import unicodedata # Let's get the names of the specific characters in the user's manual decode output # s = "рќ ѕA𝙉𝙠𝠼𝙍𝙄 рќ ѕрќ™Ќрќ™Ђрќ™Ћрќ™ рќ јрќ™Ќрќ™„ рќ™„рќ™Љрќ™Ћрќ™„рќ™Ѓ 𝙁𝙄𝙇𝙄𝙋 - рќ Љрќ €рќ •рќ ›рќ €рќ ™рќ Њ ГЋрќ • рќ “рќ ђрќ рќ ‰рќ € рќ ™рќ –рќ рќ €рќ •рќ ђ" # Characters like рќ ѕ are actually single characters in the interpreter output. # I'll just iterate over the string and print the names. s = "рќ ѕA𝙉𝙠𝠼𝙍𝙄 рќ ѕрќ™Ќрќ™Ђрќ™Ћрќ™ рќ јрќ™Ќрќ™„ рќ™„рќ™Љрќ™Ћрќ™„рќ™Ѓ 𝙁𝙄𝙇𝙄𝙋 - рќ Љрќ €рќ •рќ ›рќ €рќ ™рќ Њ рќ • рќ “рќ ђрќ рќ ‰рќ € рќ ™рќ –рќ рќ €рќ •рќ ђ" for char in s: try: print(f"{char}: {unicodedata.name(char)}") except: pass Use code with caution. Copied to clipboard
Based on the recognizable fragments and the year mentioned, this likely refers to a "LIVE 2022" event. However, since the primary text is corrupted beyond reliable reconstruction, I have created a helpful guide on how to this type of garbled text so you can recover the original information. Guide: Decoding "Mojibake" (Garbled Text) import unicodedata # Let's get the names of
The fastest way to fix this is using specialized tools that "reverse" the encoding error. Retailers or services like 2cyr.com or Universal Cyrillic Decoder are specifically designed to handle Russian and Cyrillic text that has been scrambled into "krokodyabry" (nonsense characters). 2. Identify the Likely Original Language Copied to clipboard Based on the recognizable fragments