Encode::TW.3pm

Langue: en

Version: 2001-09-21 (openSuse - 09/10/07)

Section: 3 (Bibliothèques de fonctions)

NAME

Encode::TW - Taiwan-based Chinese Encodings

SYNOPSIS


    use Encode qw/encode decode/; 

    $big5 = encode("big5", $utf8); # loads Encode::TW implicitly

    $utf8 = decode("big5", $big5); # ditto



DESCRIPTION

This module implements tradition Chinese charset encodings as used in Taiwan and Hong Kong. Encodings supported are as follows.

  Canonical   Alias             Description

  --------------------------------------------------------------------

  big5-eten   /\bbig-?5$/i      Big5 encoding (with ETen extensions)

              /\bbig5-?et(en)?$/i

              /\btca-?big5$/i

  big5-hkscs  /\bbig5-?hk(scs)?$/i

              /\bhk(scs)?-?big5$/i

                                Big5 + Cantonese characters in Hong Kong

  MacChineseTrad                Big5 + Apple Vendor Mappings

  cp950                         Code Page 950 

                                = Big5 + Microsoft vendor mappings

  --------------------------------------------------------------------



To find out how to use this module in detail, see Encode.

NOTES

Due to size concerns, "EUC-TW" (Extended Unix Character), "CCCII" (Chinese Character Code for Information Interchange), "BIG5PLUS" (CMEX's Big5+) and "BIG5EXT" (CMEX's Big5e) are distributed separately on CPAN, under the name Encode::HanExtra. That module also contains extra China-based encodings.

BUGS

Since the original "big5" encoding (1984) is not supported anywhere (glibc and DOS-based systems uses "big5" to mean "big5-eten"; Microsoft uses "big5" to mean "cp950"), a conscious decision was made to alias "big5" to "big5-eten", which is the de facto superset of the original big5.

The "CNS11643" encoding files are not complete. For common "CNS11643" manipulation, please use "EUC-TW" in Encode::HanExtra, which contains planes 1-7.

The ASCII region (0x00-0x7f) is preserved for all encodings, even though this conflicts with mappings by the Unicode Consortium. See

<http://www.debian.or.jp/~kubota/unicode-symbols.html.en>

to find out why it is implemented that way.

SEE ALSO

Encode