NAME
Sjis - Source code filter to escape ShiftJIS script
Install and Usage
There are two steps there:
You'll have to download Sjis.pm and Esjis.pm and put it in your perl lib directory.
You'll need to write "use Sjis;" at head of the script.
SYNOPSIS
use Sjis;
use Sjis ver.sion; --- require minimum version
use Sjis ver.sion.0; --- expects version (match or die)
#if MULTIBYTE_ENCODING
use Sjis qw(ord reverse getc); --- demand enhanced feature of ord, reverse, and getc
use Sjis ver.sion qw(ord reverse getc);
use Sjis ver.sion.0 qw(ord reverse getc);
#endif
# "no Sjis;" not supported
or
$ perl Sjis.pm ShiftJIS_script.pl > Escaped_script.pl.e
then
$ perl Escaped_script.pl.e
ShiftJIS_script.pl --- script written in ShiftJIS
Escaped_script.pl.e --- escaped script
subroutines:
#if MULTIBYTE_ENCODING
Sjis::ord(...);
Sjis::reverse(...);
Sjis::getc(...);
Sjis::length(...);
Sjis::substr(...);
Sjis::index(...);
#endif
Sjis::eval(...);
#if MULTIBYTE_ENCODING functions: <*> glob(...); CORE::chop(...); CORE::ord(...); CORE::reverse(...); CORE::getc(...); CORE::index(...); CORE::rindex(...);
#endif dummy functions: utf8::upgrade(...); utf8::downgrade(...); utf8::encode(...); utf8::decode(...); utf8::is_utf8(...); utf8::valid(...); bytes::chr(...); bytes::index(...); bytes::length(...); bytes::ord(...); bytes::rindex(...); bytes::substr(...);
ABSTRACT
Sjis software is "middleware" between perl interpreter and your Perl script written in ShiftJIS.
Perl is optimized for problems which are about 90% working with text and about 10% everything else. Even if this "text" doesn't contain ShiftJIS, Perl3 or later can treat ShiftJIS as binary data.
By "use Sjis;", it automatically interpret your script as ShiftJIS. The various functions of perl including a regular expression can treat ShiftJIS now. The function length treats length per byte. This software does not use UTF8 flag.
Yet Another Future Of
JPerl is very useful software. -- Oops, note, this "JPerl" means "Japanized Perl" or "Japanese Perl". Therefore, it is unrelated to JPerl of the following.
JPerl is an implementation of Perl written in Java.
http://www.javainc.com/projects/jperl/
jPerl - Perl on the JVM
http://www.dzone.com/links/175948.html
Jamie's PERL scripts for bioinformatics
http://code.google.com/p/jperl/
jperl (Jonathan Perl)
https://github.com/jperl
Now, the last version of JPerl is 5.005_04 and is not maintained now.
Japanization modifier WATANABE Hirofumi said,
"Because WATANABE am tired I give over maintaing JPerl."
at Slide #15: "The future of JPerl" of
ftp://ftp.oreilly.co.jp/pcjp98/watanabe/jperlconf.ppt
in The Perl Confernce Japan 1998.
When I heard it, I thought that someone excluding me would maintain JPerl. And I slept every night hanging a sock. Night and day, I kept having hope. After 10 years, I noticed that white beard exists in the sock :-)
This software is a source code filter to escape Perl script encoded by ShiftJIS given from STDIN or command line parameter. The character code is never converted by escaping the script. Neither the value of the character nor the length of the character string change even if it escapes.
I learned the following things from the successful software.
Upper Compatibility like Perl4 to Perl5
Maximum Portability like jcode.pl
Remains One Language Handling Raw ShiftJIS, Doesn't Use UTF8 flag like JPerl
Remains One Interpreter like Encode module
Code Set Independent like Ruby
Monolithic Script like cpanminus
There's more than one way to do it like Perl itself
I am excited about this software and Perl's future --- I hope you are too.
JRE: JPerl Runtime Environment
+---------------------------------------+
| JPerl Application Script | Your Script
+---------------------------------------+
| Source Code Filter, Runtime Routine | ex. Sjis.pm, Esjis.pm
+---------------------------------------+
| PVM 5.00503 or later | ex. perl 5.00503
+---------------------------------------+
A Perl Virtual Machine (PVM) enables a set of computer software programs and data structures to use a virtual machine model for the execution of other computer programs and scripts. The model used by a PVM accepts a form of computer intermediate language commonly referred to as Perl byteorientedcode. This language conceptually represents the instruction set of a byte-oriented, capability architecture.
Basic Idea of Source Code Filter
I discovered this mail again recently.
[Tokyo.pm] jus Benkyoukai
http://mail.pm.org/pipermail/tokyo-pm/1999-September/001854.html
save as: SJIS.pm
package SJIS;
use Filter::Util::Call;
sub multibyte_filter {
my $status;
if (($status = filter_read()) > 0 ) {
s/([\x81-\x9f\xe0-\xef])([\x40-\x7e\x80-\xfc])/
sprintf("\\x%02x\\x%02x",ord($1),ord($2))
/eg;
}
$status;
}
sub import {
filter_add(\&multibyte_filter);
}
1;
I am glad that I could confirm my idea is not so wrong.
Command-line Wildcard Expansion on DOS-like Systems
The default command shells on DOS-like systems (COMMAND.COM or cmd.exe or Win95Cmd.exe) do not expand wildcard arguments supplied to programs. Instead, import of Esjis.pm works well.
in Esjis.pm
#
# @ARGV wildcard globbing
#
sub import {
if ($^O =~ /\A (?: MSWin32 | NetWare | symbian | dos ) \z/oxms) {
my @argv = ();
for (@ARGV) {
# has space
if (/\A (?:$q_char)*? [ ] /oxms) {
if (my @glob = Esjis::glob(qq{"$_"})) {
push @argv, @glob;
}
else {
push @argv, $_;
}
}
# has wildcard metachar
elsif (/\A (?:$q_char)*? [*?] /oxms) {
if (my @glob = Esjis::glob($_)) {
push @argv, @glob;
}
else {
push @argv, $_;
}
}
# no wildcard globbing
else {
push @argv, $_;
}
}
@ARGV = @argv;
}
}
Software Composition
Sjis.pm --- source code filter to escape ShiftJIS
Esjis.pm --- run-time routines for Sjis.pm
Upper Compatibility by Escaping
This software adds the function by 'Escaping' it always, and nothing of the past is broken. Therefore, 'Possible job' never becomes 'Impossible job'. This approach is effective in the field where the retreat is never permitted. It means incompatible upgrade of Perl should be rewound.
Escaping Your Script (You do)
You need write 'use Sjis;' in your script.
---------------------
You do
---------------------
use Sjis;
---------------------
#if ESCAPE_SECOND_OCTET =head1 Escaping Multiple-Octet Code (Sjis software provides)
Insert chr(0x5c) before @ [ \ ] ^ ` { | and } in multiple-octet of
string in single quote ('', q{}, <<'END', and qw{})
string in double quote ("", qq{}, <<END, <<"END", ``, qx{}, and <<`END`)
regexp in single quote (m'', s''', split(''), split(m''), and qr'')
regexp in double quote (//, m//, ??, s///, split(//), split(m//), and qr//)
character in tr/// (tr/// and y///)
ex. Japanese Katakana "SO" like [ `/ ] code is "\x83\x5C" in SJIS
see hex dump
-----------------------------------------
source script "`/" [83 5c]
-----------------------------------------
Here, use SJIS;
hex dump
-----------------------------------------
escaped script "`\/" [83 [5c] 5c]
-----------------------------------------
^--- escape by SJIS software
by the by see hex dump
-----------------------------------------
your eye's "`/\" [83 5c] [5c]
-----------------------------------------
perl eye's "`\/" [83] \[5c]
-----------------------------------------
hex dump
-----------------------------------------
in the perl "`/" [83] [5c]
-----------------------------------------
#endif #if MULTIBYTE_ANCHORING =head1 Multiple-Octet Anchoring of Regular Expression (Sjis software provides)
Sjis software applies multiple-octet anchoring at beginning of regular expression.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Before After
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
m/regexp/ m/${Esjis::anchor}(?:regexp).../
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
#endif #if DIST_UTF2 =head1 Multiple-Octet Anchoring of Regular Expression
This software requires valid UTF8-encoded Unicode instead of using a multi-octet anchoring.
#endif #if DIST_OLDUTF8 =head1 Multiple-Octet Anchoring of Regular Expression
This software requires valid Modified UTF8-encoded Unicode instead of using a multi-octet anchoring.
#endif #if ESCAPE_SECOND_OCTET =head1 Escaping Second Octet (Sjis software provides)
Sjis software escapes second octet of multiple-octet character in regular expression.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Before After
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
m<...`/...> m<...`/\...>
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
#endif #if MULTIBYTE_ENCODING =head1 Multiple-Octet Character Regular Expression (Sjis software provides)
Sjis software clusters multiple-octet character with quantifier, makes cluster from multiple-octet custom character classes. And makes multiple-octet version metasymbol from classic Perl character class shortcuts and POSIX-style character classes.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Before After
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
m/...MULTIOCT+.../ m/...(?:MULTIOCT)+.../
m/...[AN-EM].../ m/...(?:A[N-Z]|[B-D][A-Z]|E[A-M]).../
m/...\D.../ m/...(?:${Esjis::eD}).../
m/...[[:^digit:]].../ m/...(?:${Esjis::not_digit}).../
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
#endif =head1 Calling 'Esjis::ignorecase()' (Sjis software provides)
Sjis software applies calling 'Esjis::ignorecase()' instead of /i modifier.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Before After
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
m/...$var.../i m/...@{[Esjis::ignorecase($var)]}.../
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
#if MULTIBYTE_ENCODING =head1 Character-Oriented Regular Expression
Regular expression works as character-oriented that has no /b modifier.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Before After
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
/regexp/ /ditto$Esjis::matched/
m/regexp/ m/ditto$Esjis::matched/
?regexp? m?ditto$Esjis::matched?
m?regexp? m?ditto$Esjis::matched?
$_ =~ ($_ =~ m/ditto$Esjis::matched/) ?
s/regexp/replacement/ CORE::eval{ Esjis::s_matched(); local $^W=0; my $__r=qq/replacement/; $_="${1}$__r$'"; 1 } :
undef
$_ !~ ($_ !~ m/ditto$Esjis::matched/) ?
s/regexp/replacement/ 1 :
CORE::eval{ Esjis::s_matched(); local $^W=0; my $__r=qq/replacement/; $_="${1}$__r$'"; undef }
split(/regexp/) Esjis::split(qr/regexp/)
split(m/regexp/) Esjis::split(qr/regexp/)
split(qr/regexp/) Esjis::split(qr/regexp/)
qr/regexp/ qr/ditto$Esjis::matched/
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Byte-Oriented Regular Expression
Regular expression works as byte-oriented that has /b modifier.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Before After
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
/regexp/b /(?:regexp)$Esjis::matched/
m/regexp/b m/(?:regexp)$Esjis::matched/
?regexp?b m?regexp$Esjis::matched?
m?regexp?b m?regexp$Esjis::matched?
$_ =~ ($_ =~ m/(\G[\x00-\xFF]*?)(?:regexp)$Esjis::matched/) ?
s/regexp/replacement/b CORE::eval{ Esjis::s_matched(); local $^W=0; my $__r=qq/replacement/; $_="${1}$__r$'"; 1 } :
undef
$_ !~ ($_ !~ m/(\G[\x00-\xFF]*?)(?:regexp)$Esjis::matched/) ?
s/regexp/replacement/b 1 :
CORE::eval{ Esjis::s_matched(); local $^W=0; my $__r=qq/replacement/; $_="${1}$__r$'"; undef }
split(/regexp/b) split(qr/regexp/)
split(m/regexp/b) split(qr/regexp/)
split(qr/regexp/b) split(qr/regexp/)
qr/regexp/b qr/(?:regexp)$Esjis::matched/
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
#endif =head1 Escaping Character Classes (Esjis.pm provides)
The character classes are redefined as follows to backward compatibility.
---------------------------------------------------------------
Before After
---------------------------------------------------------------
. ${Esjis::dot}
${Esjis::dot_s} (/s modifier)
\d [0-9] (universally)
\s \s
\w [0-9A-Z_a-z] (universally)
\D ${Esjis::eD}
\S ${Esjis::eS}
\W ${Esjis::eW}
\h [\x09\x20]
\v [\x0A\x0B\x0C\x0D]
\H ${Esjis::eH}
\V ${Esjis::eV}
\C [\x00-\xFF]
\X X (so, just 'X')
\R ${Esjis::eR}
\N ${Esjis::eN}
---------------------------------------------------------------
Also POSIX-style character classes.
---------------------------------------------------------------
Before After
---------------------------------------------------------------
[:alnum:] [\x30-\x39\x41-\x5A\x61-\x7A]
[:alpha:] [\x41-\x5A\x61-\x7A]
[:ascii:] [\x00-\x7F]
[:blank:] [\x09\x20]
[:cntrl:] [\x00-\x1F\x7F]
[:digit:] [\x30-\x39]
[:graph:] [\x21-\x7F]
[:lower:] [\x61-\x7A]
[\x41-\x5A\x61-\x7A] (/i modifier)
[:print:] [\x20-\x7F]
[:punct:] [\x21-\x2F\x3A-\x3F\x40\x5B-\x5F\x60\x7B-\x7E]
[:space:] [\s\x0B]
[:upper:] [\x41-\x5A]
[\x41-\x5A\x61-\x7A] (/i modifier)
[:word:] [\x30-\x39\x41-\x5A\x5F\x61-\x7A]
[:xdigit:] [\x30-\x39\x41-\x46\x61-\x66]
[:^alnum:] ${Esjis::not_alnum}
[:^alpha:] ${Esjis::not_alpha}
[:^ascii:] ${Esjis::not_ascii}
[:^blank:] ${Esjis::not_blank}
[:^cntrl:] ${Esjis::not_cntrl}
[:^digit:] ${Esjis::not_digit}
[:^graph:] ${Esjis::not_graph}
[:^lower:] ${Esjis::not_lower}
${Esjis::not_lower_i} (/i modifier)
[:^print:] ${Esjis::not_print}
[:^punct:] ${Esjis::not_punct}
[:^space:] ${Esjis::not_space}
[:^upper:] ${Esjis::not_upper}
${Esjis::not_upper_i} (/i modifier)
[:^word:] ${Esjis::not_word}
[:^xdigit:] ${Esjis::not_xdigit}
---------------------------------------------------------------
\b and \B are redefined as follows to backward compatibility.
---------------------------------------------------------------
Before After
---------------------------------------------------------------
\b ${Esjis::eb}
\B ${Esjis::eB}
---------------------------------------------------------------
Definitions in Esjis.pm.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
After Definition
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
#if MULTIBYTE_ANCHORING
${Esjis::anchor} qr{\G(?:[\x81-\x9F\xE0-\xFC][\x00-\xFF]|[^\x81-\x9F\xE0-\xFC])*?}
#endif
#if DIST_GB18030
for over 32766 octets string on ActivePerl5.6 and Perl5.10 or later
qr{\G(?(?=.{0,32766}\z)(?:[\x81-\xFE][\x30-\x39][\x81-\xFE][\x30-\x39]|[\x81-\xFE][^\x30-\x39]|[^\x81-\xFE])*?|(?(?=[\x00-\x80\xFF-\xFF]+\z).*?|(?:.*?[^\x30-\x39\x81-\xFE](?:[\x30-\x39]|[\x81-\xFE][\x30-\x39][\x81-\xFE][\x30-\x39]|[\x81-\xFE]{2})*?)))}oxms;
#endif
#if DIST_EUCTW
for over 32766 octets string on ActivePerl5.6 and Perl5.10 or later
qr{.*?[^\x8E\xA1-\xFE](?:\x8E[\xA2-\xB0][\xA1-\xFE]{2}|[\xA1-\xFE]{2})*?}oxms;
#endif
#if LONG_STRING_FOR_RE
for over 32766 octets string on ActivePerl5.6 and Perl5.10 or later
qr{\G(?(?=.{0,32766}\z)(?:[\x81-\x9F\xE0-\xFC][\x00-\xFF]|[^\x81-\x9F\xE0-\xFC])*?|(?(?=[$sbcs]+\z).*?|(?:.*?[$sbcs](?:$tbcs_1st[^$sbcs]{2})*?)))}oxms;
#endif
${Esjis::dot} qr{(?:[\x81-\x9F\xE0-\xFC][\x00-\xFF]|[^\x81-\x9F\xE0-\xFC\x0A])}
${Esjis::dot_s} qr{(?:[\x81-\x9F\xE0-\xFC][\x00-\xFF]|[^\x81-\x9F\xE0-\xFC])}
${Esjis::eD} qr{(?:[\x81-\x9F\xE0-\xFC][\x00-\xFF]|[^\x81-\x9F\xE0-\xFC0-9])}
${Esjis::eS} qr{(?:[\x81-\x9F\xE0-\xFC][\x00-\xFF]|[^\x81-\x9F\xE0-\xFC\s])}
${Esjis::eW} qr{(?:[\x81-\x9F\xE0-\xFC][\x00-\xFF]|[^\x81-\x9F\xE0-\xFC0-9A-Z_a-z])}
${Esjis::eH} qr{(?:[\x81-\x9F\xE0-\xFC][\x00-\xFF]|[^\x81-\x9F\xE0-\xFC\x09\x20])}
${Esjis::eV} qr{(?:[\x81-\x9F\xE0-\xFC][\x00-\xFF]|[^\x81-\x9F\xE0-\xFC\x0A\x0B\x0C\x0D])}
${Esjis::eR} qr{(?:\x0D\x0A|[\x0A\x0D])}
${Esjis::eN} qr{(?:[\x81-\x9F\xE0-\xFC][\x00-\xFF]|[^\x81-\x9F\xE0-\xFC\x0A])}
${Esjis::not_alnum} qr{(?:[\x81-\x9F\xE0-\xFC][\x00-\xFF]|[^\x81-\x9F\xE0-\xFC\x30-\x39\x41-\x5A\x61-\x7A])}
${Esjis::not_alpha} qr{(?:[\x81-\x9F\xE0-\xFC][\x00-\xFF]|[^\x81-\x9F\xE0-\xFC\x41-\x5A\x61-\x7A])}
${Esjis::not_ascii} qr{(?:[\x81-\x9F\xE0-\xFC][\x00-\xFF]|[^\x81-\x9F\xE0-\xFC\x00-\x7F])}
${Esjis::not_blank} qr{(?:[\x81-\x9F\xE0-\xFC][\x00-\xFF]|[^\x81-\x9F\xE0-\xFC\x09\x20])}
${Esjis::not_cntrl} qr{(?:[\x81-\x9F\xE0-\xFC][\x00-\xFF]|[^\x81-\x9F\xE0-\xFC\x00-\x1F\x7F])}
${Esjis::not_digit} qr{(?:[\x81-\x9F\xE0-\xFC][\x00-\xFF]|[^\x81-\x9F\xE0-\xFC\x30-\x39])}
${Esjis::not_graph} qr{(?:[\x81-\x9F\xE0-\xFC][\x00-\xFF]|[^\x81-\x9F\xE0-\xFC\x21-\x7F])}
${Esjis::not_lower} qr{(?:[\x81-\x9F\xE0-\xFC][\x00-\xFF]|[^\x81-\x9F\xE0-\xFC\x61-\x7A])}
${Esjis::not_lower_i} qr{(?:[\x81-\x9F\xE0-\xFC][\x00-\xFF]|[^\x81-\x9F\xE0-\xFC])}
${Esjis::not_print} qr{(?:[\x81-\x9F\xE0-\xFC][\x00-\xFF]|[^\x81-\x9F\xE0-\xFC\x20-\x7F])}
${Esjis::not_punct} qr{(?:[\x81-\x9F\xE0-\xFC][\x00-\xFF]|[^\x81-\x9F\xE0-\xFC\x21-\x2F\x3A-\x3F\x40\x5B-\x5F\x60\x7B-\x7E])}
${Esjis::not_space} qr{(?:[\x81-\x9F\xE0-\xFC][\x00-\xFF]|[^\x81-\x9F\xE0-\xFC\s\x0B])}
${Esjis::not_upper} qr{(?:[\x81-\x9F\xE0-\xFC][\x00-\xFF]|[^\x81-\x9F\xE0-\xFC\x41-\x5A])}
${Esjis::not_upper_i} qr{(?:[\x81-\x9F\xE0-\xFC][\x00-\xFF]|[^\x81-\x9F\xE0-\xFC])}
${Esjis::not_word} qr{(?:[\x81-\x9F\xE0-\xFC][\x00-\xFF]|[^\x81-\x9F\xE0-\xFC\x30-\x39\x41-\x5A\x5F\x61-\x7A])}
${Esjis::not_xdigit} qr{(?:[\x81-\x9F\xE0-\xFC][\x00-\xFF]|[^\x81-\x9F\xE0-\xFC\x30-\x39\x41-\x46\x61-\x66])}
${Esjis::eb} qr{(?:\A(?=[0-9A-Z_a-z])|(?<=[\x00-\x2F\x40\x5B-\x5E\x60\x7B-\xFF])(?=[0-9A-Z_a-z])|(?<=[0-9A-Z_a-z])(?=[\x00-\x2F\x40\x5B-\x5E\x60\x7B-\xFF]|\z))}
${Esjis::eB} qr{(?:(?<=[0-9A-Z_a-z])(?=[0-9A-Z_a-z])|(?<=[\x00-\x2F\x40\x5B-\x5E\x60\x7B-\xFF])(?=[\x00-\x2F\x40\x5B-\x5E\x60\x7B-\xFF]))}
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Un-Escaping \ of \N, \p, \P, and \X (Sjis software provides)
Sjis software removes '\' at head of alphanumeric regexp metasymbols \N, \p, \P and \X. By this method, you can avoid the trap of the abstraction.
See also, Deprecate literal unescaped "{" in regexes. http://perl5.git.perl.org/perl.git/commit/2a53d3314d380af5ab5283758219417c6dfa36e9
------------------------------------
Before After
------------------------------------
\N{CHARNAME} N\{CHARNAME}
\p{L} p\{L}
\p{^L} p\{^L}
\p{\^L} p\{\^L}
\pL pL
\P{L} P\{L}
\P{^L} P\{^L}
\P{\^L} P\{\^L}
\PL PL
\X X
------------------------------------
Escaping Built-in Functions (Sjis software provides)
Insert 'Esjis::' at head of function name. Esjis.pm provides your script Esjis::* subroutines.
-------------------------------------------
Before After Works as
-------------------------------------------
#if MULTIBYTE_ENCODING
length length Byte
substr substr Byte
pos pos Byte
split Esjis::split Character
tr/// Esjis::tr Character
tr///b tr/// Byte
tr///B tr/// Byte
y/// Esjis::tr Character
y///b tr/// Byte
y///B tr/// Byte
chop Esjis::chop Character
#endif
#if MULTIBYTE_ANCHORING
index Esjis::index Character
rindex Esjis::rindex Character
#endif
lc Esjis::lc Character
lcfirst Esjis::lcfirst Character
uc Esjis::uc Character
ucfirst Esjis::ucfirst Character
fc Esjis::fc Character
chr Esjis::chr Character
glob Esjis::glob Character
#if ESCAPE_SECOND_OCTET
lstat Esjis::lstat Character
opendir Esjis::opendir Character
stat Esjis::stat Character
unlink Esjis::unlink Character
chdir Esjis::chdir Character
do Esjis::do Character
require Esjis::require Character
#endif
-------------------------------------------
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Before After
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
use Perl::Module; BEGIN { Esjis::require 'Perl/Module.pm'; Perl::Module->import() if Perl::Module->can('import'); }
use Perl::Module @list; BEGIN { Esjis::require 'Perl/Module.pm'; Perl::Module->import(@list) if Perl::Module->can('import'); }
use Perl::Module (); BEGIN { Esjis::require 'Perl/Module.pm'; }
no Perl::Module; BEGIN { Esjis::require 'Perl/Module.pm'; Perl::Module->unimport() if Perl::Module->can('unimport'); }
no Perl::Module @list; BEGIN { Esjis::require 'Perl/Module.pm'; Perl::Module->unimport(@list) if Perl::Module->can('unimport'); }
no Perl::Module (); BEGIN { Esjis::require 'Perl/Module.pm'; }
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
#if ESCAPE_SECOND_OCTET =head1 Escaping File Test Operators (Sjis software provides)
Insert 'Esjis::' instead of '-' of operator.
Available in MSWin32, MacOS, and UNIX-like systems
--------------------------------------------------------------------------
Before After Meaning
--------------------------------------------------------------------------
-r Esjis::r File or directory is readable by this (effective) user or group
-w Esjis::w File or directory is writable by this (effective) user or group
-e Esjis::e File or directory name exists
-x Esjis::x File or directory is executable by this (effective) user or group
-z Esjis::z File exists and has zero size (always false for directories)
-f Esjis::f Entry is a plain file
-d Esjis::d Entry is a directory
-t -t The filehandle is a TTY (as reported by the isatty() system function;
filenames can't be tested by this test)
-T Esjis::T File looks like a "text" file
-B Esjis::B File looks like a "binary" file
-M Esjis::M Modification age (measured in days)
-A Esjis::A Access age (measured in days)
-C Esjis::C Inode-modification age (measured in days)
-s Esjis::s File or directory exists and has nonzero size
(the value is the size in bytes)
--------------------------------------------------------------------------
Available in MacOS and UNIX-like systems
--------------------------------------------------------------------------
Before After Meaning
--------------------------------------------------------------------------
-R Esjis::R File or directory is readable by this real user or group
-W Esjis::W File or directory is writable by this real user or group
-X Esjis::X File or directory is executable by this real user or group
-l Esjis::l Entry is a symbolic link
-S Esjis::S Entry is a socket
--------------------------------------------------------------------------
Not available in MSWin32 and MacOS
--------------------------------------------------------------------------
Before After Meaning
--------------------------------------------------------------------------
-o Esjis::o File or directory is owned by this (effective) user
-O Esjis::O File or directory is owned by this real user
-p Esjis::p Entry is a named pipe (a "fifo")
-b Esjis::b Entry is a block-special file (like a mountable disk)
-c Esjis::c Entry is a character-special file (like an I/O device)
-u Esjis::u File or directory is setuid
-g Esjis::g File or directory is setgid
-k Esjis::k File or directory has the sticky bit set
--------------------------------------------------------------------------
-w only inspects the read-only file attribute (FILE_ATTRIBUTE_READONLY), which determines whether the directory can be deleted, not whether it can be written to. Directories always have read and write access unless denied by discretionary access control lists (DACLs). (MSWin32) -R, -W, -X, -O are indistinguishable from -r, -w, -x, -o. (MSWin32) -g, -k, -l, -u, -A are not particularly meaningful. (MSWin32) -x (or -X) determine if a file ends in one of the executable suffixes. -S is meaningless. (MSWin32)
As of Perl 5.00503, as a form of purely syntactic sugar, you can stack file test operators, in a way that -w -x $file is equivalent to -x $file && -w _ .
if ( -w -r $file ) {
print "The file is both readable and writable!\n";
}
#endif #if MULTIBYTE_ENCODING =head1 Escaping Function Name (You do)
You need write 'Sjis::' at head of function name when you want character- oriented subroutine. See 'Character-Oriented Subroutines'.
--------------------------------------------------------
Function Character-Oriented Description
--------------------------------------------------------
ord Sjis::ord
reverse Sjis::reverse
getc Sjis::getc
length Sjis::length
substr Sjis::substr
index Sjis::index See 'About Indexes'
rindex Sjis::rindex See 'About Rindexes'
eval Sjis::eval
--------------------------------------------------------
About Indexes
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
Function Works as Returns as Description
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
index Character Byte JPerl semantics (most useful)
(same as Esjis::index)
Sjis::index Character Character Character-oriented semantics
CORE::index Byte Byte Byte-oriented semantics
(nothing) Byte Character (most useless)
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
About Rindexes
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
Function Works as Returns as Description
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
rindex Character Byte JPerl semantics (most useful)
(same as Esjis::rindex)
Sjis::rindex Character Character Character-oriented semantics
CORE::rindex Byte Byte Byte-oriented semantics
(nothing) Byte Character (most useless)
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
Character-Oriented Subsroutines
Ordinal Value of Character
$ord = Sjis::ord($string); This subroutine returns the numeric value (ASCII or ShiftJIS character) of the first character of $string, not Unicode. If $string is omitted, it uses $_. The return value is always unsigned. If you import ord "use Sjis qw(ord);", ord of your script will be rewritten in Sjis::ord. Sjis::ord is not compatible with ord of JPerl.
Reverse List or String
@reverse = Sjis::reverse(@list); $reverse = Sjis::reverse(@list); In list context, this subroutine returns a list value consisting of the elements of @list in the opposite order. In scalar context, the subroutine concatenates all the elements of @list and then returns the reverse of that resulting string, character by character. If you import reverse "use Sjis qw(reverse);", reverse of your script will be rewritten in Sjis::reverse. Sjis::reverse is not compatible with reverse of JPerl. Even if you do not know this subroutine, there is no problem. This subroutine can be created with $rev = join('', reverse(split(//, $jstring))); as before. See: P.558 JPerl (Japanese Perl) Appendix C Supplement the Japanese version ISBN 4-89052-384-7 PERL PUROGURAMINGU
Returns Next Character
$getc = Sjis::getc(FILEHANDLE); $getc = Sjis::getc($filehandle); $getc = Sjis::getc; This subroutine returns the next character from the input file attached to FILEHANDLE. It returns undef at end-of-file, or if an I/O error was encountered. If FILEHANDLE is omitted, the subroutine reads from STDIN. This subroutine is somewhat slow, but it's occasionally useful for single-character input from the keyboard -- provided you manage to get your keyboard input unbuffered. This subroutine requests unbuffered input from the standard I/O library. Unfortunately, the standard I/O library is not so standard as to provide a portable way to tell the underlying operating system to supply unbuffered keyboard input to the standard I/O system. To do that, you have to be slightly more clever, and in an operating-system-dependent fashion. Under Unix you might say this: if ($BSD_STYLE) { system "stty cbreak </dev/tty >/dev/tty 2>&1"; } else { system "stty", "-icanon", "eol", "\001"; } $key = Sjis::getc; if ($BSD_STYLE) { system "stty -cbreak </dev/tty >/dev/tty 2>&1"; } else { system "stty", "icanon", "eol", "^@"; # ASCII NUL } print "\n"; This code puts the next character typed on the terminal in the string $key. If your stty program has options like cbreak, you'll need to use the code where $BSD_STYLE is true. Otherwise, you'll need to use the code where it is false. If you import getc "use Sjis qw(getc);", getc of your script will be rewritten in Sjis::getc. Sjis::getc is not compatible with getc of JPerl.
Length by ShiftJIS Character
$length = Sjis::length($string); $length = Sjis::length(); This subroutine returns the length in characters (programmer-visible characters) of the scalar value $string. If $string is omitted, it returns the Sjis::length of $_. Do not try to use Sjis::length to find the size of an array or hash. Use scalar @array for the size of an array, and scalar keys %hash for the number of key/value pairs in a hash. (The scalar is typically omitted when redundant.) To find the length of a string in bytes rather than characters, say simply: $bytes = length($string); Even if you do not know this subroutine, there is no problem. This subroutine can be created with $len = split(//, $jstring); as before. See: P.558 JPerl (Japanese Perl) Appendix C Supplement the Japanese version ISBN 4-89052-384-7 PERL PUROGURAMINGU
Substr by ShiftJIS Character
$substr = Sjis::substr($string,$offset,$length,$replacement); $substr = Sjis::substr($string,$offset,$length); $substr = Sjis::substr($string,$offset); This subroutine extracts a substring out of the string given by $string and returns it. The substring is extracted starting at $offset characters from the front of the string. First character is at offset zero. If $offset is negative, starts that far back from the end of the string. If $length is omitted, returns everything through the end of the string. If $length is negative, leaves that many characters off the end of the string. Otherwise, $length indicates the length of the substring to extract, which is sort of what you'd expect. my $s = "The black cat climbed the green tree"; my $color = Sjis::substr $s, 4, 5; # black my $middle = Sjis::substr $s, 4, -11; # black cat climbed the my $end = Sjis::substr $s, 14; # climbed the green tree my $tail = Sjis::substr $s, -4; # tree my $z = Sjis::substr $s, -4, 2; # tr If Perl version 5.14 or later, you can use the Sjis::substr() subroutine as an lvalue. In its case $string must itself be an lvalue. If you assign something shorter than $length, the string will shrink, and if you assign something longer than $length, the string will grow to accommodate it. To keep the string the same length, you may need to pad or chop your value using sprintf. If $offset and $length specify a substring that is partly outside the string, only the part within the string is returned. If the substring is beyond either end of the string, Sjis::substr() returns the undefined value and produces a warning. When used as an lvalue, specifying a substring that is entirely outside the string raises an exception. Here's an example showing the behavior for boundary cases: my $name = 'fred'; Sjis::substr($name, 4) = 'dy'; # $name is now 'freddy' my $null = Sjis::substr $name, 6, 2; # returns "" (no warning) my $oops = Sjis::substr $name, 7; # returns undef, with warning Sjis::substr($name, 7) = 'gap'; # raises an exception An alternative to using Sjis::substr() as an lvalue is to specify the replacement string as the 4th argument. This allows you to replace parts of the $string and return what was there before in one operation, just as you can with splice(). my $s = "The black cat climbed the green tree"; my $z = Sjis::substr $s, 14, 7, "jumped from"; # climbed # $s is now "The black cat jumped from the green tree" Note that the lvalue returned by the three-argument version of Sjis::substr() acts as a 'magic bullet'; each time it is assigned to, it remembers which part of the original string is being modified; for example: $x = '1234'; for (Sjis::substr($x,1,2)) { $_ = 'a'; print $x,"\n"; # prints 1a4 $_ = 'xyz'; print $x,"\n"; # prints 1xyz4 $x = '56789'; $_ = 'pq'; print $x,"\n"; # prints 5pq9 } With negative offsets, it remembers its position from the end of the string when the target string is modified: $x = '1234'; for (Sjis::substr($x, -3, 2)) { $_ = 'a'; print $x,"\n"; # prints 1a4, as above $x = 'abcdefg'; print $_,"\n"; # prints f } Prior to Perl version 5.10, the result of using an lvalue multiple times was unspecified. Prior to 5.16, the result with negative offsets was unspecified.
Index by ShiftJIS Character
$index = Sjis::index($string,$substring,$offset); $index = Sjis::index($string,$substring); This subroutine searches for one string within another. It returns the character position of the first occurrence of $substring in $string. The $offset, if specified, says how many characters from the start to skip before beginning to look. Positions are based at 0. If the substring is not found, the subroutine returns one less than the base, ordinarily -1. To work your way through a string, you might say: $pos = -1; while (($pos = Sjis::index($string, $lookfor, $pos)) > -1) { print "Found at $pos\n"; $pos++; }
Rindex by ShiftJIS Character
$rindex = Sjis::rindex($string,$substring,$offset); $rindex = Sjis::rindex($string,$substring); This subroutine works just like Sjis::index except that it returns the character position of the last occurrence of $substring in $string (a reverse Sjis::index). The subroutine returns -1 if $substring is not found. $offset, if specified, is the rightmost character position that may be returned. To work your way through a string backward, say: $pos = Sjis::length($string); while (($pos = Sjis::rindex($string, $lookfor, $pos)) >= 0) { print "Found at $pos\n"; $pos--; }
Eval ShiftJIS Script
$eval = Sjis::eval { block }; $eval = Sjis::eval $expr; $eval = Sjis::eval; The Sjis::eval keyword serves two distinct but related purposes in JPerl. These purposes are represented by two forms of syntax, Sjis::eval { block } and Sjis::eval $expr. The first form traps runtime exceptions (errors) that would otherwise prove fatal, similar to the "try block" construct in C++ or Java. The second form compiles and executes little bits of code on the fly at runtime, and also (conveniently) traps any exceptions just like the first form. But the second form runs much slower than the first form, since it must parse the string every time. On the other hand, it is also more general. Whichever form you use, Sjis::eval is the preferred way to do all exception handling in JPerl. For either form of Sjis::eval, the value returned from an Sjis::eval is the value of the last expression evaluated, just as with subroutines. Similarly, you may use the return operator to return a value from the middle of the eval. The expression providing the return value is evaluated in void, scalar, or list context, depending on the context of the Sjis::eval itself. See wantarray for more on how the evaluation context can be determined. If there is a trappable error (including any produced by the die operator), Sjis::eval returns undef and puts the error message (or object) in $@. If there is no error, $@ is guaranteed to be set to the null string, so you can test it reliably afterward for errors. A simple Boolean test suffices: Sjis::eval { ... }; # trap runtime errors if ($@) { ... } # handle error (Prior to Perl 5.16, a bug caused undef to be returned in list context for syntax errors, but not for runtime errors.) The Sjis::eval { block } form is syntax checked and compiled at compile time, so it is just as efficient at runtime as any other block. (People familiar with the slow Sjis::eval $expr form are occasionally confused on this issue.) Because the { block } is compiled when the surrounding code is, this form of Sjis::eval cannot trap syntax errors. The Sjis::eval $expr form can trap syntax errors because it parses the code at runtime. (If the parse is unsuccessful, it places the parse error in $@, as usual.) If $expr is omitted, evaluates $_ . Otherwise, it executes the value of $expr as though it were a little JPerl script. The code is executed in the context of the current of the current JPerl script, which means that it can see any enclosing lexicals from a surrounding scope, and that any nonlocal variable settings remain in effect after the Sjis::eval is complete, as do any subroutine or format definitions. The code of the Sjis::eval is treated as a block, so any locally scoped variables declared within the Sjis::eval last only until the Sjis::eval is done. (See my and local.) As with any code in a block, a final semicolon is not required. Sjis::eval will be escaped as follows: ------------------------------------------------- Before After ------------------------------------------------- Sjis::eval { block } eval { block } Sjis::eval $expr eval Sjis::escape $expr Sjis::eval eval Sjis::escape ------------------------------------------------- To tell the truth, the subroutine Sjis::eval does not exist. If it exists, you will troubled, when Sjis::eval has a parameter that is single quoted string included my variables. Sjis::escape is a subroutine that makes Perl script from JPerl script. Here is a simple JPerl shell. It prompts the user to enter a string of arbitrary JPerl code, compiles and executes that string, and prints whatever error occurred: #!/usr/bin/perl # jperlshell.pl - simple JPerl shell use Sjis; print "\nEnter some JPerl code: "; while (<STDIN>) { Sjis::eval; print $@; print "\nEnter some more JPerl code: "; } Here is a rename.pl script to do a mass renaming of files using a JPerl expression: #!/usr/bin/perl # rename.pl - change filenames use Sjis; $op = shift; for (@ARGV) { $was = $_; Sjis::eval $op; die if $@; # next line calls the built-in function, not # the script by the same name if ($was ne $_) { print STDERR "rename $was --> $_\n"; rename($was,$_); } } You'd use that script like this: C:\WINDOWS> perl rename.pl 's/\.orig$//' *.orig C:\WINDOWS> perl rename.pl 'y/A-Z/a-z/ unless /^Make/' * C:\WINDOWS> perl rename.pl '$_ .= ".bad"' *.f Since Sjis::eval traps errors that would otherwise prove fatal, it is useful for determining whether particular features (such as fork or symlink) are implemented. Because Sjis::eval { block } is syntax checked at compile time, any syntax error is reported earlier. Therefore, if your code is invariant and both Sjis::eval $expr and Sjis::eval { block } will suit your purposes equally well, the { block } form is preferred. For example: # make divide-by-zero nonfatal Sjis::eval { $answer = $a / $b; }; warn $@ if $@; # same thing, but less efficient if run multiple times Sjis::eval '$answer = $a / $b'; warn $@ if $@; # a compile-time syntax error (not trapped) Sjis::eval { $answer = }; # WRONG # a runtime syntax error Sjis::eval '$answer ='; # sets $@ Here, the code in the { block } has to be valid JPerl code to make it past the compile phase. The code in the $expr doesn't get examined until runtime, so it doesn't cause an error until runtime. Using the Sjis::eval { block } form as an exception trap in libraries does have some issues. Due to the current arguably broken state of __DIE__ hooks, you may wish not to trigger any __DIE__ hooks that user code may have installed. You can use the local $SIG{__DIE__} construct for this purpose, as this example shows: # a private exception trap for divide-by-zero Sjis::eval { local $SIG{'__DIE__'}; $answer = $a / $b; }; warn $@ if $@; This is especially significant, given that __DIE__ hooks can call die again, which has the effect of changing their error messages: # __DIE__ hooks may modify error messages { local $SIG{'__DIE__'} = sub { (my $x = $_[0]) =~ s/foo/bar/g; die $x }; Sjis::eval { die "foo lives here" }; print $@ if $@; # prints "bar lives here" } Because this promotes action at a distance, this counterintuitive behavior may be fixed in a future release. With an Sjis::eval, you should be especially careful to remember what's being looked at when: Sjis::eval $x; # CASE 1 Sjis::eval "$x"; # CASE 2 Sjis::eval '$x'; # CASE 3 Sjis::eval { $x }; # CASE 4 Sjis::eval "\$$x++"; # CASE 5 $$x++; # CASE 6 CASEs 1 and 2 above behave identically: they run the code contained in the variable $x. (Although CASE 2 has misleading double quotes making the reader wonder what else might be happening (nothing is).) CASEs 3 and 4 likewise behave in the same way: they run the code '$x' , which does nothing but return the value of $x. (CASE 4 is preferred for purely visual reasons, but it also has the advantage of compiling at compile-time instead of at run-time.) CASE 5 is a place where normally you would like to use double quotes, except that in this particular situation, you can just use symbolic references instead, as in CASE 6. Before Perl 5.14, the assignment to $@ occurred before restoration of localized variables, which means that for your code to run on older versions, a temporary is required if you want to mask some but not all errors: # alter $@ on nefarious repugnancy only { my $e; { local $@; # protect existing $@ Sjis::eval { test_repugnancy() }; # $@ =~ /nefarious/ and die $@; # Perl 5.14 and higher only $@ =~ /nefarious/ and $e = $@; } die $e if defined $e } The block of Sjis::eval { block } does not count as a loop, so the loop control statements next, last, or redo cannot be used to leave or restart the block.
Filename Globbing
@glob = glob($expr); $glob = glob($expr); @glob = glob; $glob = glob; @glob = <*>; $glob = <*>; Performs filename expansion (globbing) on $expr, returning the next successive name on each call. If $expr is omitted, $_ is globbed instead. This operator is implemented via the Esjis::glob() subroutine. See Esjis::glob of Esjis.pm for details.
Byte-Oriented Functions
Chop Byte String
$byte = CORE::chop($string); $byte = CORE::chop(@list); $byte = CORE::chop; This function chops off the last byte of a string variable and returns the byte chopped. The CORE::chop operator is used primarily to remove the newline from the end of an input record, and is more efficient than using a substitution (s/\n$//). If that's all you're doing, then it would be safer to use chomp, since CORE::chop always shortens the string no matter what's there, and chomp is more selective. You cannot CORE::chop a literal, only a variable. If you CORE::chop a @list of variables, each string in the list is chopped: @lines = `cat myfile`; CORE::chop @lines; You can CORE::chop anything that is an lvalue, including an assignment: CORE::chop($cwd = `pwd`); CORE::chop($answer = <STDIN>); This is different from: $answer = CORE::chop($temp = <STDIN>); # WRONG which puts a newline into $answer because CORE::chop returns the byte chopped, not the remaining string (which is in $tmp). One way to get the result intended here is with substr: $answer = substr <STDIN>, 0, -1; But this is more commonly written as: CORE::chop($answer = <STDIN>); In the most general case, CORE::chop can be expressed in terms of substr: $last_byte = CORE::chop($var); $last_byte = substr($var, -1, 1, ""); # same thing Once you understand this equivalence, you can use it to do bigger chops. To CORE::chop more than one byte, use substr as an lvalue, assigning a null string. The following removes the last five bytes of $caravan: substr($caravan, -5) = ""; The negative subscript causes substr to count from the end of the string instead of the beginning. If you wanted to save the bytes so removed, you could use the four-argument form of substr, creating something of a quintuple CORE::chop: $tail = substr($caravan, -5, 5, ""); If no argument is given, the function chops the $_ variable.
Ordinal Value of Byte
$ord = CORE::ord($expr); This function returns the numeric value of the first byte of $expr, regardless of "use Sjis qw(ord);" exists or not. If $expr is omitted, it uses $_. The return value is always unsigned. If you want a signed value, use unpack('c',$expr). If you want all the bytes of the string converted to a list of numbers, use unpack('C*',$expr) instead.
Reverse List or Byte String
@reverse = CORE::reverse(@list); $reverse = CORE::reverse(@list); In list context, this function returns a list value consisting of the elements of @list in the opposite order. In scalar context, the function concatenates all the elements of @list and then returns the reverse of that resulting string, byte by byte, regardless of "use Sjis qw(reverse);" exists or not.
Returns Next Byte
$getc = CORE::getc(FILEHANDLE); $getc = CORE::getc($filehandle); $getc = CORE::getc; This function returns the next byte from the input file attached to FILEHANDLE. It returns undef at end-of-file, or if an I/O error was encountered. If FILEHANDLE is omitted, the function reads from STDIN. This function is somewhat slow, but it's occasionally useful for single-byte input from the keyboard -- provided you manage to get your keyboard input unbuffered. This function requests unbuffered input from the standard I/O library. Unfortunately, the standard I/O library is not so standard as to provide a portable way to tell the underlying operating system to supply unbuffered keyboard input to the standard I/O system. To do that, you have to be slightly more clever, and in an operating-system-dependent fashion. Under Unix you might say this: if ($BSD_STYLE) { system "stty cbreak </dev/tty >/dev/tty 2>&1"; } else { system "stty", "-icanon", "eol", "\001"; } $key = CORE::getc; if ($BSD_STYLE) { system "stty -cbreak </dev/tty >/dev/tty 2>&1"; } else { system "stty", "icanon", "eol", "^@"; # ASCII NUL } print "\n"; This code puts the next single-byte typed on the terminal in the string $key. If your stty program has options like cbreak, you'll need to use the code where $BSD_STYLE is true. Otherwise, you'll need to use the code where it is false.
Index by Byte String
$index = CORE::index($string,$substring,$offset); $index = CORE::index($string,$substring); This function searches for one byte string within another. It returns the position of the first occurrence of $substring in $string. The $offset, if specified, says how many bytes from the start to skip before beginning to look. Positions are based at 0. If the substring is not found, the function returns one less than the base, ordinarily -1. To work your way through a string, you might say: $pos = -1; while (($pos = CORE::index($string, $lookfor, $pos)) > -1) { print "Found at $pos\n"; $pos++; }
Rindex by Byte String
$rindex = CORE::rindex($string,$substring,$offset); $rindex = CORE::rindex($string,$substring); This function works just like CORE::index except that it returns the position of the last occurrence of $substring in $string (a reverse CORE::index). The function returns -1 if not $substring is found. $offset, if specified, is the rightmost position that may be returned. To work your way through a string backward, say: $pos = CORE::length($string); while (($pos = CORE::rindex($string, $lookfor, $pos)) >= 0) { print "Found at $pos\n"; $pos--; }
#endif =head1 Un-Escaping bytes::* Subroutines (Sjis software provides)
Sjis software removes 'bytes::' at head of subroutine name.
---------------------------------------
Before After Works as
---------------------------------------
bytes::chr chr Byte
bytes::index index Byte
bytes::length length Byte
bytes::ord ord Byte
bytes::rindex rindex Byte
bytes::substr substr Byte
---------------------------------------
Ignore Pragmas and Modules
-----------------------------------------------------------
Before After
-----------------------------------------------------------
use strict; use strict; no strict qw(refs);
use 5.12.0; use 5.12.0; no strict qw(refs);
require utf8; # require utf8;
require bytes; # require bytes;
require charnames; # require charnames;
require I18N::Japanese; # require I18N::Japanese;
require I18N::Collate; # require I18N::Collate;
require I18N::JExt; # require I18N::JExt;
require File::DosGlob; # require File::DosGlob;
require Wild; # require Wild;
require Wildcard; # require Wildcard;
require Japanese; # require Japanese;
use utf8; # use utf8;
use bytes; # use bytes;
use charnames; # use charnames;
use I18N::Japanese; # use I18N::Japanese;
use I18N::Collate; # use I18N::Collate;
use I18N::JExt; # use I18N::JExt;
use File::DosGlob; # use File::DosGlob;
use Wild; # use Wild;
use Wildcard; # use Wildcard;
use Japanese; # use Japanese;
no utf8; # no utf8;
no bytes; # no bytes;
no charnames; # no charnames;
no I18N::Japanese; # no I18N::Japanese;
no I18N::Collate; # no I18N::Collate;
no I18N::JExt; # no I18N::JExt;
no File::DosGlob; # no File::DosGlob;
no Wild; # no Wild;
no Wildcard; # no Wildcard;
no Japanese; # no Japanese;
-----------------------------------------------------------
Comment out pragma to ignore utf8 environment, and Esjis.pm provides these
functions.
Dummy utf8::upgrade
$num_octets = utf8::upgrade($string); Returns the number of octets necessary to represent the string.
Dummy utf8::downgrade
$success = utf8::downgrade($string[, FAIL_OK]); Returns true always.
Dummy utf8::encode
utf8::encode($string); Returns nothing.
Dummy utf8::decode
$success = utf8::decode($string); Returns true always.
Dummy utf8::is_utf8
$flag = utf8::is_utf8(STRING); Returns false always.
Dummy utf8::valid
$flag = utf8::valid(STRING); Returns true always.
Dummy bytes::chr
This subroutine is same as chr.
Dummy bytes::index
This subroutine is same as index.
Dummy bytes::length
This subroutine is same as length.
Dummy bytes::ord
This subroutine is same as ord.
Dummy bytes::rindex
This subroutine is same as rindex.
Dummy bytes::substr
This subroutine is same as substr.
Environment Variable
This software uses the flock function for exclusive control. The execution of the
program is blocked until it becomes possible to read or write the file.
You can have it not block in the flock function by defining environment variable
CHAR_NONBLOCK.
Example:
SET CHAR_NONBLOCK=1
(The value '1' doesn't have the meaning)
#if MACPERL =head1 MacJPerl on The MacOS
The functions of MacJPerl was mimicked referring to the books and web.
It is welcome if there is a bug report.
The following software is necessary to execute Sjis software.
1. MacPerl module
2. Mac::Files module
3. ToolServer
4. MPW(Macintosh Programmer's Workshop)
#endif =head1 BUGS, LIMITATIONS, and COMPATIBILITY
I have tested and verified this software using the best of my ability. However, a software containing much regular expression is bound to contain some bugs. Thus, if you happen to find a bug that's in Sjis software and not your own program, you can try to reduce it to a minimal test case and then report it to the following author's address. If you have an idea that could make this a more useful tool, please let everyone share it.
#if MULTIBYTE_ENCODING =item * format
Function "format" can't handle multiple-octet code same as original Perl.
#endif =item * cloister of regular expression
The cloister (?s) and (?i) of a regular expression will not be implemented for the time being. Cloister (?s) can be substituted with the .(dot) and \N on /s modifier. Cloister (?i) can be substituted with \F...\E.
#if ESCAPE_SECOND_OCTET =item * chdir
Function chdir() can always be executed with perl5.005.
There are the following limitations for DOS-like system(any of MSWin32, NetWare, symbian, dos).
On perl5.006 or perl5.00800, if path is ended by chr(0x5C), it needs jacode.pl library.
On perl5.008001 or later, perl5.010, perl5.012, perl5.014, perl5.016, perl5.018, perl5.020 if path is ended by chr(0x5C), chdir succeeds when a short path name (8dot3name) can be acquired according to COMMAND.COM or cmd.exe or Win95Cmd.exe. However, leaf-subdirectory of the current directory is a short path name (8dot3name).
see also,
Bug #81839
chdir does not work with chr(0x5C) at end of path
http://bugs.activestate.com/show_bug.cgi?id=81839
#endif #if MULTIBYTE_ENCODING =item * Sjis::substr as Lvalue
If Perl version is older than 5.14, Sjis::substr differs from CORE::substr, and cannot be used as a lvalue. To change part of a string, you need use the optional fourth argument which is the replacement string.
Sjis::substr($string, 13, 4, "JPerl");
#endif #if MULTIBYTE_ANCHORING =item * Special Variables $` and $& need /( Capture All )/
Because $` and $& use $1.
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Before After Works as
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
$` Esjis::PREMATCH() CORE::substr($&,0,CORE::length($&)-CORE::length($1))
${`} Esjis::PREMATCH() CORE::substr($&,0,CORE::length($&)-CORE::length($1))
$PREMATCH Esjis::PREMATCH() CORE::substr($&,0,CORE::length($&)-CORE::length($1))
${^PREMATCH} Esjis::PREMATCH() CORE::substr($&,0,CORE::length($&)-CORE::length($1))
$& Esjis::MATCH() $1
${&} Esjis::MATCH() $1
$MATCH Esjis::MATCH() $1
${^MATCH} Esjis::MATCH() $1
$' $' $'
${'} ${'} $'
$POSTMATCH Esjis::POSTMATCH() $'
${^POSTMATCH} Esjis::POSTMATCH() $'
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
* Limitation of Regular Expression
This software has limitation from \G in multibyte anchoring. Only the following Perl can treat the character string which exceeds 32766 octets with a regular expression.
perl 5.6 or later --- ActivePerl on MSWin32
perl 5.10.1 or later --- other Perl
see also,
In 5.10.0, the * quantifier in patterns was sometimes treated as {0,32767}
http://perldoc.perl.org/perl5101delta.html
[perl #116379] \G can't treat over 32767 octet
http://www.nntp.perl.org/group/perl.perl5.porters/2013/01/msg197320.html
perlre - Perl regular expressions
http://perldoc.perl.org/perlre.html
perlre length limit
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/4592467/perlre-length-limit
Japanese Document
Sjis/JA.pm
#endif #if MULTIBYTE_ENCODING =item * Empty Variable in Regular Expression
Unlike literal null string, an interpolated variable evaluated to the empty string can't use the most recent pattern from a previous successful regular expression.
* Limitation of ?? and m??
Multibyte character needs ( ) which is before {n,m}, {n,}, {n}, *, and + in ?? or m??. As a result, you need to rewrite a script about $1,$2,$3,... You cannot use (?: ) ?, {n,m}?, {n,}?, and {n}? in ?? and m??, because delimiter of m?? is '?'.
#endif #if ESCAPE_SECOND_OCTET =item * Look-behind Assertion
The look-behind assertion like (?<=[A-Z]) is not prevented from matching trail octet of the previous multiple-octet code.
#endif =item * Modifier /a /d /l and /u of Regular Expression
The concept of this software is not to use two or more encoding methods as literal string and literal of regexp in one Perl script. Therefore, modifier /a, /d, /l, and /u are not supported. \d means [0-9] universally.
* Named Character
A named character, such \N{GREEK SMALL LETTER EPSILON}, \N{greek:epsilon}, or \N{epsilon} is not supported.
* Unicode Properties (aka Character Properties) of Regular Expression
Unicode properties (aka character properties) of regexp are not available. Also (?[]) in regexp of Perl 5.18 is not available. There is no plans to currently support these.
#if ESCAPE_SECOND_OCTET =item * ${^WIN32_SLOPPY_STAT} is ignored
Even if ${^WIN32_SLOPPY_STAT} is set to a true value, file test functions Esjis::*(), Esjis::lstat(), and Esjis::stat() on Microsoft Windows open the file for the path which has chr(0x5c) at end.
#endif =item * Delimiter of String and Regexp
qq//, q//, qw//, qx//, qr//, m//, s///, tr///, and y/// can't use a wide character as the delimiter.
AUTHOR
INABA Hitoshi <ina@cpan.org>
This project was originated by INABA Hitoshi.
LICENSE AND COPYRIGHT
This software is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself. See perlartistic.
This software is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.
My Goal
P.401 See chapter 15: Unicode of ISBN 0-596-00027-8 Programming Perl Third Edition.
Before the introduction of Unicode support in perl, The eq operator just compared the byte-strings represented by two scalars. Beginning with perl 5.8, eq compares two byte-strings with simultaneous consideration of the UTF8 flag.
/* You are not expected to understand this */
Information processing model beginning with perl 5.8
+----------------------+---------------------+
| Text strings | |
+----------+-----------| Binary strings |
| UTF-8 | Latin-1 | |
+----------+-----------+---------------------+
| UTF8 | Not UTF8 |
| Flagged | Flagged |
+--------------------------------------------+
http://perl-users.jp/articles/advent-calendar/2010/casual/4
Confusion of Perl string model is made from double meanings of
"Binary string."
Meanings of "Binary string"
1. Non-Text string
2. Digital octet string
Let's draw again using those term.
+----------------------+---------------------+
| Text strings | |
+----------+-----------| Non-Text strings |
| UTF-8 | Latin-1 | |
+----------+-----------+---------------------+
| UTF8 | Not UTF8 |
| Flagged | Flagged |
+--------------------------------------------+
| Digital octet string |
+--------------------------------------------+
There are people who don't agree to change in the character string processing model of Perl 5.8. It is impossible to get to agree it to majority of Perl user who hardly ever use Perl. How to solve it by returning to a original method, let's drag out page 402 of the old dusty Programming Perl, 3rd ed. again.
Information processing model beginning with perl3 or this software
of UNIX/C-ism.
+--------------------------------------------+
| Text string as Digital octet string |
| Digital octet string as Text string |
+--------------------------------------------+
| Not UTF8 Flagged, No Mojibake |
+--------------------------------------------+
In UNIX Everything is a File
- In UNIX everything is a stream of bytes
- In UNIX the filesystem is used as a universal name space
Native Encoding Scripting
- native encoding of file contents
- native encoding of file name on filesystem
- native encoding of command line
- native encoding of environment variable
- native encoding of API
- native encoding of network packet
- native encoding of database
Ideally, I'd like to achieve these five Goals:
Goal #1:
Old byte-oriented programs should not spontaneously break on the old byte-oriented data they used to work on.
This goal has been achieved by that this software is additional code for perl like utf8 pragma. Perl should work same as past Perl if added nothing.
Goal #2:
Old byte-oriented programs should magically start working on the new character-oriented data when appropriate.
Still now, 1 octet is counted with 1 by built-in functions length, substr, index, rindex, and pos that handle length and position of string. In this part, there is no change. The length of 1 character of 2 octet code is 2.
On the other hand, the regular expression in the script is added the multibyte anchoring processing with this software, instead of you.
figure of Goal #1 and Goal #2.
GOAL#1 GOAL#2 (a) (b) (c) (d) (e) +--------------+-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+ | data | Old | Old | New | Old | New | +--------------+-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+ | script | Old | Old | New | +--------------+-------+---------------+---------------+ | interpreter | Old | New | +--------------+-------+-------------------------------+ Old --- Old byte-oriented New --- New character-oriented
There is a combination from (a) to (e) in data, script, and interpreter of old and new. Let's add the Encode module and this software did not exist at time of be written this document and JPerl did exist.
(a) (b) (c) (d) (e) JPerl,japerl Encode,Sjis +--------------+-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+ | data | Old | Old | New | Old | New | +--------------+-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+ | script | Old | Old | New | +--------------+-------+---------------+---------------+ | interpreter | Old | New | +--------------+-------+-------------------------------+ Old --- Old byte-oriented New --- New character-oriented
The reason why JPerl is very excellent is that it is at the position of (c). That is, it is not necessary to do a special description to the script to process new character-oriented string. (May the japerl take over JPerl!)
Goal #3:
Programs should run just as fast in the new character-oriented mode as in the old byte-oriented mode.
It is impossible. Because the following time is necessary.
(1) Time of escape script for old byte-oriented perl.
#if MULTIBYTE_ANCHORING (2) Time of processing regular expression by escaped script while multibyte anchoring.
#endif Someday, I want to ask Larry Wall about this goal in the elevator.
Goal #4:
Perl should remain one language, rather than forking into a byte-oriented Perl and a character-oriented Perl.
JPerl remains one Perl language by forking to two interpreters. However, the Perl core team did not desire fork of the interpreter. As a result, Perl language forked contrary to goal #4.
A character-oriented perl is not necessary to make it specially, because a byte-oriented perl can already treat the binary data. This software is only an application program of byte-oriented Perl, a filter program.
And you will get support from the Perl community, when you solve the problem by the Perl script.
Sjis software remains one language and one interpreter.
Goal #5:
JPerl users will be able to maintain JPerl by Perl.
May the JPerl be with you, always.
Back when Programming Perl, 3rd ed. was written, UTF8 flag was not born and Perl is designed to make the easy jobs easy. This software provides programming environment like at that time.
Perl's motto
Some computer scientists (the reductionists, in particular) would
like to deny it, but people have funny-shaped minds. Mental geography
is not linear, and cannot be mapped onto a flat surface without
severe distortion. But for the last score years or so, computer
reductionists have been first bowing down at the Temple of Orthogonality,
then rising up to preach their ideas of ascetic rectitude to any who
would listen.
Their fervent but misguided desire was simply to squash your mind to
fit their mindset, to smush your patterns of thought into some sort of
Hyperdimensional Flatland. It's a joyless existence, being smushed.
--- Learning Perl on Win32 Systems
If you think this is a big headache, you're right. No one likes
this situation, but Perl does the best it can with the input and
encodings it has to deal with. If only we could reset history and
not make so many mistakes next time.
--- Learning Perl 6th Edition
The most important thing for most people to know about handling
Unicode data in Perl, however, is that if you don't ever use any Uni-
code data -- if none of your files are marked as UTF-8 and you don't
use UTF-8 locales -- then you can happily pretend that you're back in
Perl 5.005_03 land; the Unicode features will in no way interfere with
your code unless you're explicitly using them. Sometimes the twin
goals of embracing Unicode but not disturbing old-style byte-oriented
scripts has led to compromise and confusion, but it's the Perl way to
silently do the right thing, which is what Perl ends up doing.
--- Advanced Perl Programming, 2nd Edition
SEE ALSO
PERL PUROGURAMINGU
Larry Wall, Randal L.Schwartz, Yoshiyuki Kondo
December 1997
ISBN 4-89052-384-7
http://www.context.co.jp/~cond/books/old-books.html
Programming Perl, Second Edition
By Larry Wall, Tom Christiansen, Randal L. Schwartz
October 1996
Pages: 670
ISBN 10: 1-56592-149-6 | ISBN 13: 9781565921498
http://shop.oreilly.com/product/9781565921498.do
Programming Perl, Third Edition
By Larry Wall, Tom Christiansen, Jon Orwant
Third Edition July 2000
Pages: 1104
ISBN 10: 0-596-00027-8 | ISBN 13: 9780596000271
http://shop.oreilly.com/product/9780596000271.do
The Perl Language Reference Manual (for Perl version 5.12.1)
by Larry Wall and others
Paperback (6"x9"), 724 pages
Retail Price: $39.95 (pound 29.95 in UK)
ISBN-13: 978-1-906966-02-7
http://www.network-theory.co.uk/perl/language/
Perl Pocket Reference, 5th Edition
By Johan Vromans
Publisher: O'Reilly Media
Released: July 2011
Pages: 102
http://shop.oreilly.com/product/0636920018476.do
Programming Perl, 4th Edition
By: Tom Christiansen, brian d foy, Larry Wall, Jon Orwant
Publisher: O'Reilly Media
Formats: Print, Ebook, Safari Books Online
Released: March 2012
Pages: 1130
Print ISBN: 978-0-596-00492-7 | ISBN 10: 0-596-00492-3
Ebook ISBN: 978-1-4493-9890-3 | ISBN 10: 1-4493-9890-1
http://shop.oreilly.com/product/9780596004927.do
Perl Cookbook
By Tom Christiansen, Nathan Torkington
August 1998
Pages: 800
ISBN 10: 1-56592-243-3 | ISBN 13: 978-1-56592-243-3
http://shop.oreilly.com/product/9781565922433.do
Perl Cookbook, Second Edition
By Tom Christiansen, Nathan Torkington
Second Edition August 2003
Pages: 964
ISBN 10: 0-596-00313-7 | ISBN 13: 9780596003135
http://shop.oreilly.com/product/9780596003135.do
Perl in a Nutshell, Second Edition
By Stephen Spainhour, Ellen Siever, Nathan Patwardhan
Second Edition June 2002
Pages: 760
Series: In a Nutshell
ISBN 10: 0-596-00241-6 | ISBN 13: 9780596002411
http://shop.oreilly.com/product/9780596002411.do
Learning Perl on Win32 Systems
By Randal L. Schwartz, Erik Olson, Tom Christiansen
August 1997
Pages: 306
ISBN 10: 1-56592-324-3 | ISBN 13: 9781565923249
http://shop.oreilly.com/product/9781565923249.do
Learning Perl, Fifth Edition
By Randal L. Schwartz, Tom Phoenix, brian d foy
June 2008
Pages: 352
Print ISBN:978-0-596-52010-6 | ISBN 10: 0-596-52010-7
Ebook ISBN:978-0-596-10316-3 | ISBN 10: 0-596-10316-6
http://shop.oreilly.com/product/9780596520113.do
Learning Perl, 6th Edition
By Randal L. Schwartz, brian d foy, Tom Phoenix
June 2011
Pages: 390
ISBN-10: 1449303587 | ISBN-13: 978-1449303587
http://shop.oreilly.com/product/0636920018452.do
Advanced Perl Programming, 2nd Edition
By Simon Cozens
June 2005
Pages: 300
ISBN-10: 0-596-00456-7 | ISBN-13: 978-0-596-00456-9
http://shop.oreilly.com/product/9780596004569.do
Perl RESOURCE KIT UNIX EDITION
Futato, Irving, Jepson, Patwardhan, Siever
ISBN 10: 1-56592-370-7
http://shop.oreilly.com/product/9781565923706.do
MODAN Perl NYUMON
By Daisuke Maki
2009/2/10
Pages: 344
ISBN 10: 4798119172 | ISBN 13: 978-4798119175
http://www.seshop.com/product/detail/10250/
Understanding Japanese Information Processing
By Ken Lunde
January 1900
Pages: 470
ISBN 10: 1-56592-043-0 | ISBN 13: 9781565920439
http://shop.oreilly.com/product/9781565920439.do
CJKV Information Processing
Chinese, Japanese, Korean & Vietnamese Computing
By Ken Lunde
First Edition January 1999
Pages: 1128
ISBN 10: 1-56592-224-7 | ISBN 13: 9781565922242
http://shop.oreilly.com/product/9781565922242.do
Mastering Regular Expressions, Second Edition
By Jeffrey E. F. Friedl
Second Edition July 2002
Pages: 484
ISBN 10: 0-596-00289-0 | ISBN 13: 9780596002893
http://shop.oreilly.com/product/9780596002893.do
Mastering Regular Expressions, Third Edition
By Jeffrey E. F. Friedl
Third Edition August 2006
Pages: 542
ISBN 10: 0-596-52812-4 | ISBN 13:9780596528126
http://shop.oreilly.com/product/9780596528126.do
Regular Expressions Cookbook
By Jan Goyvaerts, Steven Levithan
May 2009
Pages: 512
ISBN 10:0-596-52068-9 | ISBN 13: 978-0-596-52068-7
http://shop.oreilly.com/product/9780596520694.do
JIS KANJI JITEN
By Kouji Shibano
Pages: 1456
ISBN 4-542-20129-5
http://www.webstore.jsa.or.jp/lib/lib.asp?fn=/manual/mnl01_12.htm
UNIX MAGAZINE
1993 Aug
Pages: 172
T1008901080816 ZASSHI 08901-8
http://ascii.asciimw.jp/books/books/detail/978-4-7561-5008-0.shtml
LINUX NIHONGO KANKYO
By YAMAGATA Hiroo, Stephen J. Turnbull, Craig Oda, Robert J. Bickel
June, 2000
Pages: 376
ISBN 4-87311-016-5
http://www.oreilly.co.jp/books/4873110165/
MacPerl Power and Ease
By Vicki Brown, Chris Nandor
April 1998
Pages: 350
ISBN 10: 1881957322 | ISBN 13: 978-1881957324
http://www.amazon.com/Macperl-Power-Ease-Vicki-Brown/dp/1881957322
Windows NT Shell Scripting
By Timothy Hill
April 27, 1998
Pages: 400
ISBN 10: 1578700477 | ISBN 13: 9781578700479
http://search.barnesandnoble.com/Windows-NT-Shell-Scripting/Timothy-Hill/e/9781578700479/
Windows(R) Command-Line Administrators Pocket Consultant, 2nd Edition
By William R. Stanek
February 2009
Pages: 594
ISBN 10: 0-7356-2262-0 | ISBN 13: 978-0-7356-2262-3
http://shop.oreilly.com/product/9780735622623.do
Kaoru Maeda, Perl's history Perl 1,2,3,4
http://www.slideshare.net/KaoruMaeda/perl-perl-1234
nurse, What is "string"
http://d.hatena.ne.jp/nurse/20141107#1415355181
NISHIO Hirokazu, What's meant "string as a sequence of characters"?
http://d.hatena.ne.jp/nishiohirokazu/20141107/1415286729
nurse, History of Japanese EUC 22:00
http://d.hatena.ne.jp/nurse/20090308/1236517235
Mike Whitaker, Perl And Unicode
http://www.slideshare.net/Penfold/perl-and-unicode
Ricardo Signes, Perl 5.14 for Pragmatists
http://www.slideshare.net/rjbs/perl-514-8809465
Ricardo Signes, What's New in Perl? v5.10 - v5.16
http://www.slideshare.net/rjbs/whats-new-in-perl-v510-v516
CPAN Directory INABA Hitoshi
http://search.cpan.org/~ina/
BackPAN
http://backpan.perl.org/authors/id/I/IN/INA/
Recent Perl packages by "INABA Hitoshi"
http://code.activestate.com/ppm/author:INABA-Hitoshi/
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
This software was made referring to software and the document that the following hackers or persons had made. I am thankful to all persons.
Rick Yamashita, Shift_JIS
ttp://furukawablog.spaces.live.com/Blog/cns!1pmWgsL289nm7Shn7cS0jHzA!2225.entry (dead link)
ttp://shino.tumblr.com/post/116166805/1981-us-jis
(add 'h' at head)
http://www.wdic.org/w/WDIC/%E3%82%B7%E3%83%95%E3%83%88JIS
Larry Wall, Perl
http://www.perl.org/
Kazumasa Utashiro, jcode.pl
http://search.cpan.org/~utashiro/
ftp://ftp.iij.ad.jp/pub/IIJ/dist/utashiro/perl/
http://log.utashiro.com/pub/2006/07/jkondo_a580.html
Jeffrey E. F. Friedl, Mastering Regular Expressions
http://regex.info/
SADAHIRO Tomoyuki, The right way of using Shift_JIS
http://homepage1.nifty.com/nomenclator/perl/shiftjis.htm
http://search.cpan.org/~sadahiro/
Yukihiro "Matz" Matsumoto, YAPC::Asia2006 Ruby on Perl(s)
http://www.rubyist.net/~matz/slides/yapc2006/
jscripter, For jperl users
http://homepage1.nifty.com/kazuf/jperl.html
Bruce., Unicode in Perl
http://www.rakunet.org/tsnet/TSabc/18/546.html
Hiroaki Izumi, Perl5.8/Perl5.10 is not useful on the Windows.
http://dl.dropbox.com/u/23756062/perlwin.html
https://sites.google.com/site/hiroa63iz/perlwin
TSUKAMOTO Makio, Perl memo/file path of Windows
http://digit.que.ne.jp/work/wiki.cgi?Perl%E3%83%A1%E3%83%A2%2FWindows%E3%81%A7%E3%81%AE%E3%83%95%E3%82%A1%E3%82%A4%E3%83%AB%E3%83%91%E3%82%B9
chaichanPaPa, Matching Shift_JIS file name
http://d.hatena.ne.jp/chaichanPaPa/20080802/1217660826
SUZUKI Norio, Jperl
http://homepage2.nifty.com/kipp/perl/jperl/
WATANABE Hirofumi, Jperl
http://www.cpan.org/src/5.0/jperl/
http://search.cpan.org/~watanabe/
ftp://ftp.oreilly.co.jp/pcjp98/watanabe/jperlconf.ppt
Chuck Houpt, Michiko Nozu, MacJPerl
http://habilis.net/macjperl/index.j.html
Kenichi Ishigaki, Pod-PerldocJp, Welcome to modern Perl world
http://search.cpan.org/dist/Pod-PerldocJp/
http://gihyo.jp/dev/serial/01/modern-perl/0031
http://gihyo.jp/dev/serial/01/modern-perl/0032
http://gihyo.jp/dev/serial/01/modern-perl/0033
Fuji, Goro (gfx), Perl Hackers Hub No.16
http://gihyo.jp/dev/serial/01/perl-hackers-hub/001602
Dan Kogai, Encode module
http://search.cpan.org/dist/Encode/
http://www.archive.org/details/YAPCAsia2006TokyoPerl58andUnicodeMythsFactsandChanges (video)
http://yapc.g.hatena.ne.jp/jkondo/ (audio)
Takahashi Masatuyo, JPerl Wiki
http://ja.jperl.wikia.com/wiki/JPerl_Wiki
Juerd, Perl Unicode Advice
http://juerd.nl/site.plp/perluniadvice
daily dayflower, 2008-06-25 perluniadvice
http://d.hatena.ne.jp/dayflower/20080625/1214374293
Jesse Vincent, Compatibility is a virtue
http://www.nntp.perl.org/group/perl.perl5.porters/2010/05/msg159825.html
Tokyo-pm archive
http://mail.pm.org/pipermail/tokyo-pm/
http://mail.pm.org/pipermail/tokyo-pm/1999-September/001844.html
http://mail.pm.org/pipermail/tokyo-pm/1999-September/001854.html
Error: Runtime exception on jperl 5.005_03
http://www.rakunet.org/tsnet/TSperl/12/374.html
http://www.rakunet.org/tsnet/TSperl/12/375.html
http://www.rakunet.org/tsnet/TSperl/12/376.html
http://www.rakunet.org/tsnet/TSperl/12/377.html
http://www.rakunet.org/tsnet/TSperl/12/378.html
http://www.rakunet.org/tsnet/TSperl/12/379.html
http://www.rakunet.org/tsnet/TSperl/12/380.html
http://www.rakunet.org/tsnet/TSperl/12/382.html
ruby-list
http://blade.nagaokaut.ac.jp/ruby/ruby-list/index.shtml
http://blade.nagaokaut.ac.jp/cgi-bin/scat.rb/ruby/ruby-list/2440
http://blade.nagaokaut.ac.jp/cgi-bin/scat.rb/ruby/ruby-list/2446
http://blade.nagaokaut.ac.jp/cgi-bin/scat.rb/ruby/ruby-list/2569
http://blade.nagaokaut.ac.jp/cgi-bin/scat.rb/ruby/ruby-list/9427
http://blade.nagaokaut.ac.jp/cgi-bin/scat.rb/ruby/ruby-list/9431
http://blade.nagaokaut.ac.jp/cgi-bin/scat.rb/ruby/ruby-list/10500
http://blade.nagaokaut.ac.jp/cgi-bin/scat.rb/ruby/ruby-list/10501
http://blade.nagaokaut.ac.jp/cgi-bin/scat.rb/ruby/ruby-list/10502
http://blade.nagaokaut.ac.jp/cgi-bin/scat.rb/ruby/ruby-list/12385
http://blade.nagaokaut.ac.jp/cgi-bin/scat.rb/ruby/ruby-list/12392
http://blade.nagaokaut.ac.jp/cgi-bin/scat.rb/ruby/ruby-list/12393
http://blade.nagaokaut.ac.jp/cgi-bin/scat.rb/ruby/ruby-list/19156
Object-oriented with Perl
http://www.freeml.com/perl-oo/486
http://www.freeml.com/perl-oo/487
http://www.freeml.com/perl-oo/490
http://www.freeml.com/perl-oo/491
http://www.freeml.com/perl-oo/492
http://www.freeml.com/perl-oo/494
http://www.freeml.com/perl-oo/514
NAME
Esjis - Run-time routines for Sjis.pm
SYNOPSIS
use Esjis;
Esjis::split(...);
Esjis::tr(...);
Esjis::chop(...);
Esjis::index(...);
Esjis::rindex(...);
Esjis::lc(...);
Esjis::lc_;
Esjis::lcfirst(...);
Esjis::lcfirst_;
Esjis::uc(...);
Esjis::uc_;
Esjis::ucfirst(...);
Esjis::ucfirst_;
Esjis::fc(...);
Esjis::fc_;
Esjis::ignorecase(...);
Esjis::capture(...);
Esjis::chr(...);
Esjis::chr_;
#if ESCAPE_SECOND_OCTET
Esjis::X ...;
Esjis::X_;
#endif
Esjis::glob(...);
Esjis::glob_;
#if ESCAPE_SECOND_OCTET
Esjis::lstat(...);
Esjis::lstat_;
Esjis::opendir(...);
Esjis::stat(...);
Esjis::stat_;
Esjis::unlink(...);
Esjis::chdir(...);
Esjis::do(...);
Esjis::require(...);
Esjis::telldir(...);
#endif
# "no Esjis;" not supported
ABSTRACT
This module has run-time routines for use Sjis software automatically, you do not have to use.
BUGS AND LIMITATIONS
I have tested and verified this software using the best of my ability. However, a software containing much regular expression is bound to contain some bugs. Thus, if you happen to find a bug that's in Sjis software and not your own program, you can try to reduce it to a minimal test case and then report it to the following author's address. If you have an idea that could make this a more useful tool, please let everyone share it.
HISTORY
This Esjis module first appeared in ActivePerl Build 522 Built under MSWin32 Compiled at Nov 2 1999 09:52:28
AUTHOR
INABA Hitoshi <ina@cpan.org>
This project was originated by INABA Hitoshi. For any questions, use <ina@cpan.org> so we can share this file.
LICENSE AND COPYRIGHT
This module is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself. See perlartistic.
This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.
EXAMPLES
- Split string
-
@split = Esjis::split(/pattern/,$string,$limit); @split = Esjis::split(/pattern/,$string); @split = Esjis::split(/pattern/); @split = Esjis::split('',$string,$limit); @split = Esjis::split('',$string); @split = Esjis::split(''); @split = Esjis::split(); @split = Esjis::split; This subroutine scans a string given by $string for separators, and splits the string into a list of substring, returning the resulting list value in list context or the count of substring in scalar context. Scalar context also causes split to write its result to @_, but this usage is deprecated. The separators are determined by repeated pattern matching, using the regular expression given in /pattern/, so the separators may be of any size and need not be the same string on every match. (The separators are not ordinarily returned; exceptions are discussed later in this section.) If the /pattern/ doesn't match the string at all, Esjis::split returns the original string as a single substring, If it matches once, you get two substrings, and so on. You may supply regular expression modifiers to the /pattern/, like /pattern/i, /pattern/x, etc. The //m modifier is assumed when you split on the pattern /^/. If $limit is specified and positive, the subroutine splits into no more than that many fields (though it may split into fewer if it runs out of separators). If $limit is negative, it is treated as if an arbitrarily large $limit has been specified If $limit is omitted or zero, trailing null fields are stripped from the result (which potential users of pop would do wel to remember). If $string is omitted, the subroutine splits the $_ string. If /pattern/ is also omitted or is the literal space, " ", the subroutine split on whitespace, /\s+/, after skipping any leading whitespace. A /pattern/ of /^/ is secretly treated if it it were /^/m, since it isn't much use otherwise. String of any length can be split: @chars = Esjis::split(//, $word); @fields = Esjis::split(/:/, $line); @words = Esjis::split(" ", $paragraph); @lines = Esjis::split(/^/, $buffer); A pattern capable of matching either the null string or something longer than the null string (for instance, a pattern consisting of any single character modified by a * or ?) will split the value of $string into separate characters wherever it matches the null string between characters; nonnull matches will skip over the matched separator characters in the usual fashion. (In other words, a pattern won't match in one spot more than once, even if it matched with a zero width.) For example: print join(":" => Esjis::split(/ */, "hi there")); produces the output "h:i:t:h:e:r:e". The space disappers because it matches as part of the separator. As a trivial case, the null pattern // simply splits into separate characters, and spaces do not disappear. (For normal pattern matches, a // pattern would repeat the last successfully matched pattern, but Esjis::split's pattern is exempt from that wrinkle.) The $limit parameter splits only part of a string: my ($login, $passwd, $remainder) = Esjis::split(/:/, $_, 3); We encourage you to split to lists of names like this to make your code self-documenting. (For purposes of error checking, note that $remainder would be undefined if there were fewer than three fields.) When assigning to a list, if $limit is omitted, Perl supplies a $limit one larger than the number of variables in the list, to avoid unneccessary work. For the split above, $limit would have been 4 by default, and $remainder would have received only the third field, not all the rest of the fields. In time-critical applications, it behooves you not to split into more fields than you really need. (The trouble with powerful languages it that they let you be powerfully stupid at times.) We said earlier that the separators are not returned, but if the /pattern/ contains parentheses, then the substring matched by each pair of parentheses is included in the resulting list, interspersed with the fields that are ordinarily returned. Here's a simple example: Esjis::split(/([-,])/, "1-10,20"); which produces the list value: (1, "-", 10, ",", 20) With more parentheses, a field is returned for each pair, even if some pairs don't match, in which case undefined values are returned in those positions. So if you say: Esjis::split(/(-)|(,)/, "1-10,20"); you get the value: (1, "-", undef, 10, undef, ",", 20) The /pattern/ argument may be replaced with an expression to specify patterns that vary at runtime. As with ordinary patterns, to do run-time compilation only once, use /$variable/o. As a special case, if the expression is a single space (" "), the subroutine splits on whitespace just as Esjis::split with no arguments does. Thus, Esjis::split(" ") can be used to emulate awk's default behavior. In contrast, Esjis::split(/ /) will give you as many null initial fields as there are leading spaces. (Other than this special case, if you supply a string instead of a regular expression, it'll be interpreted as a regular expression anyway.) You can use this property to remove leading and trailing whitespace from a string and to collapse intervaning stretches of whitespace into a single space: $string = join(" ", Esjis::split(" ", $string)); The following example splits an RFC822 message header into a hash containing $head{'Date'}, $head{'Subject'}, and so on. It uses the trick of assigning a list of pairs to a hash, because separators altinate with separated fields, It users parentheses to return part of each separator as part of the returned list value. Since the split pattern is guaranteed to return things in pairs by virtue of containing one set of parentheses, the hash assignment is guaranteed to receive a list consisting of key/value pairs, where each key is the name of a header field. (Unfortunately, this technique loses information for multiple lines with the same key field, such as Received-By lines. Ah well) $header =~ s/\n\s+/ /g; # Merge continuation lines. %head = ("FRONTSTUFF", Esjis::split(/^(\S*?):\s*/m, $header)); The following example processes the entries in a Unix passwd(5) file. You could leave out the chomp, in which case $shell would have a newline on the end of it. open(PASSWD, "/etc/passwd"); while (<PASSWD>) { chomp; # remove trailing newline. ($login, $passwd, $uid, $gid, $gcos, $home, $shell) = Esjis::split(/:/); ... } Here's how process each word of each line of each file of input to create a word-frequency hash. while (<>) { for my $word (Esjis::split()) { $count{$word}++; } } The inverse of Esjis::split is join, except that join can only join with the same separator between all fields. To break apart a string with fixed-position fields, use unpack. Processing long $string (over 32766 octets) requires Perl 5.010001 or later.
- Transliteration
-
$tr = Esjis::tr($variable,$bind_operator,$searchlist,$replacementlist,$modifier); $tr = Esjis::tr($variable,$bind_operator,$searchlist,$replacementlist); This is the transliteration (sometimes erroneously called translation) operator, which is like the y/// operator in the Unix sed program, only better, in everybody's humble opinion. This subroutine scans a ShiftJIS string character by character and replaces all occurrences of the characters found in $searchlist with the corresponding character in $replacementlist. It returns the number of characters replaced or deleted. If no ShiftJIS string is specified via =~ operator, the $_ variable is translated. $modifier are: --------------------------------------------------------------------------- Modifier Meaning --------------------------------------------------------------------------- c Complement $searchlist. d Delete found but unreplaced characters. s Squash duplicate replaced characters. r Return transliteration and leave the original string untouched. --------------------------------------------------------------------------- To use with a read-only value without raising an exception, use the /r modifier. print Esjis::tr('bookkeeper','=~','boep','peob','r'); # prints 'peekkoobor'
- Chop string
-
$chop = Esjis::chop(@list); $chop = Esjis::chop(); $chop = Esjis::chop; This subroutine chops off the last character of a string variable and returns the character chopped. The Esjis::chop subroutine is used primary to remove the newline from the end of an input recoed, and it is more efficient than using a substitution. If that's all you're doing, then it would be safer to use chomp, since Esjis::chop always shortens the string no matter what's there, and chomp is more selective. If no argument is given, the subroutine chops the $_ variable. You cannot Esjis::chop a literal, only a variable. If you Esjis::chop a list of variables, each string in the list is chopped: @lines = `cat myfile`; Esjis::chop(@lines); You can Esjis::chop anything that is an lvalue, including an assignment: Esjis::chop($cwd = `pwd`); Esjis::chop($answer = <STDIN>); This is different from: $answer = Esjis::chop($tmp = <STDIN>); # WRONG which puts a newline into $answer because Esjis::chop returns the character chopped, not the remaining string (which is in $tmp). One way to get the result intended here is with substr: $answer = substr <STDIN>, 0, -1; But this is more commonly written as: Esjis::chop($answer = <STDIN>); In the most general case, Esjis::chop can be expressed using substr: $last_code = Esjis::chop($var); $last_code = substr($var, -1, 1, ""); # same thing Once you understand this equivalence, you can use it to do bigger chops. To Esjis::chop more than one character, use substr as an lvalue, assigning a null string. The following removes the last five characters of $caravan: substr($caravan, -5) = ''; The negative subscript causes substr to count from the end of the string instead of the beginning. To save the removed characters, you could use the four-argument form of substr, creating something of a quintuple Esjis::chop; $tail = substr($caravan, -5, 5, ''); This is all dangerous business dealing with characters instead of graphemes. Perl doesn't really have a grapheme mode, so you have to deal with them yourself.
- Index string
-
$byte_pos = Esjis::index($string,$substr,$byte_offset); $byte_pos = Esjis::index($string,$substr); This subroutine searches for one string within another. It returns the byte position of the first occurrence of $substring in $string. The $byte_offset, if specified, says how many bytes from the start to skip before beginning to look. Positions are based at 0. If the substring is not found, the subroutine returns one less than the base, ordinarily -1. To work your way through a string, you might say: $byte_pos = -1; while (($byte_pos = Esjis::index($string, $lookfor, $byte_pos)) > -1) { print "Found at $byte_pos\n"; $byte_pos++; }
- Reverse index string
-
$byte_pos = Esjis::rindex($string,$substr,$byte_offset); $byte_pos = Esjis::rindex($string,$substr); This subroutine works just like Esjis::index except that it returns the byte position of the last occurrence of $substring in $string (a reverse Esjis::index). The subroutine returns -1 if $substring is not found. $byte_offset, if specified, is the rightmost byte position that may be returned. To work your way through a string backward, say: $byte_pos = length($string); while (($byte_pos = Sjis::rindex($string, $lookfor, $byte_pos)) >= 0) { print "Found at $byte_pos\n"; $byte_pos--; }
- Lower case string
-
$lc = Esjis::lc($string); $lc = Esjis::lc_; This subroutine returns a lowercased version of ShiftJIS $string (or $_, if $string is omitted). This is the internal subroutine implementing the \L escape in double-quoted strings. You can use the Esjis::fc subroutine for case-insensitive comparisons via Sjis software.
- Lower case first character of string
-
$lcfirst = Esjis::lcfirst($string); $lcfirst = Esjis::lcfirst_; This subroutine returns a version of ShiftJIS $string with the first character lowercased (or $_, if $string is omitted). This is the internal subroutine implementing the \l escape in double-quoted strings.
- Upper case string
-
$uc = Esjis::uc($string); $uc = Esjis::uc_; This subroutine returns an uppercased version of ShiftJIS $string (or $_, if $string is omitted). This is the internal subroutine implementing the \U escape in interpolated strings. For titlecase, use Esjis::ucfirst instead. You can use the Esjis::fc subroutine for case-insensitive comparisons via Sjis software.
- Upper case first character of string
-
$ucfirst = Esjis::ucfirst($string); $ucfirst = Esjis::ucfirst_; This subroutine returns a version of ShiftJIS $string with the first character titlecased and other characters left alone (or $_, if $string is omitted). Titlecase is "Camel" for an initial capital that has (or expects to have) lowercase characters following it, not uppercase ones. Exsamples are the first letter of a sentence, of a person's name, of a newspaper headline, or of most words in a title. Characters with no titlecase mapping return the uppercase mapping instead. This is the internal subroutine implementing the \u escape in double-quoted strings. To capitalize a string by mapping its first character to titlecase and the rest to lowercase, use: $titlecase = Esjis::ucfirst(substr($word,0,1)) . Esjis::lc(substr($word,1)); or $string =~ s/(\w)(\w*)/\u$1\L$2/g; Do not use: $do_not_use = Esjis::ucfirst(Esjis::lc($word)); or "\u\L$word", because that can produce a different and incorrect answer with certain characters. The titlecase of something that's been lowercased doesn't always produce the same thing titlecasing the original produces. Because titlecasing only makes sense at the start of a string that's followed by lowercase characters, we can't think of any reason you might want to titlecase every character in a string. See also P.287 A Case of Mistaken Identity in Chapter 6: Unicode of ISBN 978-0-596-00492-7 Programming Perl 4th Edition.
- Fold case string
-
P.860 fc in Chapter 27: Functions of ISBN 978-0-596-00492-7 Programming Perl 4th Edition. $fc = Esjis::fc($string); $fc = Esjis::fc_; New to Sjis software, this subroutine returns the full Unicode-like casefold of ShiftJIS $string (or $_, if omitted). This is the internal subroutine implementing the \F escape in double-quoted strings. Just as title-case is based on uppercase but different, foldcase is based on lowercase but different. In ASCII there is a one-to-one mapping between only two cases, but in other encoding there is a one-to-many mapping and between three cases. Because that's too many combinations to check manually each time, a fourth casemap called foldcase was invented as a common intermediary for the other three. It is not a case itself, but it is a casemap. To compare whether two strings are the same without regard to case, do this: Esjis::fc($a) eq Esjis::fc($b) The reliable way to compare string case-insensitively was with the /i pattern modifier, because Sjis software has always used casefolding semantics for case-insensitive pattern matches. Knowing this, you can emulate equality comparisons like this: sub fc_eq ($$) { my($a,$b) = @_; return $a =~ /\A\Q$b\E\z/i; }
- Make ignore case string
-
@ignorecase = Esjis::ignorecase(@string); This subroutine is internal use to m/ /i, s/ / /i, split / /i, and qr/ /i.
- Make capture number
-
$capturenumber = Esjis::capture($string); This subroutine is internal use to m/ /, s/ / /, split / /, and qr/ /.
- Make character
-
$chr = Esjis::chr($code); $chr = Esjis::chr_; This subroutine returns a programmer-visible character, character represented by that $code in the character set. For example, Esjis::chr(65) is "A" in either ASCII or ShiftJIS, not Unicode. For the reverse of Esjis::chr, use Sjis::ord.
#if ESCAPE_SECOND_OCTET =item File test subroutine Esjis::X
The following all subroutines function when the pathname ends with chr(0x5C) on MSWin32. A file test subroutine is a unary function that takes one argument, either a filename or a filehandle, and tests the associated file to see whether something is true about it. If the argument is omitted, it tests $_. Unless otherwise documented, it returns 1 for true and "" for false, or the undefined value if the file doesn't exist or is otherwise inaccessible. Currently implemented file test subroutines are listed in: Available in MSWin32, MacOS, and UNIX-like systems ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Subroutine and Prototype Meaning ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Esjis::r(*), Esjis::r_() File or directory is readable by this (effective) user or group Esjis::w(*), Esjis::w_() File or directory is writable by this (effective) user or group Esjis::e(*), Esjis::e_() File or directory name exists Esjis::x(*), Esjis::x_() File or directory is executable by this (effective) user or group Esjis::z(*), Esjis::z_() File exists and has zero size (always false for directories) Esjis::f(*), Esjis::f_() Entry is a plain file Esjis::d(*), Esjis::d_() Entry is a directory ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Available in MacOS and UNIX-like systems ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Subroutine and Prototype Meaning ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Esjis::R(*), Esjis::R_() File or directory is readable by this real user or group Same as Esjis::r(*), Esjis::r_() on MacOS Esjis::W(*), Esjis::W_() File or directory is writable by this real user or group Same as Esjis::w(*), Esjis::w_() on MacOS Esjis::X(*), Esjis::X_() File or directory is executable by this real user or group Same as Esjis::x(*), Esjis::x_() on MacOS Esjis::l(*), Esjis::l_() Entry is a symbolic link Esjis::S(*), Esjis::S_() Entry is a socket ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Not available in MSWin32 and MacOS ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Subroutine and Prototype Meaning ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Esjis::o(*), Esjis::o_() File or directory is owned by this (effective) user Esjis::O(*), Esjis::O_() File or directory is owned by this real user Esjis::p(*), Esjis::p_() Entry is a named pipe (a "fifo") Esjis::b(*), Esjis::b_() Entry is a block-special file (like a mountable disk) Esjis::c(*), Esjis::c_() Entry is a character-special file (like an I/O device) Esjis::u(*), Esjis::u_() File or directory is setuid Esjis::g(*), Esjis::g_() File or directory is setgid Esjis::k(*), Esjis::k_() File or directory has the sticky bit set ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ The tests -T and -B takes a try at telling whether a file is text or binary. But people who know a lot about filesystems know that there's no bit (at least in UNIX-like operating systems) to indicate that a file is a binary or text file --- so how can Perl tell? The answer is that Perl cheats. As you might guess, it sometimes guesses wrong. This incomplete thinking of file test operator -T and -B gave birth to UTF8 flag of a later period. The Esjis::T, Esjis::T_, Esjis::B, and Esjis::B_ work as follows. The first block or so of the file is examined for strange chatracters such as [\000-\007\013\016-\032\034-\037\377] (that don't look like ShiftJIS). If more than 10% of the bytes appear to be strange, it's a *maybe* binary file; otherwise, it's a *maybe* text file. Also, any file containing ASCII NUL(\0) or \377 in the first block is considered a binary file. If Esjis::T or Esjis::B is used on a filehandle, the current input (standard I/O or "stdio") buffer is examined rather than the first block of the file. Both Esjis::T and Esjis::B return 1 as true on an empty file, or on a file at EOF (end-of-file) when testing a filehandle. Both Esjis::T and Esjis::B doesn't work when given the special filehandle consisting of a solitary underline. Because Esjis::T has to read to do the test, you don't want to use Esjis::T on special files that might hang or give you other kinds or grief. So on most occasions you'll want to test with a Esjis::f first, as in: next unless Esjis::f($file) && Esjis::T($file); Available in MSWin32, MacOS, and UNIX-like systems ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Subroutine and Prototype Meaning ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Esjis::T(*), Esjis::T_() File looks like a "text" file Esjis::B(*), Esjis::B_() File looks like a "binary" file ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ File ages for Esjis::M, Esjis::M_, Esjis::A, Esjis::A_, Esjis::C, and Esjis::C_ are returned in days (including fractional days) since the script started running. This start time is stored in the special variable $^T ($BASETIME). Thus, if the file changed after the script, you would get a negative time. Note that most time values (86,399 out of 86,400, on average) are fractional, so testing for equality with an integer without using the int function is usually futile. Examples: next unless Esjis::M($file) > 0.5; # files are older than 12 hours &newfile if Esjis::M($file) < 0; # file is newer than process &mailwarning if int(Esjis::A_) == 90; # file ($_) was accessed 90 days ago today Available in MSWin32, MacOS, and UNIX-like systems ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Subroutine and Prototype Meaning ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Esjis::M(*), Esjis::M_() Modification age (measured in days) Esjis::A(*), Esjis::A_() Access age (measured in days) Same as Esjis::M(*), Esjis::M_() on MacOS Esjis::C(*), Esjis::C_() Inode-modification age (measured in days) ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ The Esjis::s, and Esjis::s_ returns file size in bytes if succesful, or undef unless successful. Available in MSWin32, MacOS, and UNIX-like systems ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Subroutine and Prototype Meaning ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Esjis::s(*), Esjis::s_() File or directory exists and has nonzero size (the value is the size in bytes) ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
#endif =item Filename expansion (globbing)
@glob = Esjis::glob($string); @glob = Esjis::glob_; This subroutine returns the value of $string with filename expansions the way a DOS-like shell would expand them, returning the next successive name on each call. If $string is omitted, $_ is globbed instead. This is the internal subroutine implementing the <*> and glob operator. This subroutine function when the pathname ends with chr(0x5C) on MSWin32. For ease of use, the algorithm matches the DOS-like shell's style of expansion, not the UNIX-like shell's. An asterisk ("*") matches any sequence of any character (including none). A question mark ("?") matches any one character or none. A tilde ("~") expands to a home directory, as in "~/.*rc" for all the current user's "rc" files, or "~jane/Mail/*" for all of Jane's mail files. Note that all path components are case-insensitive, and that backslashes and forward slashes are both accepted, and preserved. You may have to double the backslashes if you are putting them in literally, due to double-quotish parsing of the pattern by perl. The Esjis::glob subroutine grandfathers the use of whitespace to separate multiple patterns such as <*.c *.h>. If you want to glob filenames that might contain whitespace, you'll have to use extra quotes around the spacy filename to protect it. For example, to glob filenames that have an "e" followed by a space followed by an "f", use either of: @spacies = <"*e f*">; @spacies = Esjis::glob('"*e f*"'); @spacies = Esjis::glob(q("*e f*")); If you had to get a variable through, you could do this: @spacies = Esjis::glob("'*${var}e f*'"); @spacies = Esjis::glob(qq("*${var}e f*")); Another way on MSWin32 # relative path @relpath_file = split(/\n/,`dir /b wildcard\\here*.txt 2>NUL`); # absolute path @abspath_file = split(/\n/,`dir /s /b wildcard\\here*.txt 2>NUL`); # on COMMAND.COM @relpath_file = split(/\n/,`dir /b wildcard\\here*.txt`); @abspath_file = split(/\n/,`dir /s /b wildcard\\here*.txt`);
#if ESCAPE_SECOND_OCTET =item Statistics about link
@lstat = Esjis::lstat($file); @lstat = Esjis::lstat_; Like Esjis::stat, returns information on file, except that if file is a symbolic link, Esjis::lstat returns information about the link; Esjis::stat returns information about the file pointed to by the link. If symbolic links are unimplemented on your system, a normal Esjis::stat is done instead. If file is omitted, returns information on file given in $_. Returns values (especially device and inode) may be bogus. This subroutine function when the filename ends with chr(0x5C) on MSWin32.
- Open directory handle
-
$rc = Esjis::opendir(DIR,$dir); This subroutine opens a directory named $dir for processing by readdir, telldir, seekdir, rewinddir, and closedir. The subroutine returns true if successful. Directory handles have their own namespace from filehandles. This subroutine function when the directory name ends with chr(0x5C) on MSWin32.
- Statistics about file
-
$stat = Esjis::stat(FILEHANDLE); $stat = Esjis::stat(DIRHANDLE); $stat = Esjis::stat($expr); $stat = Esjis::stat_; @stat = Esjis::stat(FILEHANDLE); @stat = Esjis::stat(DIRHANDLE); @stat = Esjis::stat($expr); @stat = Esjis::stat_; In scalar context, this subroutine returns a Boolean value that indicates whether the call succeeded. In list context, it returns a 13-element list giving the statistics for a file, either the file opened via FILEHANDLE or DIRHANDLE, or named by $expr. It's typically used as followes: ($dev,$ino,$mode,$nlink,$uid,$gid,$rdev,$size, $atime,$mtime,$ctime,$blksize,$blocks) = Esjis::stat($expr); Not all fields are supported on all filesystem types; unsupported fields return 0. Here are the meanings of the fields: ------------------------------------------------------------------------- Index Field Meaning ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 0 $dev Device number of filesystem drive number for MSWin32 vRefnum for MacOS 1 $ino Inode number zero for MSWin32 fileID/dirID for MacOS 2 $mode File mode (type and permissions) 3 $nlink Nunmer of (hard) links to the file usually one for MSWin32 --- NTFS filesystems may have a value greater than one 1 for MacOS 4 $uid Numeric user ID of file's owner zero for MSWin32 zero for MacOS 5 $gid Numeric group ID of file's owner zero for MSWin32 zero for MacOS 6 $rdev The device identifier (special files only) drive number for MSWin32 NULL for MacOS 7 $size Total size of file, in bytes 8 $atime Last access time since the epoch same as $mtime for MacOS 9 $mtime Last modification time since the epoch since 1904-01-01 00:00:00 for MacOS 10 $ctime Inode change time (not creation time!) since the epoch creation time instead of inode change time for MSWin32 since 1904-01-01 00:00:00 for MacOS 11 $blksize Preferred blocksize for file system I/O zero for MSWin32 12 $blocks Actual number of blocks allocated zero for MSWin32 int(($size + $blksize-1) / $blksize) for MacOS ------------------------------------------------------------------------- $dev and $ino, token together, uniquely identify a file on the same system. The $blksize and $blocks are likely defined only on BSD-derived filesystems. The $blocks field (if defined) is reported in 512-byte blocks. The value of $blocks * 512 can differ greatly from $size for files containing unallocated blocks, or "hole", which aren't counted in $blocks. If Esjis::stat is passed the special filehandle consisting of an underline, no actual stat(2) is done, but the current contents of the stat structure from the last Esjis::stat, Esjis::lstat, or Esjis::stat-based file test subroutine (such as Esjis::r, Esjis::w, and Esjis::x) are returned. Because the mode contains both the file type and its permissions, you should mask off the file type portion and printf or sprintf using a "%o" if you want to see the real permissions: $mode = (Esjis::stat($expr))[2]; printf "Permissions are %04o\n", $mode & 07777; If $expr is omitted, returns information on file given in $_. This subroutine function when the filename ends with chr(0x5C) on MSWin32.
- Deletes a list of files.
-
$unlink = Esjis::unlink(@list); $unlink = Esjis::unlink($file); $unlink = Esjis::unlink; Delete a list of files. (Under Unix, it will remove a link to a file, but the file may still exist if another link references it.) If list is omitted, it unlinks the file given in $_. The subroutine returns the number of files successfully deleted. This subroutine function when the filename ends with chr(0x5C) on MSWin32.
- Changes the working directory.
-
$chdir = Esjis::chdir($dirname); $chdir = Esjis::chdir; This subroutine changes the current process's working directory to $dirname, if possible. If $dirname is omitted, $ENV{'HOME'} is used if set, and $ENV{'LOGDIR'} otherwise; these are usually the process's home directory. The subroutine returns true on success, false otherwise (and puts the error code into $!). chdir("$prefix/lib") || die "Can't cd to $prefix/lib: $!"; This subroutine has limitation on the MSWin32. See also BUGS AND LIMITATIONS.
- Do file
-
$return = Esjis::do($file); The do FILE form uses the value of FILE as a filename and executes the contents of the file as a Perl script. Its primary use is (or rather was) to include subroutines from a Perl subroutine library, so that: Esjis::do('stat.pl'); is rather like: scalar CORE::eval `cat stat.pl`; # `type stat.pl` on Windows except that Esjis::do is more efficient, more concise, keeps track of the current filename for error messages, searches all the directories listed in the @INC array, and updates %INC if the file is found. It also differs in that code evaluated with Esjis::do FILE can not see lexicals in the enclosing scope, whereas code in CORE::eval FILE does. It's the same, however, in that it reparses the file every time you call it -- so you might not want to do this inside a loop unless the filename itself changes at each loop iteration. If Esjis::do can't read the file, it returns undef and sets $! to the error. If Esjis::do can read the file but can't compile it, it returns undef and sets an error message in $@. If the file is successfully compiled, do returns the value of the last expression evaluated. Inclusion of library modules (which have a mandatory .pm suffix) is better done with the use and require operators, which also Esjis::do error checking and raise an exception if there's a problem. They also offer other benefits: they avoid duplicate loading, help with object-oriented programming, and provide hints to the compiler on function prototypes. But Esjis::do FILE is still useful for such things as reading program configuration files. Manual error checking can be done this way: # read in config files: system first, then user for $file ("/usr/share/proggie/defaults.rc", "$ENV{HOME}/.someprogrc") { unless ($return = Esjis::do($file)) { warn "couldn't parse $file: $@" if $@; warn "couldn't Esjis::do($file): $!" unless defined $return; warn "couldn't run $file" unless $return; } } A long-running daemon could periodically examine the timestamp on its configuration file, and if the file has changed since it was last read in, the daemon could use Esjis::do to reload that file. This is more tidily accomplished with Esjis::do than with Esjis::require.
- Require file
-
Esjis::require($file); Esjis::require(); This subroutine asserts a dependency of some kind on its argument. If an argument is not supplied, $_ is used. Esjis::require loads and executes the Perl code found in the separate file whose name is given by the $file. This is similar to using a Esjis::do on a file, except that Esjis::require checks to see whether the library file has been loaded already and raises an exception if any difficulties are encountered. (It can thus be used to express file dependencies without worrying about duplicate compilation.) Like its cousins Esjis::do, Esjis::require knows how to search the include path stored in the @INC array and to update %INC on success. The file must return true as the last value to indicate successful execution of any initialization code, so it's customary to end such a file with 1 unless you're sure it'll return true otherwise.
- Current position of the readdir
-
$telldir = Esjis::telldir(DIRHANDLE); This subroutine returns the current position of the readdir routines on DIRHANDLE. This value may be given to seekdir to access a particular location in a directory. The subroutine has the same caveats about possible directory compaction as the corresponding system library routine. This subroutine might not be implemented everywhere that readdir is. Even if it is, no calculation may be done with the return value. It's just an opaque value, meaningful only to seekdir.
#endif /* #if ESCAPE_SECOND_OCTET */
NAME
Char - Multibyte Character Support by Traditional Scripting
SYNOPSIS
# encoding: sjis
use Char;
use Char ver.sion; --- requires minimum version
use Char ver.sion.0; --- expects version (match or die)
subroutines:
Char::eval(...);
Char::length(...);
Char::substr(...);
Char::ord(...);
Char::reverse(...);
Char::getc(...);
Char::index(...);
Char::rindex(...);
# "no Char;" not supported
supported encodings:
Arabic, Big5HKSCS, Big5Plus, Cyrillic, EUCJP, EUCTW, GB18030, GBK, Greek,
HP15, Hebrew, INFORMIXV6ALS, JIS8, KOI8R, KOI8U, KPS9566, Latin1, Latin10,
Latin2, Latin3, Latin4, Latin5, Latin6, Latin7, Latin8, Latin9, OldUTF8,
Sjis, TIS620, UHC, USASCII, UTF2, Windows1252, and Windows1258
supported operating systems:
Apple Inc. OS X,
Hewlett-Packard Development Company, L.P. HP-UX,
International Business Machines Corporation AIX,
Microsoft Corporation Windows,
Oracle Corporation Solaris,
and Other Systems
supported perl versions:
perl version 5.005_03 to newest perl
SOFTWARE COMPOSITION
Char.pm --- Character Oriented Perl by Magic Comment
OTHER SOFTWARE
To using this software, you must get filter software of 'Sjis software family'. See also following 'SEE ALSO'.
INSTALLATION BY MAKE (for UNIX-like system)
To install this software by make, type the following:
perl Makefile.PL
make
make test
make install
INSTALLATION WITHOUT MAKE (for DOS-like system)
To install this software without make, type the following:
perl pMakefile.PL --- pMakefile.PL makes "pmake.bat" only, and ...
pmake.bat
pmake.bat test
pmake.bat install --- install to current using Perl
pmake.bat dist --- make distribution package
pmake.bat ptar.bat --- make perl script "ptar.bat"
DEPENDENCIES
This software requires perl5.00503 or later.
MAGIC COMMENT
You should show the encoding method of your script by either of the following descriptions. (.+) is an encoding method. It is necessary to describe this description from anywhere of the script.
m/coding[:=]\s*(.+)/oxms
Example:
# -*- coding: Shift_JIS -*-
print "Emacs like\n";
# vim:fileencoding=Latin-1
print "Vim like 1";
# vim:set fileencoding=GB18030 :
print "Vim like 2";
#coding:Modified UTF-8
print "simple";
ENCODING METHOD
The encoding method is evaluated, after it is regularized.
regularize:
1. The upper case characters are converted into lower case.
2. Left only alphabet and number, others are removed.
The filter software is selected by using the following tables. The script does die if there is no filter software.
-----------------------------------
encoding method filter software
-----------------------------------
ascii USASCII
usascii USASCII
shiftjis Sjis
shiftjisx0213 Sjis
shiftjis2004 Sjis
sjis Sjis
sjisx0213 Sjis
sjis2004 Sjis
cp932 Sjis
windows31j Sjis
cswindows31j Sjis
sjiswin Sjis
macjapanese Sjis
macjapan Sjis
xsjis Sjis
mskanji Sjis
csshiftjis Sjis
windowscodepage932 Sjis
ibmcp943 Sjis
ms932 Sjis
jisc6220 JIS8
jisx0201 JIS8
jis8 JIS8
ank JIS8
eucjp EUCJP
euc EUCJP
ujis EUCJP
eucjpms EUCJP
eucjpwin EUCJP
cp51932 EUCJP
euctw EUCTW
utf8 UTF2
utf2 UTF2
utffss UTF2
utf8mac UTF2
oldutf8 OldUTF8
cesu8 OldUTF8
modifiedutf8 OldUTF8
hp15 HP15
informixv6als INFORMIXV6ALS
gb18030 GB18030
gbk GBK
gb2312 GBK
cp936 GBK
euccn GBK
uhc UHC
ksx1001 UHC
ksc5601 UHC
ksc56011987 UHC
ks UHC
cp949 UHC
windows949 UHC
kps9566 KPS9566
kps95662003 KPS9566
kps95662000 KPS9566
kps95661997 KPS9566
kps956697 KPS9566
euckp KPS9566
big5plus Big5Plus
big5 Big5Plus
big5et Big5Plus
big5eten Big5Plus
tcabig5 Big5Plus
cp950 Big5Plus
big5hk Big5HKSCS
big5hkscs Big5HKSCS
hkbig5 Big5HKSCS
hkscsbig5 Big5HKSCS
cp951 Big5HKSCS
latin1 Latin1
isoiec88591 Latin1
iso88591 Latin1
iec88591 Latin1
latin2 Latin2
isoiec88592 Latin2
iso88592 Latin2
iec88592 Latin2
latin3 Latin3
isoiec88593 Latin3
iso88593 Latin3
iec88593 Latin3
latin4 Latin4
isoiec88594 Latin4
iso88594 Latin4
iec88594 Latin4
cyrillic Cyrillic
isoiec88595 Cyrillic
iso88595 Cyrillic
iec88595 Cyrillic
koi8r KOI8R
koi8u KOI8U
arabic Arabic
isoiec88596 Arabic
iso88596 Arabic
iec88596 Arabic
greek Greek
isoiec88597 Greek
iso88597 Greek
iec88597 Greek
hebrew Hebrew
isoiec88598 Hebrew
iso88598 Hebrew
iec88598 Hebrew
latin5 Latin5
isoiec88599 Latin5
iso88599 Latin5
iec88599 Latin5
latin6 Latin6
isoiec885910 Latin6
iso885910 Latin6
iec885910 Latin6
tis620 TIS620
tis6202533 TIS620
isoiec885911 TIS620
iso885911 TIS620
iec885911 TIS620
latin7 Latin7
isoiec885913 Latin7
iso885913 Latin7
iec885913 Latin7
latin8 Latin8
isoiec885914 Latin8
iso885914 Latin8
iec885914 Latin8
latin9 Latin9
isoiec885915 Latin9
iso885915 Latin9
iec885915 Latin9
latin10 Latin10
isoiec885916 Latin10
iso885916 Latin10
iec885916 Latin10
windows1252 Windows1252
windows1258 Windows1258
-----------------------------------
CHARACTER ORIENTED SUBROUTINES
Order of Character
$ord = Char::ord($string); This subroutine returns the numeric value (ASCII or Multibyte Character) of the first character of $string. The return value is always unsigned.
Reverse List or String
@reverse = Char::reverse(@list); $reverse = Char::reverse(@list); In list context, this subroutine returns a list value consisting of the elements of @list in the opposite order. The subroutine can be used to create descending sequences: for (Char::reverse(1 .. 10)) { ... } Because of the way hashes flatten into lists when passed as a @list, reverse can also be used to invert a hash, presuming the values are unique: %barfoo = Char::reverse(%foobar); In scalar context, the subroutine concatenates all the elements of LIST and then returns the reverse of that resulting string, character by character.
Returns Next Character
$getc = Char::getc(FILEHANDLE); $getc = Char::getc($filehandle); $getc = Char::getc; This subroutine returns the next character from the input file attached to FILEHANDLE. It returns undef at end-of-file, or if an I/O error was encountered. If FILEHANDLE is omitted, the subroutine reads from STDIN. This subroutine is somewhat slow, but it's occasionally useful for single-character input from the keyboard -- provided you manage to get your keyboard input unbuffered. This subroutine requests unbuffered input from the standard I/O library. Unfortunately, the standard I/O library is not so standard as to provide a portable way to tell the underlying operating system to supply unbuffered keyboard input to the standard I/O system. To do that, you have to be slightly more clever, and in an operating-system-dependent fashion. Under Unix you might say this: if ($BSD_STYLE) { system "stty cbreak </dev/tty >/dev/tty 2>&1"; } else { system "stty", "-icanon", "eol", "\001"; } $key = Char::getc; if ($BSD_STYLE) { system "stty -cbreak </dev/tty >/dev/tty 2>&1"; } else { system "stty", "icanon", "eol", "^@"; # ASCII NUL } print "\n"; This code puts the next character typed on the terminal in the string $key. If your stty program has options like cbreak, you'll need to use the code where $BSD_STYLE is true. Otherwise, you'll need to use the code where it is false.
Length by Character
$length = Char::length($string); $length = Char::length(); This subroutine returns the length in characters of the scalar value $string. If $string is omitted, it returns the Char::length of $_. Do not try to use length to find the size of an array or hash. Use scalar @array for the size of an array, and scalar keys %hash for the number of key/value pairs in a hash. (The scalar is typically omitted when redundant.) To find the length of a string in bytes rather than characters, say: $blen = length($string); or $blen = CORE::length($string);
Substr by Character
$substr = Char::substr($string,$offset,$length,$replacement); $substr = Char::substr($string,$offset,$length); $substr = Char::substr($string,$offset); This subroutine extracts a substring out of the string given by $string and returns it. The substring is extracted starting at $offset characters from the front of the string. If $offset is negative, the substring starts that far from the end of the string instead. If $length is omitted, everything to the end of the string is returned. If $length is negative, the length is calculated to leave that many characters off the end of the string. Otherwise, $length indicates the length of the substring to extract, which is sort of what you'd expect. An alternative to using Char::substr as an lvalue is to specify the $replacement string as the fourth argument. This allows you to replace parts of the $string and return what was there before in one operation, just as you can with splice. The next example also replaces the last character of $var with "Curly" and puts that replaced character into $oldstr: $oldstr = Char::substr($var, -1, 1, "Curly"); If you assign something shorter than the length of your substring, the string will shrink, and if you assign something longer than the length, the string will grow to accommodate it. To keep the string the same length, you may need to pad or chop your value using sprintf or the x operator. If you attempt to assign to an unallocated area past the end of the string, Char::substr raises an exception. To prepend the string "Larry" to the current value of $_, use: Char::substr($var, 0, 0, "Larry"); To instead replace the first character of $_ with "Moe", use: Char::substr($var, 0, 1, "Moe"); And finally, to replace the last character of $var with "Curly", use: Char::substr($var, -1, 1, "Curly");
Index by Character
$index = Char::index($string,$substring,$offset); $index = Char::index($string,$substring); This subroutine searches for one string within another. It returns the position of the first occurrence of $substring in $string. The $offset, if specified, says how many characters from the start to skip before beginning to look. Positions are based at 0. If the substring is not found, the subroutine returns one less than the base, ordinarily -1. To work your way through a string, you might say: $pos = -1; while (($pos = Char::index($string, $lookfor, $pos)) > -1) { print "Found at $pos\n"; $pos++; } Three Indexes ------------------------------------------------------------------------- Function Works as Returns as Description ------------------------------------------------------------------------- index Character Byte JPerl semantics (most useful) Char::index Character Character Character-oriented semantics CORE::index Byte Byte Byte-oriented semantics -------------------------------------------------------------------------
Rindex by Character
$rindex = Char::rindex($string,$substring,$position); $rindex = Char::rindex($string,$substring); This subroutine works just like Char::index except that it returns the position of the last occurrence of $substring in $string (a reverse index). The subroutine returns -1 if not $substring is found. $position, if specified, is the rightmost position that may be returned. To work your way through a string backward, say: $pos = Char::length($string); while (($pos = Char::rindex($string, $lookfor, $pos)) >= 0) { print "Found at $pos\n"; $pos--; } Three Rindexes ------------------------------------------------------------------------- Function Works as Returns as Description ------------------------------------------------------------------------- rindex Character Byte JPerl semantics (most useful) Char::rindex Character Character Character-oriented semantics CORE::rindex Byte Byte Byte-oriented semantics -------------------------------------------------------------------------
Eval by Character
$eval = Char::eval { block }; $eval = Char::eval $expr; $eval = Char::eval; The Char::eval keyword serves two distinct but related purposes in JPerl. These purposes are represented by two forms of syntax, Char::eval { block } and Char::eval $expr. The first form traps runtime exceptions (errors) that would otherwise prove fatal, similar to the "try block" construct in C++ or Java. The second form compiles and executes little bits of code on the fly at runtime, and also (conveniently) traps any exceptions just like the first form. But the second form runs much slower than the first form, since it must parse the string every time. On the other hand, it is also more general. Whichever form you use, Char::eval is the preferred way to do all exception handling in JPerl. For either form of Char::eval, the value returned from an Char::eval is the value of the last expression evaluated, just as with subroutines. Similarly, you may use the return operator to return a value from the middle of the eval. The expression providing the return value is evaluated in void, scalar, or list context, depending on the context of the Char::eval itself. See wantarray for more on how the evaluation context can be determined. If there is a trappable error (including any produced by the die operator), Char::eval returns undef and puts the error message (or object) in $@. If there is no error, $@ is guaranteed to be set to the null string, so you can test it reliably afterward for errors. A simple Boolean test suffices: Char::eval { ... }; # trap runtime errors if ($@) { ... } # handle error (Prior to Perl 5.16, a bug caused undef to be returned in list context for syntax errors, but not for runtime errors.) The Char::eval { block } form is syntax checked and compiled at compile time, so it is just as efficient at runtime as any other block. (People familiar with the slow Char::eval $expr form are occasionally confused on this issue.) Because the { block } is compiled when the surrounding code is, this form of Char::eval cannot trap syntax errors. The Char::eval $expr form can trap syntax errors because it parses the code at runtime. (If the parse is unsuccessful, it places the parse error in $@, as usual.) If $expr is omitted, evaluates $_ . Otherwise, it executes the value of $expr as though it were a little JPerl script. The code is executed in the context of the current of the current JPerl script, which means that it can see any enclosing lexicals from a surrounding scope, and that any nonlocal variable settings remain in effect after the Char::eval is complete, as do any subroutine or format definitions. The code of the Char::eval is treated as a block, so any locally scoped variables declared within the Char::eval last only until the Char::eval is done. (See my and local.) As with any code in a block, a final semicolon is not required. Char::eval will be escaped as follows: ------------------------------------------------- Before After ------------------------------------------------- Char::eval { block } eval { block } Char::eval $expr eval Char::escape $expr Char::eval eval Char::escape ------------------------------------------------- To tell the truth, the subroutine Char::eval does not exist. If it exists, you will troubled, when Char::eval has a parameter that is single quoted string included my variables. Char::escape is a subroutine that makes Perl script from JPerl script. Here is a simple JPerl shell. It prompts the user to enter a string of arbitrary JPerl code, compiles and executes that string, and prints whatever error occurred: #!/usr/bin/perl # jperlshell.pl - simple JPerl shell use Char; print "\nEnter some JPerl code: "; while (<STDIN>) { Char::eval; print $@; print "\nEnter some more JPerl code: "; } Here is a rename.pl script to do a mass renaming of files using a JPerl expression: #!/usr/bin/perl # rename.pl - change filenames use Char; $op = shift; for (@ARGV) { $was = $_; Char::eval $op; die if $@; # next line calls the built-in function, not # the script by the same name if ($was ne $_) { print STDERR "rename $was --> $_\n"; rename($was,$_); } } You'd use that script like this: C:\WINDOWS> perl rename.pl 's/\.orig$//' *.orig C:\WINDOWS> perl rename.pl 'y/A-Z/a-z/ unless /^Make/' * C:\WINDOWS> perl rename.pl '$_ .= ".bad"' *.f Since Char::eval traps errors that would otherwise prove fatal, it is useful for determining whether particular features (such as fork or symlink) are implemented. Because Char::eval { block } is syntax checked at compile time, any syntax error is reported earlier. Therefore, if your code is invariant and both Char::eval $expr and Char::eval { block } will suit your purposes equally well, the { block } form is preferred. For example: # make divide-by-zero nonfatal Char::eval { $answer = $a / $b; }; warn $@ if $@; # same thing, but less efficient if run multiple times Char::eval '$answer = $a / $b'; warn $@ if $@; # a compile-time syntax error (not trapped) Char::eval { $answer = }; # WRONG # a runtime syntax error Char::eval '$answer ='; # sets $@ Here, the code in the { block } has to be valid JPerl code to make it past the compile phase. The code in the $expr doesn't get examined until runtime, so it doesn't cause an error until runtime. Using the Char::eval { block } form as an exception trap in libraries does have some issues. Due to the current arguably broken state of __DIE__ hooks, you may wish not to trigger any __DIE__ hooks that user code may have installed. You can use the local $SIG{__DIE__} construct for this purpose, as this example shows: # a private exception trap for divide-by-zero Char::eval { local $SIG{'__DIE__'}; $answer = $a / $b; }; warn $@ if $@; This is especially significant, given that __DIE__ hooks can call die again, which has the effect of changing their error messages: # __DIE__ hooks may modify error messages { local $SIG{'__DIE__'} = sub { (my $x = $_[0]) =~ s/foo/bar/g; die $x }; Char::eval { die "foo lives here" }; print $@ if $@; # prints "bar lives here" } Because this promotes action at a distance, this counterintuitive behavior may be fixed in a future release. With an Char::eval, you should be especially careful to remember what's being looked at when: Char::eval $x; # CASE 1 Char::eval "$x"; # CASE 2 Char::eval '$x'; # CASE 3 Char::eval { $x }; # CASE 4 Char::eval "\$$x++"; # CASE 5 $$x++; # CASE 6 CASEs 1 and 2 above behave identically: they run the code contained in the variable $x. (Although CASE 2 has misleading double quotes making the reader wonder what else might be happening (nothing is).) CASEs 3 and 4 likewise behave in the same way: they run the code '$x' , which does nothing but return the value of $x. (CASE 4 is preferred for purely visual reasons, but it also has the advantage of compiling at compile-time instead of at run-time.) CASE 5 is a place where normally you would like to use double quotes, except that in this particular situation, you can just use symbolic references instead, as in CASE 6. Before Perl 5.14, the assignment to $@ occurred before restoration of localized variables, which means that for your code to run on older versions, a temporary is required if you want to mask some but not all errors: # alter $@ on nefarious repugnancy only { my $e; { local $@; # protect existing $@ Char::eval { test_repugnancy() }; # $@ =~ /nefarious/ and die $@; # Perl 5.14 and higher only $@ =~ /nefarious/ and $e = $@; } die $e if defined $e } The block of Char::eval { block } does not count as a loop, so the loop control statements next, last, or redo cannot be used to leave or restart the block.
Filename Globbing
@glob = glob($expr); $glob = glob($expr); @glob = glob; $glob = glob; @glob = <*>; $glob = <*>; Performs filename expansion (globbing) on $expr, returning the next successive name on each call. If $expr is omitted, $_ is globbed instead.
AUTHOR
INABA Hitoshi <ina@cpan.org>
This project was originated by INABA Hitoshi.
LICENSE AND COPYRIGHT
This software is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself. See perlartistic.
This software is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.
SEE ALSO
Other Tools
http://search.cpan.org/dist/jacode/
BackPAN
http://backpan.perl.org/authors/id/I/IN/INA/
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
This software was made referring to software and the document that the following hackers or persons had made. Especially, Yukihiro Matsumoto taught to us,
CSI is not impossible.
I am thankful to all persons.
Larry Wall, Perl
http://www.perl.org/
Yukihiro "Matz" Matsumoto, YAPC::Asia2006 Ruby on Perl(s)
http://www.rubyist.net/~matz/slides/yapc2006/
About Ruby M17N in Rubyist Magazine
http://jp.rubyist.net/magazine/?0025-Ruby19_m17n#l13
2 POD Errors
The following errors were encountered while parsing the POD:
- Around line 3491:
You can't have =items (as at line 3560) unless the first thing after the =over is an =item
- Around line 21486:
You forgot a '=back' before '=head1'