phpMan > man > Encode::Alias

Markdown | JSON | MCP    

Encode::Alias
NAME SYNOPSIS DESCRIPTION SEE ALSO
NAME
    Encode::Alias - alias definitions to encodings

SYNOPSIS
      use Encode;
      use Encode::Alias;
      define_alias( "newName" => ENCODING);
      define_alias( qr/.../ => ENCODING);
      define_alias( sub { return ENCODING if ...; } );

DESCRIPTION
    Allows newName to be used as an alias for ENCODING. ENCODING may be either the name of an
    encoding or an encoding object (as described in Encode).

    Currently the first argument to define_alias() can be specified in the following ways:

    As a simple string.
    As a qr// compiled regular expression, e.g.:
          define_alias( qr/^iso8859-(\d+)$/i => '"iso-8859-$1"' );

        In this case, if *ENCODING* is not a reference, it is "eval"-ed in order to allow $1 etc. to
        be substituted. The example is one way to alias names as used in X11 fonts to the MIME names
        for the iso-8859-* family. Note the double quotes inside the single quotes.

        (or, you don't have to do this yourself because this example is predefined)

        If you are using a regex here, you have to use the quotes as shown or it won't work. Also
        note that regex handling is tricky even for the experienced. Use this feature with caution.

    As a code reference, e.g.:
          define_alias( sub {shift =~ /^iso8859-(\d+)$/i ? "iso-8859-$1" : undef } );

        The same effect as the example above in a different way. The coderef takes the alias name as
        an argument and returns a canonical name on success or undef if not. Note the second
        argument is ignored if provided. Use this with even more caution than the regex version.

   Changes in code reference aliasing
    As of Encode 1.87, the older form

      define_alias( sub { return  /^iso8859-(\d+)$/i ? "iso-8859-$1" : undef } );

    no longer works.

    Encode up to 1.86 internally used "local $_" to implement this older form. But consider the code
    below;

      use Encode;
      $_ = "eeeee" ;
      while (/(e)/g) {
        my $utf = decode('aliased-encoding-name', $1);
        print "position:",pos,"\n";
      }

    Prior to Encode 1.86 this fails because of "local $_".

  Alias overloading
    You can override predefined aliases by simply applying define_alias(). The new alias is always
    evaluated first, and when necessary, define_alias() flushes the internal cache to make the new
    definition available.

      # redirect SHIFT_JIS to MS/IBM Code Page 932, which is a
      # superset of SHIFT_JIS

      define_alias( qr/shift.*jis$/i  => '"cp932"' );
      define_alias( qr/sjis$/i        => '"cp932"' );

    If you want to zap all predefined aliases, you can use

      Encode::Alias->undef_aliases;

    to do so. And

      Encode::Alias->init_aliases;

    gets the factory settings back.

    Note that define_alias() will not be able to override the canonical name of encodings. Encodings
    are first looked up by canonical name before potential aliases are tried.

SEE ALSO
    Encode, Encode::Supported

Generated by phpMan v2.3-9-g897ea50-dirty Author: Che Dong Under GNU General Public License
2026-06-03 09:07 @216.73.216.151
CrawledBy Mozilla/5.0 AppleWebKit/537.36 (KHTML, like Gecko; compatible; ClaudeBot/1.0; +claudebot@anthropic.com)
Valid XHTML 1.0 TransitionalValid CSS!

^_back to top