Iconv(3) User Contributed Perl Documentation Iconv(3)
NAME
Text::Iconv - Perl interface to iconv() codeset conversion function
SYNOPSIS
use Text::Iconv;
$converter = Text::Iconv->new("fromcode", "tocode");
$converted = $converter->convert("Text to convert");
DESCRIPTION
The Text::Iconv module provides a Perl interface to the iconv()
function as defined by the Single UNIX Specification.
The convert() method converts the encoding of characters in the input
string from the fromcode codeset to the tocode codeset, and returns the
result.
Settings of fromcode and tocode and their permitted combinations are
implementation-dependent. Valid values are specified in the system
documentation; the iconv(1) utility should also provide a -l option
that lists all supported codesets.
Utility methods
Text::Iconv objects also provide the following methods:
retval() returns the return value of the underlying iconv() function
for the last conversion; according to the Single UNIX Specification,
this value indicates "the number of non-identical conversions
performed." Note, however, that iconv implementations vary widely in
the interpretation of this specification.
This method can be called after calling convert(), e.g.:
$result = $converter->convert("lorem ipsum dolor sit amet");
$retval = $converter->retval;
When called before the first call to convert(), or if an error occured
during the conversion, retval() returns undef.
get_attr(): This method is only available with GNU libiconv, otherwise
it throws an exception. The get_attr() method allows you to query
various attributes which influence the behavior of convert(). The
currently supported attributes are trivialp, transliterate, and
discard_ilseq, e.g.:
$state = $converter->get_attr("transliterate");
See iconvctl(3) for details. To ensure portability to other iconv
implementations you should first check for the availability of this
method using eval {}, e.g.:
eval { $conv->get_attr("trivialp") };
if ($@)
{
# get_attr() is not available
}
else
{
# get_attr() is available
}
This method should be considered experimental.
set_attr(): This method is only available with GNU libiconv, otherwise
it throws an exception. The set_attr() method allows you to set
various attributes which influence the behavior of convert(). The
currently supported attributes are transliterate and discard_ilseq,
e.g.:
$state = $converter->set_attr("transliterate");
See iconvctl(3) for details. To ensure portability to other iconv
implementations you should first check for the availability of this
method using eval {}, cf. the description of set_attr() above.
This method should be considered experimental.
ERRORS
If the conversion can't be initialized an exception is raised (using
croak()).
Handling of conversion errors
Text::Iconv provides a class attribute raise_error and a corresponding
class method for setting and getting its value. The handling of errors
during conversion depends on the setting of this attribute. If
raise_error is set to a true value, an exception is raised; otherwise,
the convert() method only returns undef. By default raise_error is
false. Example usage:
Text::Iconv->raise_error(1); # Conversion errors raise exceptions
Text::Iconv->raise_error(0); # Conversion errors return undef
$a = Text::Iconv->raise_error(); # Get current setting
Per-object handling of conversion errors
As an experimental feature, Text::Iconv also provides an instance
attribute raise_error and a corresponding method for setting and
getting its value. If raise_error is undef, the class-wide settings
apply. If raise_error is 1 or 0 (true or false), the object settings
override the class-wide settings.
Consult iconv(3) for details on errors that might occur.
Conversion of undef
Converting undef, e.g.,
$converted = $converter->convert(undef);
always returns undef. This is not considered an error.
NOTES
The supported codesets, their names, the supported conversions, and the
quality of the conversions are all system-dependent.
AUTHOR
Michael Piotrowski <mxp AT dynalabs.de>
SEE ALSO
iconv(1), iconv(3)
perl v5.26.3 2007-10-17 Iconv(3)