root/lang/perl/Encode/trunk/Encode.pm @ 6324

Revision 2133, 28.6 kB (checked in by dankogai, 5 years ago)

POD fix by tels

Line 
1#
2# $Id: Encode.pm,v 2.23 2007/05/29 18:15:32 dankogai Exp dankogai $
3#
4package Encode;
5use strict;
6use warnings;
7our $VERSION = sprintf "%d.%02d", q$Revision: 2.23 $ =~ /(\d+)/g;
8sub DEBUG () { 0 }
9use XSLoader ();
10XSLoader::load( __PACKAGE__, $VERSION );
11
12require Exporter;
13use base qw/Exporter/;
14
15# Public, encouraged API is exported by default
16
17our @EXPORT = qw(
18  decode  decode_utf8  encode  encode_utf8 str2bytes bytes2str
19  encodings  find_encoding clone_encoding
20);
21our @FB_FLAGS = qw(
22  DIE_ON_ERR WARN_ON_ERR RETURN_ON_ERR LEAVE_SRC
23  PERLQQ HTMLCREF XMLCREF STOP_AT_PARTIAL
24);
25our @FB_CONSTS = qw(
26  FB_DEFAULT FB_CROAK FB_QUIET FB_WARN
27  FB_PERLQQ FB_HTMLCREF FB_XMLCREF
28);
29our @EXPORT_OK = (
30    qw(
31      _utf8_off _utf8_on define_encoding from_to is_16bit is_8bit
32      is_utf8 perlio_ok resolve_alias utf8_downgrade utf8_upgrade
33      ),
34    @FB_FLAGS, @FB_CONSTS,
35);
36
37our %EXPORT_TAGS = (
38    all          => [ @EXPORT,    @EXPORT_OK ],
39    fallbacks    => [@FB_CONSTS],
40    fallback_all => [ @FB_CONSTS, @FB_FLAGS ],
41);
42
43# Documentation moved after __END__ for speed - NI-S
44
45our $ON_EBCDIC = ( ord("A") == 193 );
46
47use Encode::Alias;
48
49# Make a %Encoding package variable to allow a certain amount of cheating
50our %Encoding;
51our %ExtModule;
52require Encode::Config;
53eval { require Encode::ConfigLocal };
54
55sub encodings {
56    my $class = shift;
57    my %enc;
58    if ( @_ and $_[0] eq ":all" ) {
59        %enc = ( %Encoding, %ExtModule );
60    }
61    else {
62        %enc = %Encoding;
63        for my $mod ( map { m/::/o ? $_ : "Encode::$_" } @_ ) {
64            DEBUG and warn $mod;
65            for my $enc ( keys %ExtModule ) {
66                $ExtModule{$enc} eq $mod and $enc{$enc} = $mod;
67            }
68        }
69    }
70    return sort { lc $a cmp lc $b }
71      grep      { !/^(?:Internal|Unicode|Guess)$/o } keys %enc;
72}
73
74sub perlio_ok {
75    my $obj = ref( $_[0] ) ? $_[0] : find_encoding( $_[0] );
76    $obj->can("perlio_ok") and return $obj->perlio_ok();
77    return 0;    # safety net
78}
79
80sub define_encoding {
81    my $obj  = shift;
82    my $name = shift;
83    $Encoding{$name} = $obj;
84    my $lc = lc($name);
85    define_alias( $lc => $obj ) unless $lc eq $name;
86    while (@_) {
87        my $alias = shift;
88        define_alias( $alias, $obj );
89    }
90    return $obj;
91}
92
93sub getEncoding {
94    my ( $class, $name, $skip_external ) = @_;
95
96    ref($name) && $name->can('renew') and return $name;
97    exists $Encoding{$name} and return $Encoding{$name};
98    my $lc = lc $name;
99    exists $Encoding{$lc} and return $Encoding{$lc};
100
101    my $oc = $class->find_alias($name);
102    defined($oc) and return $oc;
103    $lc ne $name and $oc = $class->find_alias($lc);
104    defined($oc) and return $oc;
105
106    unless ($skip_external) {
107        if ( my $mod = $ExtModule{$name} || $ExtModule{$lc} ) {
108            $mod =~ s,::,/,g;
109            $mod .= '.pm';
110            eval { require $mod; };
111            exists $Encoding{$name} and return $Encoding{$name};
112        }
113    }
114    return;
115}
116
117sub find_encoding($;$) {
118    my ( $name, $skip_external ) = @_;
119    return __PACKAGE__->getEncoding( $name, $skip_external );
120}
121
122sub resolve_alias($) {
123    my $obj = find_encoding(shift);
124    defined $obj and return $obj->name;
125    return;
126}
127
128sub clone_encoding($) {
129    my $obj = find_encoding(shift);
130    ref $obj or return;
131    eval { require Storable };
132    $@ and return;
133    return Storable::dclone($obj);
134}
135
136sub encode($$;$) {
137    my ( $name, $string, $check ) = @_;
138    return undef unless defined $string;
139    $string .= '' if ref $string;    # stringify;
140    $check ||= 0;
141    my $enc = find_encoding($name);
142    unless ( defined $enc ) {
143        require Carp;
144        Carp::croak("Unknown encoding '$name'");
145    }
146    my $octets = $enc->encode( $string, $check );
147    $_[1] = $string if $check and !ref $check and !( $check & LEAVE_SRC() );
148    return $octets;
149}
150*str2bytes = \&encode;
151
152sub decode($$;$) {
153    my ( $name, $octets, $check ) = @_;
154    return undef unless defined $octets;
155    $octets .= '' if ref $octets;
156    $check ||= 0;
157    my $enc = find_encoding($name);
158    unless ( defined $enc ) {
159        require Carp;
160        Carp::croak("Unknown encoding '$name'");
161    }
162    my $string = $enc->decode( $octets, $check );
163    $_[1] = $octets if $check and !ref $check and !( $check & LEAVE_SRC() );
164    return $string;
165}
166*bytes2str = \&decode;
167
168sub from_to($$$;$) {
169    my ( $string, $from, $to, $check ) = @_;
170    return undef unless defined $string;
171    $check ||= 0;
172    my $f = find_encoding($from);
173    unless ( defined $f ) {
174        require Carp;
175        Carp::croak("Unknown encoding '$from'");
176    }
177    my $t = find_encoding($to);
178    unless ( defined $t ) {
179        require Carp;
180        Carp::croak("Unknown encoding '$to'");
181    }
182    my $uni = $f->decode($string);
183    $_[0] = $string = $t->encode( $uni, $check );
184    return undef if ( $check && length($uni) );
185    return defined( $_[0] ) ? length($string) : undef;
186}
187
188sub encode_utf8($) {
189    my ($str) = @_;
190    utf8::encode($str);
191    return $str;
192}
193
194sub decode_utf8($;$) {
195    my ( $str, $check ) = @_;
196    return $str if is_utf8($str);
197    if ($check) {
198        return decode( "utf8", $str, $check );
199    }
200    else {
201        return decode( "utf8", $str );
202        return $str;
203    }
204}
205
206predefine_encodings(1);
207
208#
209# This is to restore %Encoding if really needed;
210#
211
212sub predefine_encodings {
213    require Encode::Encoding;
214    no warnings 'redefine';
215    my $use_xs = shift;
216    if ($ON_EBCDIC) {
217
218        # was in Encode::UTF_EBCDIC
219        package Encode::UTF_EBCDIC;
220        push @Encode::UTF_EBCDIC::ISA, 'Encode::Encoding';
221        *decode = sub {
222            my ( $obj, $str, $chk ) = @_;
223            my $res = '';
224            for ( my $i = 0 ; $i < length($str) ; $i++ ) {
225                $res .=
226                  chr(
227                    utf8::unicode_to_native( ord( substr( $str, $i, 1 ) ) )
228                  );
229            }
230            $_[1] = '' if $chk;
231            return $res;
232        };
233        *encode = sub {
234            my ( $obj, $str, $chk ) = @_;
235            my $res = '';
236            for ( my $i = 0 ; $i < length($str) ; $i++ ) {
237                $res .=
238                  chr(
239                    utf8::native_to_unicode( ord( substr( $str, $i, 1 ) ) )
240                  );
241            }
242            $_[1] = '' if $chk;
243            return $res;
244        };
245        $Encode::Encoding{Unicode} =
246          bless { Name => "UTF_EBCDIC" } => "Encode::UTF_EBCDIC";
247    }
248    else {
249
250        package Encode::Internal;
251        push @Encode::Internal::ISA, 'Encode::Encoding';
252        *decode = sub {
253            my ( $obj, $str, $chk ) = @_;
254            utf8::upgrade($str);
255            $_[1] = '' if $chk;
256            return $str;
257        };
258        *encode = \&decode;
259        $Encode::Encoding{Unicode} =
260          bless { Name => "Internal" } => "Encode::Internal";
261    }
262
263    {
264
265        # was in Encode::utf8
266        package Encode::utf8;
267        push @Encode::utf8::ISA, 'Encode::Encoding';
268
269        #
270        if ($use_xs) {
271            Encode::DEBUG and warn __PACKAGE__, " XS on";
272            *decode = \&decode_xs;
273            *encode = \&encode_xs;
274        }
275        else {
276            Encode::DEBUG and warn __PACKAGE__, " XS off";
277            *decode = sub {
278                my ( $obj, $octets, $chk ) = @_;
279                my $str = Encode::decode_utf8($octets);
280                if ( defined $str ) {
281                    $_[1] = '' if $chk;
282                    return $str;
283                }
284                return undef;
285            };
286            *encode = sub {
287                my ( $obj, $string, $chk ) = @_;
288                my $octets = Encode::encode_utf8($string);
289                $_[1] = '' if $chk;
290                return $octets;
291            };
292        }
293        *cat_decode = sub {    # ($obj, $dst, $src, $pos, $trm, $chk)
294                               # currently ignores $chk
295            my ( $obj, undef, undef, $pos, $trm ) = @_;
296            my ( $rdst, $rsrc, $rpos ) = \@_[ 1, 2, 3 ];
297            use bytes;
298            if ( ( my $npos = index( $$rsrc, $trm, $pos ) ) >= 0 ) {
299                $$rdst .=
300                  substr( $$rsrc, $pos, $npos - $pos + length($trm) );
301                $$rpos = $npos + length($trm);
302                return 1;
303            }
304            $$rdst .= substr( $$rsrc, $pos );
305            $$rpos = length($$rsrc);
306            return '';
307        };
308        $Encode::Encoding{utf8} =
309          bless { Name => "utf8" } => "Encode::utf8";
310        $Encode::Encoding{"utf-8-strict"} =
311          bless { Name => "utf-8-strict", strict_utf8 => 1 } =>
312          "Encode::utf8";
313    }
314}
315
3161;
317
318__END__
319
320=head1 NAME
321
322Encode - character encodings
323
324=head1 SYNOPSIS
325
326    use Encode;
327
328=head2 Table of Contents
329
330Encode consists of a collection of modules whose details are too big
331to fit in one document.  This POD itself explains the top-level APIs
332and general topics at a glance.  For other topics and more details,
333see the PODs below:
334
335  Name                          Description
336  --------------------------------------------------------
337  Encode::Alias         Alias definitions to encodings
338  Encode::Encoding      Encode Implementation Base Class
339  Encode::Supported     List of Supported Encodings
340  Encode::CN            Simplified Chinese Encodings
341  Encode::JP            Japanese Encodings
342  Encode::KR            Korean Encodings
343  Encode::TW            Traditional Chinese Encodings
344  --------------------------------------------------------
345
346=head1 DESCRIPTION
347
348The C<Encode> module provides the interfaces between Perl's strings
349and the rest of the system.  Perl strings are sequences of
350B<characters>.
351
352The repertoire of characters that Perl can represent is at least that
353defined by the Unicode Consortium. On most platforms the ordinal
354values of the characters (as returned by C<ord(ch)>) is the "Unicode
355codepoint" for the character (the exceptions are those platforms where
356the legacy encoding is some variant of EBCDIC rather than a super-set
357of ASCII - see L<perlebcdic>).
358
359Traditionally, computer data has been moved around in 8-bit chunks
360often called "bytes". These chunks are also known as "octets" in
361networking standards. Perl is widely used to manipulate data of many
362types - not only strings of characters representing human or computer
363languages but also "binary" data being the machine's representation of
364numbers, pixels in an image - or just about anything.
365
366When Perl is processing "binary data", the programmer wants Perl to
367process "sequences of bytes". This is not a problem for Perl - as a
368byte has 256 possible values, it easily fits in Perl's much larger
369"logical character".
370
371=head2 TERMINOLOGY
372
373=over 2
374
375=item *
376
377I<character>: a character in the range 0..(2**32-1) (or more).
378(What Perl's strings are made of.)
379
380=item *
381
382I<byte>: a character in the range 0..255
383(A special case of a Perl character.)
384
385=item *
386
387I<octet>: 8 bits of data, with ordinal values 0..255
388(Term for bytes passed to or from a non-Perl context, e.g. a disk file.)
389
390=back
391
392=head1 PERL ENCODING API
393
394=over 2
395
396=item $octets  = encode(ENCODING, $string [, CHECK])
397
398Encodes a string from Perl's internal form into I<ENCODING> and returns
399a sequence of octets.  ENCODING can be either a canonical name or
400an alias.  For encoding names and aliases, see L</"Defining Aliases">.
401For CHECK, see L</"Handling Malformed Data">.
402
403For example, to convert a string from Perl's internal format to
404iso-8859-1 (also known as Latin1),
405
406  $octets = encode("iso-8859-1", $string);
407
408B<CAVEAT>: When you run C<$octets = encode("utf8", $string)>, then
409$octets B<may not be equal to> $string.  Though they both contain the
410same data, the UTF8 flag for $octets is B<always> off.  When you
411encode anything, UTF8 flag of the result is always off, even when it
412contains completely valid utf8 string. See L</"The UTF8 flag"> below.
413
414If the $string is C<undef> then C<undef> is returned.
415
416=item $string = decode(ENCODING, $octets [, CHECK])
417
418Decodes a sequence of octets assumed to be in I<ENCODING> into Perl's
419internal form and returns the resulting string.  As in encode(),
420ENCODING can be either a canonical name or an alias. For encoding names
421and aliases, see L</"Defining Aliases">.  For CHECK, see
422L</"Handling Malformed Data">.
423
424For example, to convert ISO-8859-1 data to a string in Perl's internal format:
425
426  $string = decode("iso-8859-1", $octets);
427
428B<CAVEAT>: When you run C<$string = decode("utf8", $octets)>, then $string
429B<may not be equal to> $octets.  Though they both contain the same data,
430the UTF8 flag for $string is on unless $octets entirely consists of
431ASCII data (or EBCDIC on EBCDIC machines).  See L</"The UTF8 flag">
432below.
433
434If the $string is C<undef> then C<undef> is returned.
435
436=item [$obj =] find_encoding(ENCODING)
437
438Returns the I<encoding object> corresponding to ENCODING.  Returns
439undef if no matching ENCODING is find.
440
441This object is what actually does the actual (en|de)coding.
442
443  $utf8 = decode($name, $bytes);
444
445is in fact
446
447  $utf8 = do{
448    $obj = find_encoding($name);
449    croak qq(encoding "$name" not found) unless ref $obj;
450    $obj->decode($bytes)
451  };
452
453with more error checking.
454
455Therefore you can save time by reusing this object as follows;
456
457  my $enc = find_encoding("iso-8859-1");
458  while(<>){
459     my $utf8 = $enc->decode($_);
460     # and do someting with $utf8;
461  }
462
463Besides C<< ->decode >> and C<< ->encode >>, other methods are
464available as well.  For instance, C<< -> name >> returns the canonical
465name of the encoding object.
466
467  find_encoding("latin1")->name; # iso-8859-1
468
469See L<Encode::Encoding> for details.
470
471=item [$length =] from_to($octets, FROM_ENC, TO_ENC [, CHECK])
472
473Converts B<in-place> data between two encodings. The data in $octets
474must be encoded as octets and not as characters in Perl's internal
475format. For example, to convert ISO-8859-1 data to Microsoft's CP1250
476encoding:
477
478  from_to($octets, "iso-8859-1", "cp1250");
479
480and to convert it back:
481
482  from_to($octets, "cp1250", "iso-8859-1");
483
484Note that because the conversion happens in place, the data to be
485converted cannot be a string constant; it must be a scalar variable.
486
487from_to() returns the length of the converted string in octets on
488success, I<undef> on error.
489
490B<CAVEAT>: The following operations look the same but are not quite so;
491
492  from_to($data, "iso-8859-1", "utf8"); #1
493  $data = decode("iso-8859-1", $data);  #2
494
495Both #1 and #2 make $data consist of a completely valid UTF-8 string
496but only #2 turns UTF8 flag on.  #1 is equivalent to
497
498  $data = encode("utf8", decode("iso-8859-1", $data));
499
500See L</"The UTF8 flag"> below.
501
502Also note that
503
504  from_to($octets, $from, $to, $check);
505
506is equivalent to
507
508  $octets = encode($to, decode($from, $octets), $check);
509
510Yes, it does not respect the $check during decoding.  It is
511deliberately done that way.  If you need minute control, C<decode>
512then C<encode> as follows;
513
514  $octets = encode($to, decode($from, $octets, $check_from), $check_to);
515
516=item $octets = encode_utf8($string);
517
518Equivalent to C<$octets = encode("utf8", $string);> The characters
519that comprise $string are encoded in Perl's internal format and the
520result is returned as a sequence of octets. All possible
521characters have a UTF-8 representation so this function cannot fail.
522
523
524=item $string = decode_utf8($octets [, CHECK]);
525
526equivalent to C<$string = decode("utf8", $octets [, CHECK])>.
527The sequence of octets represented by
528$octets is decoded from UTF-8 into a sequence of logical
529characters. Not all sequences of octets form valid UTF-8 encodings, so
530it is possible for this call to fail.  For CHECK, see
531L</"Handling Malformed Data">.
532
533=back
534
535=head2 Listing available encodings
536
537  use Encode;
538  @list = Encode->encodings();
539
540Returns a list of the canonical names of the available encodings that
541are loaded.  To get a list of all available encodings including the
542ones that are not loaded yet, say
543
544  @all_encodings = Encode->encodings(":all");
545
546Or you can give the name of a specific module.
547
548  @with_jp = Encode->encodings("Encode::JP");
549
550When "::" is not in the name, "Encode::" is assumed.
551
552  @ebcdic = Encode->encodings("EBCDIC");
553
554To find out in detail which encodings are supported by this package,
555see L<Encode::Supported>.
556
557=head2 Defining Aliases
558
559To add a new alias to a given encoding, use:
560
561  use Encode;
562  use Encode::Alias;
563  define_alias(newName => ENCODING);
564
565After that, newName can be used as an alias for ENCODING.
566ENCODING may be either the name of an encoding or an
567I<encoding object>
568
569But before you do so, make sure the alias is nonexistent with
570C<resolve_alias()>, which returns the canonical name thereof.
571i.e.
572
573  Encode::resolve_alias("latin1") eq "iso-8859-1" # true
574  Encode::resolve_alias("iso-8859-12")   # false; nonexistent
575  Encode::resolve_alias($name) eq $name  # true if $name is canonical
576
577resolve_alias() does not need C<use Encode::Alias>; it can be
578exported via C<use Encode qw(resolve_alias)>.
579
580See L<Encode::Alias> for details.
581
582=head2 Finding IANA Character Set Registry names
583
584The canonical name of a given encoding does not necessarily agree with
585IANA IANA Character Set Registry, commonly seen as C<< Content-Type:
586text/plain; charset=I<whatever> >>.  For most cases canonical names
587work but sometimes it does not (notably 'utf-8-strict').
588
589Therefore as of Encode version 2.21, a new method C<mime_name()> is added.
590
591  use Encode;
592  my $enc = find_encoding('UTF-8');
593  warn $enc->name;      # utf-8-strict
594  warn $enc->mime_name; # UTF-8
595
596See also:  L<Encode::Encoding>
597
598=head1 Encoding via PerlIO
599
600If your perl supports I<PerlIO> (which is the default), you can use a
601PerlIO layer to decode and encode directly via a filehandle.  The
602following two examples are totally identical in their functionality.
603
604  # via PerlIO
605  open my $in,  "<:encoding(shiftjis)", $infile  or die;
606  open my $out, ">:encoding(euc-jp)",   $outfile or die;
607  while(<$in>){ print $out $_; }
608
609  # via from_to
610  open my $in,  "<", $infile  or die;
611  open my $out, ">", $outfile or die;
612  while(<$in>){
613    from_to($_, "shiftjis", "euc-jp", 1);
614    print $out $_;
615  }
616
617Unfortunately, it may be that encodings are PerlIO-savvy.  You can check
618if your encoding is supported by PerlIO by calling the C<perlio_ok>
619method.
620
621  Encode::perlio_ok("hz");             # False
622  find_encoding("euc-cn")->perlio_ok;  # True where PerlIO is available
623
624  use Encode qw(perlio_ok);            # exported upon request
625  perlio_ok("euc-jp")
626
627Fortunately, all encodings that come with Encode core are PerlIO-savvy
628except for hz and ISO-2022-kr.  For gory details, see
629L<Encode::Encoding> and L<Encode::PerlIO>.
630
631=head1 Handling Malformed Data
632
633The optional I<CHECK> argument tells Encode what to do when it
634encounters malformed data.  Without CHECK, Encode::FB_DEFAULT ( == 0 )
635is assumed.
636
637As of version 2.12 Encode supports coderef values for CHECK.  See below.
638
639=over 2
640
641=item B<NOTE:> Not all encoding support this feature
642
643Some encodings ignore I<CHECK> argument.  For example,
644L<Encode::Unicode> ignores I<CHECK> and it always croaks on error.
645
646=back
647
648Now here is the list of I<CHECK> values available
649
650=over 2
651
652=item I<CHECK> = Encode::FB_DEFAULT ( == 0)
653
654If I<CHECK> is 0, (en|de)code will put a I<substitution character> in
655place of a malformed character.  When you encode, E<lt>subcharE<gt>
656will be used.  When you decode the code point C<0xFFFD> is used.  If
657the data is supposed to be UTF-8, an optional lexical warning
658(category utf8) is given.
659
660=item I<CHECK> = Encode::FB_CROAK ( == 1)
661
662If I<CHECK> is 1, methods will die on error immediately with an error
663message.  Therefore, when I<CHECK> is set to 1,  you should trap the
664error with eval{} unless you really want to let it die.
665
666=item I<CHECK> = Encode::FB_QUIET
667
668If I<CHECK> is set to Encode::FB_QUIET, (en|de)code will immediately
669return the portion of the data that has been processed so far when an
670error occurs. The data argument will be overwritten with everything
671after that point (that is, the unprocessed part of data).  This is
672handy when you have to call decode repeatedly in the case where your
673source data may contain partial multi-byte character sequences,
674(i.e. you are reading with a fixed-width buffer). Here is a sample
675code that does exactly this:
676
677  my $buffer = ''; my $string = '';
678  while(read $fh, $buffer, 256, length($buffer)){
679    $string .= decode($encoding, $buffer, Encode::FB_QUIET);
680    # $buffer now contains the unprocessed partial character
681  }
682
683=item I<CHECK> = Encode::FB_WARN
684
685This is the same as above, except that it warns on error.  Handy when
686you are debugging the mode above.
687
688=item perlqq mode (I<CHECK> = Encode::FB_PERLQQ)
689
690=item HTML charref mode (I<CHECK> = Encode::FB_HTMLCREF)
691
692=item XML charref mode (I<CHECK> = Encode::FB_XMLCREF)
693
694For encodings that are implemented by Encode::XS, CHECK ==
695Encode::FB_PERLQQ turns (en|de)code into C<perlqq> fallback mode.
696
697When you decode, C<\xI<HH>> will be inserted for a malformed character,
698where I<HH> is the hex representation of the octet  that could not be
699decoded to utf8.  And when you encode, C<\x{I<HHHH>}> will be inserted,
700where I<HHHH> is the Unicode ID of the character that cannot be found
701in the character repertoire of the encoding.
702
703HTML/XML character reference modes are about the same, in place of
704C<\x{I<HHHH>}>, HTML uses C<&#I<NNN>;> where I<NNN> is a decimal number and
705XML uses C<&#xI<HHHH>;> where I<HHHH> is the hexadecimal number.
706
707In Encode 2.10 or later, C<LEAVE_SRC> is also implied.
708
709=item The bitmask
710
711These modes are actually set via a bitmask.  Here is how the FB_XX
712constants are laid out.  You can import the FB_XX constants via
713C<use Encode qw(:fallbacks)>; you can import the generic bitmask
714constants via C<use Encode qw(:fallback_all)>.
715
716                     FB_DEFAULT FB_CROAK FB_QUIET FB_WARN  FB_PERLQQ
717 DIE_ON_ERR    0x0001             X
718 WARN_ON_ERR   0x0002                               X
719 RETURN_ON_ERR 0x0004                      X        X
720 LEAVE_SRC     0x0008                                        X
721 PERLQQ        0x0100                                        X
722 HTMLCREF      0x0200
723 XMLCREF       0x0400
724
725=back
726
727=over 2
728
729=item Encode::LEAVE_SRC
730
731If the C<Encode::LEAVE_SRC> bit is not set, but I<CHECK> is, then the second
732argument to C<encode()> or C<decode()> may be assigned to by the functions. If
733you're not interested in this, then bitwise-or the bitmask with it.
734
735=back
736
737=head2 coderef for CHECK
738
739As of Encode 2.12 CHECK can also be a code reference which takes the
740ord value of unmapped caharacter as an argument and returns a string
741that represents the fallback character.  For instance,
742
743  $ascii = encode("ascii", $utf8, sub{ sprintf "<U+%04X>", shift });
744
745Acts like FB_PERLQQ but E<lt>U+I<XXXX>E<gt> is used instead of
746\x{I<XXXX>}.
747
748=head1 Defining Encodings
749
750To define a new encoding, use:
751
752    use Encode qw(define_encoding);
753    define_encoding($object, 'canonicalName' [, alias...]);
754
755I<canonicalName> will be associated with I<$object>.  The object
756should provide the interface described in L<Encode::Encoding>.
757If more than two arguments are provided then additional
758arguments are taken as aliases for I<$object>.
759
760See L<Encode::Encoding> for more details.
761
762=head1 The UTF8 flag
763
764Before the introduction of Unicode support in perl, The C<eq> operator
765just compared the strings represented by two scalars. Beginning with
766perl 5.8, C<eq> compares two strings with simultaneous consideration of
767I<the UTF8 flag>. To explain why we made it so, I will quote page 402 of
768C<Programming Perl, 3rd ed.>
769
770=over 2
771
772=item Goal #1:
773
774Old byte-oriented programs should not spontaneously break on the old
775byte-oriented data they used to work on.
776
777=item Goal #2:
778
779Old byte-oriented programs should magically start working on the new
780character-oriented data when appropriate.
781
782=item Goal #3:
783
784Programs should run just as fast in the new character-oriented mode
785as in the old byte-oriented mode.
786
787=item Goal #4:
788
789Perl should remain one language, rather than forking into a
790byte-oriented Perl and a character-oriented Perl.
791
792=back
793
794Back when C<Programming Perl, 3rd ed.> was written, not even Perl 5.6.0
795was born and many features documented in the book remained
796unimplemented for a long time.  Perl 5.8 corrected this and the introduction
797of the UTF8 flag is one of them.  You can think of this perl notion as of a
798byte-oriented mode (UTF8 flag off) and a character-oriented mode (UTF8
799flag on).
800
801Here is how Encode takes care of the UTF8 flag.
802
803=over 2
804
805=item *
806
807When you encode, the resulting UTF8 flag is always off.
808
809=item *
810
811When you decode, the resulting UTF8 flag is on unless you can
812unambiguously represent data.  Here is the definition of
813dis-ambiguity.
814
815After C<$utf8 = decode('foo', $octet);>,
816
817  When $octet is...   The UTF8 flag in $utf8 is
818  ---------------------------------------------
819  In ASCII only (or EBCDIC only)            OFF
820  In ISO-8859-1                              ON
821  In any other Encoding                      ON
822  ---------------------------------------------
823
824As you see, there is one exception, In ASCII.  That way you can assume
825Goal #1.  And with Encode Goal #2 is assumed but you still have to be
826careful in such cases mentioned in B<CAVEAT> paragraphs.
827
828This UTF8 flag is not visible in perl scripts, exactly for the same
829reason you cannot (or you I<don't have to>) see if a scalar contains a
830string, integer, or floating point number.   But you can still peek
831and poke these if you will.  See the section below.
832
833=back
834
835=head2 Messing with Perl's Internals
836
837The following API uses parts of Perl's internals in the current
838implementation.  As such, they are efficient but may change.
839
840=over 2
841
842=item is_utf8(STRING [, CHECK])
843
844[INTERNAL] Tests whether the UTF8 flag is turned on in the STRING.
845If CHECK is true, also checks the data in STRING for being well-formed
846UTF-8.  Returns true if successful, false otherwise.
847
848As of perl 5.8.1, L<utf8> also has utf8::is_utf8().
849
850=item _utf8_on(STRING)
851
852[INTERNAL] Turns on the UTF8 flag in STRING.  The data in STRING is
853B<not> checked for being well-formed UTF-8.  Do not use unless you
854B<know> that the STRING is well-formed UTF-8.  Returns the previous
855state of the UTF8 flag (so please don't treat the return value as
856indicating success or failure), or C<undef> if STRING is not a string.
857
858=item _utf8_off(STRING)
859
860[INTERNAL] Turns off the UTF8 flag in STRING.  Do not use frivolously.
861Returns the previous state of the UTF8 flag (so please don't treat the
862return value as indicating success or failure), or C<undef> if STRING is
863not a string.
864
865=back
866
867=head1 UTF-8 vs. utf8 vs. UTF8
868
869  ....We now view strings not as sequences of bytes, but as sequences
870  of numbers in the range 0 .. 2**32-1 (or in the case of 64-bit
871  computers, 0 .. 2**64-1) -- Programming Perl, 3rd ed.
872
873That has been the perl's notion of UTF-8 but official UTF-8 is more
874strict; Its ranges is much narrower (0 .. 10FFFF), some sequences are
875not allowed (i.e. Those used in the surrogate pair, 0xFFFE, et al).
876
877Now that is overruled by Larry Wall himself.
878
879  From: Larry Wall <larry@wall.org>
880  Date: December 04, 2004 11:51:58 JST
881  To: perl-unicode@perl.org
882  Subject: Re: Make Encode.pm support the real UTF-8
883  Message-Id: <20041204025158.GA28754@wall.org>
884 
885  On Fri, Dec 03, 2004 at 10:12:12PM +0000, Tim Bunce wrote:
886  : I've no problem with 'utf8' being perl's unrestricted uft8 encoding,
887  : but "UTF-8" is the name of the standard and should give the
888  : corresponding behaviour.
889 
890  For what it's worth, that's how I've always kept them straight in my
891  head.
892 
893  Also for what it's worth, Perl 6 will mostly default to strict but
894  make it easy to switch back to lax.
895 
896  Larry
897
898Do you copy?  As of Perl 5.8.7, B<UTF-8> means strict, official UTF-8
899while B<utf8> means liberal, lax, version thereof.  And Encode version
9002.10 or later thus groks the difference between C<UTF-8> and C"utf8".
901
902  encode("utf8",  "\x{FFFF_FFFF}", 1); # okay
903  encode("UTF-8", "\x{FFFF_FFFF}", 1); # croaks
904
905C<UTF-8> in Encode is actually a canonical name for C<utf-8-strict>.
906Yes, the hyphen between "UTF" and "8" is important.  Without it Encode
907goes "liberal"
908
909  find_encoding("UTF-8")->name # is 'utf-8-strict'
910  find_encoding("utf-8")->name # ditto. names are case insensitive
911  find_encoding("utf_8")->name  # ditto. "_" are treated as "-"
912  find_encoding("UTF8")->name  # is 'utf8'.
913
914The UTF8 flag is internally called UTF8, without a hyphen. It indicates
915whether a string is internally encoded as utf8, also without a hypen.
916
917=head1 SEE ALSO
918
919L<Encode::Encoding>,
920L<Encode::Supported>,
921L<Encode::PerlIO>,
922L<encoding>,
923L<perlebcdic>,
924L<perlfunc/open>,
925L<perlunicode>, L<perluniintro>, L<perlunifaq>, L<perlunitut>
926L<utf8>,
927the Perl Unicode Mailing List E<lt>perl-unicode@perl.orgE<gt>
928
929=head1 MAINTAINER
930
931This project was originated by Nick Ing-Simmons and later maintained
932by Dan Kogai E<lt>dankogai@dan.co.jpE<gt>.  See AUTHORS for a full
933list of people involved.  For any questions, use
934E<lt>perl-unicode@perl.orgE<gt> so we can all share.
935
936While Dan Kogai retains the copyright as a maintainer, the credit
937should go to all those involoved.  See AUTHORS for those submitted
938codes.
939
940=head1 COPYRIGHT
941
942Copyright 2002-2006 Dan Kogai E<lt>dankogai@dan.co.jpE<gt>
943
944This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
945it under the same terms as Perl itself.
946
947=cut
Note: See TracBrowser for help on using the browser.