package Encode::JP; BEGIN { if ( ord("A") == 193 ) { die "Encode::JP not supported on EBCDIC\n"; } } use strict; use warnings; use Encode; our $VERSION = do { my @r = ( q$Revision: 2.4 $ =~ /\d+/g ); sprintf "%d." . "%02d" x $#r, @r }; use XSLoader; XSLoader::load( __PACKAGE__, $VERSION ); use Encode::JP::JIS7; 1; __END__ =head1 NAME Encode::JP - Japanese Encodings =head1 SYNOPSIS use Encode qw/encode decode/; $euc_jp = encode("euc-jp", $utf8); # loads Encode::JP implicitly $utf8 = decode("euc-jp", $euc_jp); # ditto =head1 ABSTRACT This module implements Japanese charset encodings. Encodings supported are as follows. Canonical Alias Description -------------------------------------------------------------------- euc-jp /\beuc.*jp$/i EUC (Extended Unix Character) /\bjp.*euc/i /\bujis$/i shiftjis /\bshift.*jis$/i Shift JIS (aka MS Kanji) /\bsjis$/i 7bit-jis /\bjis$/i 7bit JIS iso-2022-jp ISO-2022-JP [RFC1468] = 7bit JIS with all Halfwidth Kana converted to Fullwidth iso-2022-jp-1 ISO-2022-JP-1 [RFC2237] = ISO-2022-JP with JIS X 0212-1990 support. See below MacJapanese Shift JIS + Apple vendor mappings cp932 /\bwindows-31j$/i Code Page 932 = Shift JIS + MS/IBM vendor mappings jis0201-raw JIS0201, raw format jis0208-raw JIS0201, raw format jis0212-raw JIS0201, raw format -------------------------------------------------------------------- =head1 DESCRIPTION To find out how to use this module in detail, see L. =head1 Note on ISO-2022-JP(-1)? ISO-2022-JP-1 (RFC2237) is a superset of ISO-2022-JP (RFC1468) which adds support for JIS X 0212-1990. That means you can use the same code to decode to utf8 but not vice versa. $utf8 = decode('iso-2022-jp-1', $stream); and $utf8 = decode('iso-2022-jp', $stream); yield the same result but $with_0212 = encode('iso-2022-jp-1', $utf8); is now different from $without_0212 = encode('iso-2022-jp', $utf8 ); In the latter case, characters that map to 0212 are first converted to U+3013 (0xA2AE in EUC-JP; a white square also known as 'Tofu' or 'geta mark') then fed to the decoding engine. U+FFFD is not used, in order to preserve text layout as much as possible. =head1 BUGS The ASCII region (0x00-0x7f) is preserved for all encodings, even though this conflicts with mappings by the Unicode Consortium. =head1 SEE ALSO L =cut