* Firstly, thanks for sending this issue to the group: pygments & minted are very interesting tools for OrgMode/LaTeX persons. ** Read this http://ctan.mackichan.com/macros/latex/contrib/minted/minted.pdf ** And this: http://pygments.org/docs/unicode/ *** Seems that running the pygmetize from the command line has some provisos. *** Also, noticed this in bold type at http://pygments.org/docs/unicodethat might help you: "Since Pygments 0.6, all lexers use unicode strings internally. Because of that you might encounter the occasional UnicodeDecodeError if you pass strings with the wrong encoding. ... The formatters now send Unicode objects to the stream if you don't set the output encoding. You can do so by passing the formatters an encoding option: from pygments.formatters import HtmlFormatter f = HtmlFormatter(encoding='utf-8') You will have to set this option if you have non-ASCII characters in the source and the output stream does not accept Unicode written to it! This is the case for all regular files and for terminals." ---------- Forwarded message ---------- From: François Pinard Date: 2012/1/4 Subject: [O] Org mode, minted, and non-ASCII To: emacs-orgmode@gnu.org Hi, Org people. Still experimenting around for this report, I installed *minted* so one of the appendices might nicely display a bulky bit of Python code. It works satisfactorily (and speedily enough) if I squash out all diacriticized and other Unicode special symbols in the file. However, no output is produced if I leave the tiniest non-ASCII character in the file. OK, OK, don't kill me :-). Agreed that all non-ASCII characters are neither tinier or bigger than one another in this context. The Org document, the Python sources, and the default charset for this machine are all UTF-8. I saw no Unicode problem between Unicode and LaTeX when minted is not in the picture. pygmentize also appears to do well with Unicode input. So the problem likely lies either between Org mode and minted LaTex, or within minted. Is that a known problem or limitation? This problem is bit more hurtful here, as the Python code really uses Unicode, and mangling out Unicode characters really changes the semantic of the code as displayed in the report. If it was not for this problem, the minted output is attractive, at least more than what I saw with the listings package. On last resort and of course, I may still include an unfontified Python source in the appendix, or produce it by other means; not such a big deal, it's just that I would have liked to impress my coworkers a bit more with Org mode integration and capabilities. :-). To confuse me a little more, I'm getting random (I mean, unpredictable by me) "org-mode fontification error" diagnostics while creating the PDF output. Perusing org.el tells me that this is likely a mere coincidence, as those fontification errors seem wholly unrelated to LaTeX processing. François P.S. Who is a bit tired right now, and maybe missing something trivial? Tomorrow, I'll surely revisit most of today's experiments.