utf8 - phpMan

Command: man perldoc info search(apropos)  


Sections
NAME SYNOPSIS DESCRIPTION BUGS SEE ALSO
NAME
    utf8 - Perl pragma to enable/disable UTF-8 (or UTF-EBCDIC) in source
    code

SYNOPSIS
     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);

DESCRIPTION
    The "use utf8" pragma tells the Perl parser to allow UTF-8 in the
    program text in the current lexical scope. The "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).

    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 "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 "use utf8;", to instruct perl.

    When UTF-8 becomes the standard source format, this pragma will
    effectively become a no-op.

    See also the effects of the "-C" switch and its cousin, the
    "PERL_UNICODE" environment variable, in perlrun.

    Enabling the "utf8" pragma has the following effect:

    *   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.

    Note that if you have non-ASCII, non-UTF-8 bytes in your script (for
    example embedded Latin-1 in your string literals), "use utf8" will be
    unhappy. If you want to have such bytes under "use utf8", you can
    disable this pragma until the end the block (or file, if at top level)
    by "no utf8;".

  Utility functions
    The following functions are defined in the "utf8::" package by the Perl
    core. You do not need to say "use utf8" to use these and in fact you
    should not say that unless you really want to have UTF-8 source code.

    *   "$num_octets = utf8::upgrade($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 *$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
        "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"

        Note that this function does not handle arbitrary encodings; use
        Encode instead.

    *   "$success = utf8::downgrade($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 *$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
        *$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";

        Note that this function does not handle arbitrary encodings; use
        Encode instead.

    *   "utf8::encode($string)"

        (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.

         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.

        Similar to:

          use Encode;
          $x = Encode::encode("utf8", $x);

        Note that this function does not handle arbitrary encodings; use
        Encode instead.

    *   "$success = utf8::decode($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 *$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

        Note that this function does not handle arbitrary encodings; use
        Encode instead.

    *   "$unicode = utf8::native_to_unicode($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.

    *   "$native = utf8::unicode_to_native($code_point)"

        (Since Perl v5.8.0) This is the inverse of
        "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.

    *   "$flag = utf8::is_utf8($string)"

        (Since Perl 5.8.1) Test whether *$string* is marked internally as
        encoded in UTF-8. Functionally the same as
        "Encode::is_utf8($string)".

        Typically only necessary for debugging and testing, if you need to
        dump the internals of an SV, Devel::Peek's 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 perlunitut and
        "What is "the UTF8 flag"?" in perlunifaq.

        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 "utf8::upgrade($string)" unconditionally.

    *   "$flag = utf8::valid($string)"

        [INTERNAL] Test whether *$string* is in a consistent state regarding
        UTF-8. Will return true if it is well-formed Perl extended UTF-8 and
        has the UTF-8 flag on or if *$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.

    "utf8::encode" is like "utf8::upgrade", but the UTF8 flag is cleared.
    See perlunicode, and the C API functions "sv_utf8_upgrade",
    ""sv_utf8_downgrade" in perlapi", ""sv_utf8_encode" in perlapi", and
    ""sv_utf8_decode" in perlapi", which are wrapped by the Perl functions
    "utf8::upgrade", "utf8::downgrade", "utf8::encode" and "utf8::decode".
    Also, the functions "utf8::is_utf8", "utf8::valid", "utf8::encode",
    "utf8::decode", "utf8::upgrade", and "utf8::downgrade" are actually
    internal, and thus always available, without a "require utf8" statement.

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.

SEE ALSO
    perlunitut, perluniintro, perlrun, bytes, perlunicode


Generated by phpMan Author: Che Dong On Apache Under GNU General Public License - MarkDown Format
2026-05-23 05:17 @216.73.217.24 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