package utf8;
-$utf8::hint_bits = 0x00800000;
+use strict;
+use warnings;
-our $VERSION = '1.00';
+our $hint_bits = 0x00800000;
+
+our $VERSION = '1.24';
+our $AUTOLOAD;
sub import {
- $^H |= $utf8::hint_bits;
- $enc{caller()} = $_[1] if $_[1];
+ $^H |= $hint_bits;
}
sub unimport {
- $^H &= ~$utf8::hint_bits;
+ $^H &= ~$hint_bits;
}
sub AUTOLOAD {
- require "utf8_heavy.pl";
goto &$AUTOLOAD if defined &$AUTOLOAD;
+ require Carp;
Carp::croak("Undefined subroutine $AUTOLOAD called");
}
=head1 SYNOPSIS
- use utf8;
- no utf8;
+ use utf8;
+ no utf8;
+
+ # Convert the internal representation of a Perl scalar to/from UTF-8.
+
+ $num_octets = utf8::upgrade($string);
+ $success = utf8::downgrade($string[, $fail_ok]);
+
+ # Change each character of a Perl scalar to/from a series of
+ # characters that represent the UTF-8 bytes of each original character.
+
+ utf8::encode($string); # "\x{100}" becomes "\xc4\x80"
+ utf8::decode($string); # "\xc4\x80" becomes "\x{100}"
+
+ # Convert a code point from the platform native character set to
+ # Unicode, and vice-versa.
+ $unicode = utf8::native_to_unicode(ord('A')); # returns 65 on both
+ # ASCII and EBCDIC
+ # platforms
+ $native = utf8::unicode_to_native(65); # returns 65 on ASCII
+ # platforms; 193 on
+ # EBCDIC
+
+ $flag = utf8::is_utf8($string); # since Perl 5.8.1
+ $flag = utf8::valid($string);
=head1 DESCRIPTION
The C<use utf8> pragma tells the Perl parser to allow UTF-8 in the
-program text in the current lexical scope (allow UTF-EBCDIC on EBCDIC based
-platforms). The C<no utf8> pragma tells Perl to switch back to treating
-the source text as literal bytes in the current lexical scope.
-
-This pragma is primarily a compatibility device. Perl versions
-earlier than 5.6 allowed arbitrary bytes in source code, whereas
-in future we would like to standardize on the UTF-8 encoding for
-source text. Until UTF-8 becomes the default format for source
-text, this pragma should be used to recognize UTF-8 in the source.
+program text in the current lexical scope. The C<no utf8> pragma tells Perl
+to switch back to treating the source text as literal bytes in the current
+lexical scope. (On EBCDIC platforms, technically it is allowing UTF-EBCDIC,
+and not UTF-8, but this distinction is academic, so in this document the term
+UTF-8 is used to mean both).
+
+B<Do not use this pragma for anything else than telling Perl that your
+script is written in UTF-8.> The utility functions described below are
+directly usable without C<use utf8;>.
+
+Because it is not possible to reliably tell UTF-8 from native 8 bit
+encodings, you need either a Byte Order Mark at the beginning of your
+source code, or C<use utf8;>, to instruct perl.
+
When UTF-8 becomes the standard source format, this pragma will
-effectively become a no-op. For convenience in what follows the
-term I<UTF-X> is used to refer to UTF-8 on ASCII and ISO Latin based
-platforms and UTF-EBCDIC on EBCDIC based platforms.
+effectively become a no-op.
+
+See also the effects of the C<-C> switch and its cousin, the
+C<PERL_UNICODE> environment variable, in L<perlrun>.
Enabling the C<utf8> pragma has the following effect:
=item *
-Bytes in the source text that have their high-bit set will be treated
-as being part of a literal UTF-8 character. This includes most
-literals such as identifiers, string constants, constant regular
-expression patterns and package names. On EBCDIC platforms characters
-in the Latin 1 character set are treated as being part of a literal
-UTF-EBCDIC character.
+Bytes in the source text that are not in the ASCII character set will be
+treated as being part of a literal UTF-8 sequence. This includes most
+literals such as identifier names, string constants, and constant
+regular expression patterns.
=back
-Note that if you have bytes with the eighth bit on in your script
-(for example embedded Latin-1 in your string literals), C<use utf8>
-will be unhappy since the bytes are most probably not well-formed
-UTF-8. If you want to have such bytes and use utf8, you can disable
-utf8 until the end the block (or file, if at top level) by C<no utf8;>.
+Note that if you have non-ASCII, non-UTF-8 bytes in your script (for example
+embedded Latin-1 in your string literals), C<use utf8> will be unhappy. If
+you want to have such bytes under C<use utf8>, you can disable this pragma
+until the end the block (or file, if at top level) by C<no utf8;>.
=head2 Utility functions
-The following functions are defined in the C<utf8::> package by the perl core.
+The following functions are defined in the C<utf8::> package by the
+Perl core. You do not need to say C<use utf8> to use these and in fact
+you should not say that unless you really want to have UTF-8 source code.
=over 4
-=item * $num_octets = utf8::upgrade($string);
+=item * C<$num_octets = utf8::upgrade($string)>
+
+(Since Perl v5.8.0)
+Converts in-place the internal representation of the string from an octet
+sequence in the native encoding (Latin-1 or EBCDIC) to UTF-8. The
+logical character sequence itself is unchanged. If I<$string> is already
+upgraded, then this is a no-op. Returns the
+number of octets necessary to represent the string as UTF-8.
+
+If your code needs to be compatible with versions of perl without
+C<use feature 'unicode_strings';>, you can force Unicode semantics on
+a given string:
+
+ # force unicode semantics for $string without the
+ # "unicode_strings" feature
+ utf8::upgrade($string);
+
+For example:
+
+ # without explicit or implicit use feature 'unicode_strings'
+ my $x = "\xDF"; # LATIN SMALL LETTER SHARP S
+ $x =~ /ss/i; # won't match
+ my $y = uc($x); # won't convert
+ utf8::upgrade($x);
+ $x =~ /ss/i; # matches
+ my $z = uc($x); # converts to "SS"
+
+B<Note that this function does not handle arbitrary encodings>;
+use L<Encode> instead.
+
+=item * C<$success = utf8::downgrade($string[, $fail_ok])>
+
+(Since Perl v5.8.0)
+Converts in-place the internal representation of the string from UTF-8 to the
+equivalent octet sequence in the native encoding (Latin-1 or EBCDIC). The
+logical character sequence itself is unchanged. If I<$string> is already
+stored as native 8 bit, then this is a no-op. Can be used to make sure that
+the UTF-8 flag is off, e.g. when you want to make sure that the substr() or
+length() function works with the usually faster byte algorithm.
+
+Fails if the original UTF-8 sequence cannot be represented in the
+native 8 bit encoding. On failure dies or, if the value of I<$fail_ok> is
+true, returns false.
+
+Returns true on success.
+
+If your code expects an octet sequence this can be used to validate
+that you've received one:
+
+ # throw an exception if not representable as octets
+ utf8::downgrade($string)
+
+ # or do your own error handling
+ utf8::downgrade($string, 1) or die "string must be octets";
+
+B<Note that this function does not handle arbitrary encodings>;
+use L<Encode> instead.
+
+=item * C<utf8::encode($string)>
-Converts internal representation of string to the Perl's internal
-I<UTF-X> form. Returns the number of octets necessary to represent
-the string as I<UTF-X>. Note that this should not be used to convert
-a legacy byte encoding to Unicode: use Encode for that. Affected
-by the encoding pragma.
+(Since Perl v5.8.0)
+Converts in-place the character sequence to the corresponding octet
+sequence in Perl's extended UTF-8. That is, every (possibly wide) character
+gets replaced with a sequence of one or more characters that represent the
+individual UTF-8 bytes of the character. The UTF8 flag is turned off.
+Returns nothing.
-=item * utf8::downgrade($string[, CHECK])
+ my $x = "\x{100}"; # $x contains one character, with ord 0x100
+ utf8::encode($x); # $x contains two characters, with ords (on
+ # ASCII platforms) 0xc4 and 0x80. On EBCDIC
+ # 1047, this would instead be 0x8C and 0x41.
-Converts internal representation of string to be un-encoded bytes.
-Note that this should not be used to convert Unicode back to a legacy
-byte encoding: use Encode for that. B<Not> affected by the encoding
-pragma.
+Similar to:
-=item * utf8::encode($string)
+ use Encode;
+ $x = Encode::encode("utf8", $x);
-Converts (in-place) I<$string> from logical characters to octet
-sequence representing it in Perl's I<UTF-X> encoding. Note that this
-should not be used to convert a legacy byte encoding to Unicode: use
-Encode for that. =item * $flag = utf8::decode($string)
+B<Note that this function does not handle arbitrary encodings>;
+use L<Encode> instead.
-Attempts to convert I<$string> in-place from Perl's I<UTF-X> encoding
-into logical characters. Note that this should not be used to convert
-Unicode back to a legacy byte encoding: use Encode for that.
+=item * C<$success = utf8::decode($string)>
+
+(Since Perl v5.8.0)
+Attempts to convert in-place the octet sequence encoded in Perl's extended
+UTF-8 to the corresponding character sequence. That is, it replaces each
+sequence of characters in the string whose ords represent a valid (extended)
+UTF-8 byte sequence, with the corresponding single character. The UTF-8 flag
+is turned on only if the source string contains multiple-byte UTF-8
+characters. If I<$string> is invalid as extended UTF-8, returns false;
+otherwise returns true.
+
+ my $x = "\xc4\x80"; # $x contains two characters, with ords
+ # 0xc4 and 0x80
+ utf8::decode($x); # On ASCII platforms, $x contains one char,
+ # with ord 0x100. Since these bytes aren't
+ # legal UTF-EBCDIC, on EBCDIC platforms, $x is
+ # unchanged and the function returns FALSE.
+ my $y = "\xc3\x83\xc2\xab"; This has been encoded twice; this
+ # example is only for ASCII platforms
+ utf8::decode($y); # Converts $y to \xc3\xab, returns TRUE;
+ utf8::decode($y); # Further converts to \xeb, returns TRUE;
+ utf8::decode($y); # Returns FALSE, leaves $y unchanged
+
+B<Note that this function does not handle arbitrary encodings>;
+use L<Encode> instead.
+
+=item * C<$unicode = utf8::native_to_unicode($code_point)>
+
+(Since Perl v5.8.0)
+This takes an unsigned integer (which represents the ordinal number of a
+character (or a code point) on the platform the program is being run on) and
+returns its Unicode equivalent value. Since ASCII platforms natively use the
+Unicode code points, this function returns its input on them. On EBCDIC
+platforms it converts from EBCDIC to Unicode.
+
+A meaningless value will currently be returned if the input is not an unsigned
+integer.
+
+Since Perl v5.22.0, calls to this function are optimized out on ASCII
+platforms, so there is no performance hit in using it there.
+
+=item * C<$native = utf8::unicode_to_native($code_point)>
+
+(Since Perl v5.8.0)
+This is the inverse of C<utf8::native_to_unicode()>, converting the other
+direction. Again, on ASCII platforms, this returns its input, but on EBCDIC
+platforms it will find the native platform code point, given any Unicode one.
+
+A meaningless value will currently be returned if the input is not an unsigned
+integer.
+
+Since Perl v5.22.0, calls to this function are optimized out on ASCII
+platforms, so there is no performance hit in using it there.
+
+=item * C<$flag = utf8::is_utf8($string)>
+
+(Since Perl 5.8.1) Test whether I<$string> is marked internally as encoded in
+UTF-8. Functionally the same as C<Encode::is_utf8($string)>.
+
+Typically only necessary for debugging and testing, if you need to
+dump the internals of an SV, L<Devel::Peek's|Devel::Peek> Dump()
+provides more detail in a compact form.
+
+If you still think you need this outside of debugging, testing or
+dealing with filenames, you should probably read L<perlunitut> and
+L<perlunifaq/What is "the UTF8 flag"?>.
+
+Don't use this flag as a marker to distinguish character and binary
+data: that should be decided for each variable when you write your
+code.
+
+To force unicode semantics in code portable to perl 5.8 and 5.10, call
+C<utf8::upgrade($string)> unconditionally.
+
+=item * C<$flag = utf8::valid($string)>
+
+[INTERNAL] Test whether I<$string> is in a consistent state regarding
+UTF-8. Will return true if it is well-formed Perl extended UTF-8 and has the
+UTF-8 flag
+on B<or> if I<$string> is held as bytes (both these states are 'consistent').
+The main reason for this routine is to allow Perl's test suite to check
+that operations have left strings in a consistent state.
=back
-C<utf8::encode> is like C<utf8::upgrade> but the UTF8 flag does not
-get turned on. See L<perlunicode> for more on the UTF8 flag and the C
-API functions C<sv_utf8_upgrade>, C<sv_utf8_downgrade>,
-C<sv_utf8_encode>, C<sv_utf8_decode> that are wrapped by the Perl
-functions C<utf8::upgrade>, C<utf8::downgrade>, C<utf8::encode> and
-C<utf8::decode>.
+C<utf8::encode> is like C<utf8::upgrade>, but the UTF8 flag is
+cleared. See L<perlunicode>, and the C API
+functions C<L<sv_utf8_upgrade|perlapi/sv_utf8_upgrade>>,
+C<L<perlapi/sv_utf8_downgrade>>, C<L<perlapi/sv_utf8_encode>>,
+and C<L<perlapi/sv_utf8_decode>>, which are wrapped by the Perl functions
+C<utf8::upgrade>, C<utf8::downgrade>, C<utf8::encode> and
+C<utf8::decode>. Also, the functions C<utf8::is_utf8>, C<utf8::valid>,
+C<utf8::encode>, C<utf8::decode>, C<utf8::upgrade>, and C<utf8::downgrade> are
+actually internal, and thus always available, without a C<require utf8>
+statement.
+
+=head1 BUGS
+
+Some filesystems may not support UTF-8 file names, or they may be supported
+incompatibly with Perl. Therefore UTF-8 names that are visible to the
+filesystem, such as module names may not work.
=head1 SEE ALSO
-L<perlunicode>, L<bytes>
+L<perlunitut>, L<perluniintro>, L<perlrun>, L<bytes>, L<perlunicode>
=cut