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Backport PR #4163: Fix for incorrect default encoding on Windows....
Backport PR #4163: Fix for incorrect default encoding on Windows. Whilst trying out rendering notebooks in a flask app under Apache on Windows I got the below error when simply trying to import `SlidesExporter` ```python mod_wsgi (pid=6260): Exception occurred processing WSGI script 'flask_test.wsgi'. Traceback (most recent call last): File "flask_test.py", line 81, in render_notebook from IPython.nbconvert.exporters import SlidesExporter File "c:\\dev\\code\\ipython\\IPython\\__init__.py", line 47, in <module> from .terminal.embed import embed File "c:\\dev\\code\\ipython\\IPython\\terminal\\embed.py", line 32, in <module> from IPython.terminal.interactiveshell import TerminalInteractiveShell File "c:\\dev\\code\\ipython\\IPython\\terminal\\interactiveshell.py", line 25, in <module> from IPython.core.interactiveshell import InteractiveShell, InteractiveShellABC File "c:\\dev\\code\\ipython\\IPython\\core\\interactiveshell.py", line 59, in <module> from IPython.core.prompts import PromptManager File "c:\\dev\\code\\ipython\\IPython\\core\\prompts.py", line 138, in <module> HOME = py3compat.str_to_unicode(os.environ.get("HOME","//////:::::ZZZZZ,,,~~~")) File "c:\\dev\\code\\ipython\\IPython\\utils\\py3compat.py", line 18, in decode return s.decode(encoding, "replace") LookupError: unknown encoding: cp0 ``` A little bit of [googling](http://bugs.python.org/issue6501) suggests that Windows returns 'cp0' to indicate there is no code page. This fix simply looks for this invalid value and replaces it with something valid. With this change it works for me.

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test_example.txt
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=====================================
Tests in example form - pure python
=====================================
This file contains doctest examples embedded as code blocks, using normal
Python prompts. See the accompanying file for similar examples using IPython
prompts (you can't mix both types within one file). The following will be run
as a test::
>>> 1+1
2
>>> print ("hello")
hello
More than one example works::
>>> s="Hello World"
>>> s.upper()
'HELLO WORLD'
but you should note that the *entire* test file is considered to be a single
test. Individual code blocks that fail are printed separately as ``example
failures``, but the whole file is still counted and reported as one test.