NAME
Encode::Supported -- Supported encodings by Encode
DESCRIPTION
Encoding Names
Encoding names are case insensitive. White space in names is ignored. In addition an encoding may have aliases. Each encoding has one "canonical" name. The "canonical" name is chosen from the names of the encoding by picking he first in the following sequence:
o The MIME name as defined in IETF RFCs.
o The name in the IANA registry.
o The name used by the organization that defined it.
Because of all the alias issues, and because in the general case encodings have state, "Encode" uses the encoding object internally once an operation is in progress.
Supported Encodings
As of Perl 5.8.0, at least the following encodings are recognized. Note that unless otherwise specified, they are all case insensitive (via alias) and all occurance of spaces are replaced with '-'. In other words, "ISO 8859 1" and "iso-8859-1" are identical.
Encodings are categorized and implemented in several different modules but you don't have to use Encode::XX
to make them available for most cases. Encode.pm will automatically load those modules in need.
Built-in Encodings
The following encodings are always available.
Canonical Aliases
-----------------------
iso-8859-1 latin1
US-ascii ascii
UCS-2 ucs2, iso-10646-1
UCS-2le
UTF-8 utf8
-----------------------
Encode::Byte
The following encodings are based single-byte encoding implemented as extended ASCII. For most cases it uses \x80-\xff (upper half) to map non-ASCII characters.
-----------------------
iso-8859-1 latin
iso-8859-2 latin2
iso-8859-3 latin3
iso-8859-4 latin4
iso-8859-5 latin
iso-8859-6 latin
iso-8859-7
iso-8859-8
iso-8859-9 latin5
iso-8859-10 latin6
iso-8859-11
(iso-8859-12 is nonexistent)
iso-8859-13 latin7
iso-8859-14 latin8
iso-8859-15 latin9
iso-8859-16 latin10
koi8-f
koi8-r
koi8-u
viscii # ASCII + vietnamese
cp1250 WinLatin2
cp1251 WinCyrillic
cp1252 WinLatin1
cp1253 WinGreek
cp1254 WinTurkiskh
cp1255 WinHebrew
cp1256 WinArabic
cp1257 WinBaltic
cp1258 WinVietnamese
# all cp* are also available as ibm-* and ms-*
maccentraleuropean
maccroatian
macroman
maccyrillic
macromanian
macdingbats
macsami
macgreek
macthai
macicelandic
macturkish
macukraine
-----------------------
The CJK: Chinese, Japanese, Korean (Multibyte)
Note Vietnamese is listed above. Also read "Encoding vs Charset" below. Also note these are impelemented in distinct module by languages, due the the size concerns. See these perldocs also.
- Encode::CN -- Continental China
-
----------------------- cp936 gbk euc-cn gb12345 gb2312 hz iso-ir-165 -----------------------
- Encode::JP -- Japan
-
----------------------- 7bit-jis jis cp932 euc-jp ujis iso-2022-jp macjapan shiftjis Shift_JIS, sjis -----------------------
- Encode::KR -- Korea
-
----------------------- euc-kr ksc5601 cp949 -----------------------
- Encode::TW -- Taiwan
-
----------------------- big5 big5-hkscs cp950 -----------------------
- Encode::HanExtra -- More Chinese via CPAN
-
Due to size concerns, additional Chinese encodings below are distributed separately on CPAN, under the name Encode::HanExtra.
----------------------- gb18030 euc-tw big5plus -----------------------
Miscellaneous encodings
- Encode::EBCDIC
-
See perlebcdic for details.
----------------------- cp1047 cp37 posix-bc -----------------------
- Enocode::Symbols
-
For symbols and dingbats.
----------------------- symbol dingbats -----------------------
Encoding vs. Charset
Character encoding (or just "encoding") and Character Set (or just "charset") are often used interchangeably but they are different concepts.
Charset determines which characters to be included in a given text.
Encoding actually maps charset(s) to stream of bits.
Note a given encoding contains multiple charsets. For instance, euc-jp contains ASCII, JIS X 0201 (Hankaku Kana), JIS X 0208 (Zenkaku Kana and Kanji) and JIS X 0212 (Extended Kanji) in a single encoding.
As the name suggests, the Encode module supports encodings, not individual charsets.
Encoding Classification (by Anton Tagunov)
Encodings
US-ASCII UTF-8 KOI8-R ISO-8859-*
ISO-2022-CN ISO-2022-JP Big5
EUC-CN EUC-JP EUC-KR
are <http://www.iana.org/assignments/character-sets>-registered as preferred MIME names and may probably be used over the Internet. So is
Shift_JIS
but despite its wide spread it bears the label of being Microsft proprietary -- was. Now Shift JIS is official as of JIS X 0208-1997.
UTF-16 KOI8-U
are IANA-registered preferred MIME names but probably shoule be avoided as encoding for web pages due to lack of browser support.
ISO-2022 (http://www.ecma.ch/ecma1/STAND/ECMA-035.HTM)
ISO-2022-JP-1 (http://www.faqs.org/rfcs/rfc2237.html)
ISO-IR-165 (http://www.faqs.org/rfcs/rfc1345.html)
GBK
VISCII
GB 12345 (only plains 1 and 2 available)
GB 18030
CNS 11643
are totally valid encodings but not registered at IANA.
BIG5PLUS
EUC-JP-0212 (Encode::lib::Encode::Tcl::Extended)
are a bit proprietary
You may probably get some info on CJK encodings at
brief description for most of the mentioned CJK encodings
http://www.debian.org.ru/doc/manuals/intro-i18n/ch-codes.html
several years old, but still useful
http://www.oreilly.com/people/authors/lunde/cjk_inf.html
and some in-depth reading for the heroes :-) http://www.ecma.ch/ecma1/STAND/ECMA-035.HTM (eq ISO-2022)
See Also
Encode, Encode::Byte, Encode::CN, Encode::JP, Encode::KR, Encode::TW Encode::EBCDIC, Encode::Symbol