The reason for this error is that in Python 3, strings are Unicode, but when transmitting on the network, the data needs to be bytes instead. So… a couple of suggestions:
- Suggest using
c.sendall()
instead ofc.send()
to prevent possible issues where you may not have sent the entire msg with one call (see docs). - For literals, add a
'b'
for bytes string:c.sendall(b'Thank you for connecting')
- For variables, you need to encode Unicode strings to byte strings (see below)
Best solution (should work w/both 2.x & 3.x):
output = 'Thank you for connecting' c.sendall(output.encode('utf-8'))
Epilogue/background: this isn’t an issue in Python 2 because strings are bytes strings already — your OP code would work perfectly in that environment. Unicode strings were added to Python in releases 1.6 & 2.0 but took a back seat until 3.0 when they became the default string type. Also see this similar question as well as this one.