Return the Unicode string of one character whose Unicode code is the
integer \var{i}. For example, \code{unichr(97)} returns the string
\code{u'a'}. This is the inverse of \function{ord()} for Unicode
- strings. The argument must be in the range [0..65535], inclusive.
+ strings. The valid range for the argument depends how Python was
+ configured -- it may be either UCS2 [0..0xFFFF] or UCS4 [0..0x10FFFF].
\exception{ValueError} is raised otherwise.
\versionadded{2.0}
\end{funcdesc}