesser General Public License version 3 requirements ## will be met: https://www.gnu.org/licenses/lgpl-3.0.html. ## ## GNU General Public License Usage ## Alternatively, this file may be used under the terms of the GNU ## General Public License version 2.0 or (at your option) the GNU General ## Public license version 3 or any later version approved by the KDE Free ## Qt Foundation. The licenses are as published by the Free Software ## Foundation and appearing in the file LICENSE.GPL2 and LICENSE.GPL3 ## included in the packaging of this file. Please review the following ## information to ensure the GNU General Public License requirements will ## be met: https://www.gnu.org/licenses/gpl-2.0.html and ## https://www.gnu.org/licenses/gpl-3.0.html. ## ## $QT_END_LICENSE$ ## ############################################################################# """ emoji-string-test.py This is the original code from the bug report https://bugreports.qt.io/browse/PYSIDE-336 The only changes are the emoji constant creation which avoids unicode in the source itself, utf8 encoding in line 1 and a short plausibility test to make it safely fail. """ import sys from PySide2 import QtCore emoji_str = u'\U0001f632' + u' ' # "😲 " class TestStuff(QtCore.QObject): testsig = QtCore.Signal(str) def a_nop(self, sendMeAnEmoji): print(sendMeAnEmoji) return def __init__(self): super(TestStuff, self).__init__() self.testsig.connect(self.a_nop) self.testsig.emit(emoji_str) def plausi(self): # Python 2 may be built with UCS-2 or UCS-4 support. # UCS-2 creates 2 surrogate code points. See # https://stackoverflow.com/questions/30775689/python-length-of-unicode-string-confusion assert len(emoji_str) == 2 if sys.maxunicode > 0xffff else 3 if __name__ == "__main__": mything = TestStuff() mything.plausi()