╔════════════════════════════════════════════╤══════════════════════╗
║ │ ║
║ On Read │ On Write ║
║ │ ║
Perl ╟─────────────────────┬──────────────────────┼──────────────────────╢
5.26 ║ │ │ ║
║ Invalid encoding │ Outside of Unicode, │ Outside of Unicode, ║
║ other than sequence │ Unicode nonchar, or │ Unicode nonchar, or ║
║ length │ Unicode surrogate │ Unicode surrogate ║
║ │ │ ║
╔══════════════════╬═════════════════════╪══════════════════════╪══════════════════════╣
║ ║ │ │ ║
║ :encoding(UTF-8) ║ Warns and Replaces │ Warns and Replaces │ Warns and Replaces ║
║ ║ │ │ ║
╟──────────────────╫─────────────────────┼──────────────────────┼──────────────────────╢
║ ║ │ │ ║
║ :encoding(utf8) ║ Warns and Replaces │ Accepts │ Warns and Outputs ║
║ ║ │ │ ║
╟──────────────────╫─────────────────────┼──────────────────────┼──────────────────────╢
║ ║ │ │ ║
║ :utf8 ║ Corrupt scalar │ Accepts │ Warns and Outputs ║
║ ║ │ │ ║
╚══════════════════╩═════════════════════╧══════════════════════╧══════════════════════╝
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Note that :encoding(UTF-8)
actually decodes using utf8, then checks if the resulting character is in the acceptable range. This reduces the number of error messages for bad input, so it's good.
(Encoding names are case-insensitive.)
Tests used to generate the above table:
On read
:encoding(UTF-8)
$ printf "xC3xA9
xEFxBFxBF
xEDxA0x80
xF8x88x80x80x80
x80
" |
perl -MB -nle'
use open ":std", ":encoding(UTF-8)";
my $sv = B::svref_2object($_);
printf "%vX%s (internal: %vX, UTF8=%d)
", $_, length($_)==1 ? "" : " = $_", $sv->PVX, utf8::is_utf8($_);
'
utf8 "xFFFF" does not map to Unicode.
utf8 "xD800" does not map to Unicode.
utf8 "x200000" does not map to Unicode.
utf8 "x80" does not map to Unicode.
E9 (internal: C3.A9, UTF8=1)
5C.78.7B.46.46.46.46.7D = x{FFFF} (internal: 5C.78.7B.46.46.46.46.7D, UTF8=1)
5C.78.7B.44.38.30.30.7D = x{D800} (internal: 5C.78.7B.44.38.30.30.7D, UTF8=1)
5C.78.7B.32.30.30.30.30.30.7D = x{200000} (internal: 5C.78.7B.32.30.30.30.30.30.7D, UTF8=1)
5C.78.38.30 = x80 (internal: 5C.78.38.30, UTF8=1)
:encoding(utf8)
$ printf "xC3xA9
xEFxBFxBF
xEDxA0x80
xF8x88x80x80x80
x80
" |
perl -MB -nle'
use open ":std", ":encoding(utf8)";
my $sv = B::svref_2object($_);
printf "%vX%s (internal: %vX, UTF8=%d)
", $_, length($_)==1 ? "" : " = $_", $sv->PVX, utf8::is_utf8($_);
'
utf8 "x80" does not map to Unicode.
E9 (internal: C3.A9, UTF8=1)
FFFF (internal: EF.BF.BF, UTF8=1)
D800 (internal: ED.A0.80, UTF8=1)
200000 (internal: F8.88.80.80.80, UTF8=1)
5C.78.38.30 = x80 (internal: 5C.78.38.30, UTF8=1)
:utf8
$ printf "xC3xA9
xEFxBFxBF
xEDxA0x80
xF8x88x80x80x80
x80
" |
perl -MB -nle'
use open ":std", ":utf8";
my $sv = B::svref_2object($_);
printf "%vX%s (internal: %vX, UTF8=%d)
", $_, length($_)==1 ? "" : " = $_", $sv->PVX, utf8::is_utf8($_);
'
E9 (internal: C3.A9, UTF8=1)
FFFF (internal: EF.BF.BF, UTF8=1)
D800 (internal: ED.A0.80, UTF8=1)
200000 (internal: F8.88.80.80.80, UTF8=1)
Malformed UTF-8 character: x80 (unexpected continuation byte 0x80, with no preceding start byte) in printf at -e line 4, <> line 5.
0 (internal: 80, UTF8=1)
On write
:encoding(UTF-8)
$ perl -e'
use open ":std", ":encoding(UTF-8)";
print "x{E9}
";
print "x{FFFF}
";
print "x{D800}
";
print "x{20_0000}
";
' >a
Unicode non-character U+FFFF is not recommended for open interchange in print at -e line 4.
Unicode surrogate U+D800 is illegal in UTF-8 at -e line 5.
Code point 0x200000 is not Unicode, may not be portable in print at -e line 6.
"x{ffff}" does not map to utf8.
"x{d800}" does not map to utf8.
"x{200000}" does not map to utf8.
$ od -t c a
0000000 303 251
x { F F F F }
x { D
0000020 8 0 0 }
x { 2 0 0 0 0 0 }
0000040
$ cat a
é
x{FFFF}
x{D800}
x{200000}
:encoding(utf8)
$ perl -e'
use open ":std", ":encoding(utf8)";
print "x{E9}
";
print "x{FFFF}
";
print "x{D800}
";
print "x{20_0000}
";
' >a
Unicode surrogate U+D800 is illegal in UTF-8 at -e line 4.
Code point 0x200000 is not Unicode, may not be portable in print at -e line 5.
$ od -t c a
0000000 303 251
355 240 200
370 210 200 200 200
0000015
$ cat a
é
?
?
:utf8
Same results as :encoding(utf8)
.
Tested using Perl 5.26.
Encode::encode by default will replace invalid characters with a substitution character. Is that true even if you are passing the looser "utf8" as the encoding?
Perl strings are strings of 32-bit or 64-bit characters depending on the build. utf8 can encode any 72-bit integer. It is therefore capable of encoding all characters it can be asked to encode.
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