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mktables: Add field to constructor
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1package utf8;
2
3$utf8::hint_bits = 0x00800000;
4
5our $VERSION = '1.19';
6
7sub import {
8 $^H |= $utf8::hint_bits;
9}
10
11sub unimport {
12 $^H &= ~$utf8::hint_bits;
13}
14
15sub AUTOLOAD {
16 require "utf8_heavy.pl";
17 goto &$AUTOLOAD if defined &$AUTOLOAD;
18 require Carp;
19 Carp::croak("Undefined subroutine $AUTOLOAD called");
20}
21
221;
23__END__
24
25=head1 NAME
26
27utf8 - Perl pragma to enable/disable UTF-8 (or UTF-EBCDIC) in source code
28
29=head1 SYNOPSIS
30
31 use utf8;
32 no utf8;
33
34 # Convert the internal representation of a Perl scalar to/from UTF-8.
35
36 $num_octets = utf8::upgrade($string);
37 $success = utf8::downgrade($string[, $fail_ok]);
38
39 # Change each character of a Perl scalar to/from a series of
40 # characters that represent the UTF-8 bytes of each original character.
41
42 utf8::encode($string); # "\x{100}" becomes "\xc4\x80"
43 utf8::decode($string); # "\xc4\x80" becomes "\x{100}"
44
45 # Convert a code point from the platform native character set to
46 # Unicode, and vice-versa.
47 $unicode = utf8::native_to_unicode(ord('A')); # returns 65 on both
48 # ASCII and EBCDIC
49 # platforms
50 $native = utf8::unicode_to_native(65); # returns 65 on ASCII
51 # platforms; 193 on
52 # EBCDIC
53
54 $flag = utf8::is_utf8($string); # since Perl 5.8.1
55 $flag = utf8::valid($string);
56
57=head1 DESCRIPTION
58
59The C<use utf8> pragma tells the Perl parser to allow UTF-8 in the
60program text in the current lexical scope. The C<no utf8> pragma tells Perl
61to switch back to treating the source text as literal bytes in the current
62lexical scope. (On EBCDIC platforms, technically it is allowing UTF-EBCDIC,
63and not UTF-8, but this distinction is academic, so in this document the term
64UTF-8 is used to mean both).
65
66B<Do not use this pragma for anything else than telling Perl that your
67script is written in UTF-8.> The utility functions described below are
68directly usable without C<use utf8;>.
69
70Because it is not possible to reliably tell UTF-8 from native 8 bit
71encodings, you need either a Byte Order Mark at the beginning of your
72source code, or C<use utf8;>, to instruct perl.
73
74When UTF-8 becomes the standard source format, this pragma will
75effectively become a no-op.
76
77See also the effects of the C<-C> switch and its cousin, the
78C<PERL_UNICODE> environment variable, in L<perlrun>.
79
80Enabling the C<utf8> pragma has the following effect:
81
82=over 4
83
84=item *
85
86Bytes in the source text that are not in the ASCII character set will be
87treated as being part of a literal UTF-8 sequence. This includes most
88literals such as identifier names, string constants, and constant
89regular expression patterns.
90
91=back
92
93Note that if you have non-ASCII, non-UTF-8 bytes in your script (for example
94embedded Latin-1 in your string literals), C<use utf8> will be unhappy. If
95you want to have such bytes under C<use utf8>, you can disable this pragma
96until the end the block (or file, if at top level) by C<no utf8;>.
97
98=head2 Utility functions
99
100The following functions are defined in the C<utf8::> package by the
101Perl core. You do not need to say C<use utf8> to use these and in fact
102you should not say that unless you really want to have UTF-8 source code.
103
104=over 4
105
106=item * C<$num_octets = utf8::upgrade($string)>
107
108(Since Perl v5.8.0)
109Converts in-place the internal representation of the string from an octet
110sequence in the native encoding (Latin-1 or EBCDIC) to UTF-8. The
111logical character sequence itself is unchanged. If I<$string> is already
112stored as UTF-8, then this is a no-op. Returns the
113number of octets necessary to represent the string as UTF-8. Can be
114used to make sure that the UTF-8 flag is on, so that C<\w> or C<lc()>
115work as Unicode on strings containing non-ASCII characters whose code points
116are below 256.
117
118B<Note that this function does not handle arbitrary encodings>;
119use L<Encode> instead.
120
121=item * C<$success = utf8::downgrade($string[, $fail_ok])>
122
123(Since Perl v5.8.0)
124Converts in-place the internal representation of the string from
125UTF-8 to the equivalent octet sequence in the native encoding (Latin-1
126or EBCDIC). The logical character sequence itself is unchanged. If
127I<$string> is already stored as native 8 bit, then this is a no-op. Can
128be used to
129make sure that the UTF-8 flag is off, e.g. when you want to make sure
130that the substr() or length() function works with the usually faster
131byte algorithm.
132
133Fails if the original UTF-8 sequence cannot be represented in the
134native 8 bit encoding. On failure dies or, if the value of I<$fail_ok> is
135true, returns false.
136
137Returns true on success.
138
139B<Note that this function does not handle arbitrary encodings>;
140use L<Encode> instead.
141
142=item * C<utf8::encode($string)>
143
144(Since Perl v5.8.0)
145Converts in-place the character sequence to the corresponding octet
146sequence in UTF-8. That is, every (possibly wide) character gets
147replaced with a sequence of one or more characters that represent the
148individual UTF-8 bytes of the character. The UTF8 flag is turned off.
149Returns nothing.
150
151 my $a = "\x{100}"; # $a contains one character, with ord 0x100
152 utf8::encode($a); # $a contains two characters, with ords (on
153 # ASCII platforms) 0xc4 and 0x80. On EBCDIC
154 # 1047, this would instead be 0x8C and 0x41.
155
156B<Note that this function does not handle arbitrary encodings>;
157use L<Encode> instead.
158
159=item * C<$success = utf8::decode($string)>
160
161(Since Perl v5.8.0)
162Attempts to convert in-place the octet sequence encoded as UTF-8 to the
163corresponding character sequence. That is, it replaces each sequence of
164characters in the string whose ords represent a valid UTF-8 byte
165sequence, with the corresponding single character. The UTF-8 flag is
166turned on only if the source string contains multiple-byte UTF-8
167characters. If I<$string> is invalid as UTF-8, returns false;
168otherwise returns true.
169
170 my $a = "\xc4\x80"; # $a contains two characters, with ords
171 # 0xc4 and 0x80
172 utf8::decode($a); # On ASCII platforms, $a contains one char,
173 # with ord 0x100. Since these bytes aren't
174 # legal UTF-EBCDIC, on EBCDIC platforms, $a is
175 # unchanged and the function returns FALSE.
176
177B<Note that this function does not handle arbitrary encodings>;
178use L<Encode> instead.
179
180=item * C<$unicode = utf8::native_to_unicode($code_point)>
181
182(Since Perl v5.8.0)
183This takes an unsigned integer (which represents the ordinal number of a
184character (or a code point) on the platform the program is being run on) and
185returns its Unicode equivalent value. Since ASCII platforms natively use the
186Unicode code points, this function returns its input on them. On EBCDIC
187platforms it converts from EBCDIC to Unicode.
188
189A meaningless value will currently be returned if the input is not an unsigned
190integer.
191
192Since Perl v5.22.0, calls to this function are optimized out on ASCII
193platforms, so there is no performance hit in using it there.
194
195=item * C<$native = utf8::unicode_to_native($code_point)>
196
197(Since Perl v5.8.0)
198This is the inverse of C<utf8::native_to_unicode()>, converting the other
199direction. Again, on ASCII platforms, this returns its input, but on EBCDIC
200platforms it will find the native platform code point, given any Unicode one.
201
202A meaningless value will currently be returned if the input is not an unsigned
203integer.
204
205Since Perl v5.22.0, calls to this function are optimized out on ASCII
206platforms, so there is no performance hit in using it there.
207
208=item * C<$flag = utf8::is_utf8($string)>
209
210(Since Perl 5.8.1) Test whether I<$string> is marked internally as encoded in
211UTF-8. Functionally the same as C<Encode::is_utf8()>.
212
213=item * C<$flag = utf8::valid($string)>
214
215[INTERNAL] Test whether I<$string> is in a consistent state regarding
216UTF-8. Will return true if it is well-formed UTF-8 and has the UTF-8 flag
217on B<or> if I<$string> is held as bytes (both these states are 'consistent').
218Main reason for this routine is to allow Perl's test suite to check
219that operations have left strings in a consistent state. You most
220probably want to use C<utf8::is_utf8()> instead.
221
222=back
223
224C<utf8::encode> is like C<utf8::upgrade>, but the UTF8 flag is
225cleared. See L<perlunicode>, and the C API
226functions C<L<sv_utf8_upgrade|perlapi/sv_utf8_upgrade>>,
227C<L<perlapi/sv_utf8_downgrade>>, C<L<perlapi/sv_utf8_encode>>,
228and C<L<perlapi/sv_utf8_decode>>, which are wrapped by the Perl functions
229C<utf8::upgrade>, C<utf8::downgrade>, C<utf8::encode> and
230C<utf8::decode>. Also, the functions C<utf8::is_utf8>, C<utf8::valid>,
231C<utf8::encode>, C<utf8::decode>, C<utf8::upgrade>, and C<utf8::downgrade> are
232actually internal, and thus always available, without a C<require utf8>
233statement.
234
235=head1 BUGS
236
237Some filesystems may not support UTF-8 file names, or they may be supported
238incompatibly with Perl. Therefore UTF-8 names that are visible to the
239filesystem, such as module names may not work.
240
241=head1 SEE ALSO
242
243L<perlunitut>, L<perluniintro>, L<perlrun>, L<bytes>, L<perlunicode>
244
245=cut