Encode::Guess -- Guesses encoding from data |
Encode::Guess -- Guesses encoding from data
# if you are sure $data won't contain anything bogus
use Encode; use Encode::Guess qw/euc-jp shiftjis 7bit-jis/; my $utf8 = decode("Guess", $data); my $data = encode("Guess", $utf8); # this doesn't work!
# more elaborate way use Encode::Guess; my $enc = guess_encoding($data, qw/euc-jp shiftjis 7bit-jis/); ref($enc) or die "Can't guess: $enc"; # trap error this way $utf8 = $enc->decode($data); # or $utf8 = decode($enc->name, $data)
Encode::Guess enables you to guess in what encoding a given data is encoded, or at least tries to.
By default, it checks only ascii, utf8 and UTF-16/32 with BOM.
use Encode::Guess; # ascii/utf8/BOMed UTF
To use it more practically, you have to give the names of encodings to check (suspects as follows). The name of suspects can either be canonical names or aliases.
# tries all major Japanese Encodings as well use Encode::Guess qw/euc-jp shiftjis 7bit-jis/;
If the $Encode::Guess::NoUTFAutoGuess
variable is set to a true
value, no heuristics will be applied to UTF8/16/32, and the result
will be limited to the suspects and ascii
.
set_suspects
method.
use Encode::Guess; Encode::Guess->set_suspects(qw/euc-jp shiftjis 7bit-jis/);
add_suspects
method. The difference is that
set_suspects
flushes the current suspects list while
add_suspects
adds.
use Encode::Guess; Encode::Guess->add_suspects(qw/euc-jp shiftjis 7bit-jis/); # now the suspects are euc-jp,shiftjis,7bit-jis, AND # euc-kr,euc-cn, and big5-eten Encode::Guess->add_suspects(qw/euc-kr euc-cn big5-eten/);
my $utf8 = Encode::decode("Guess", $data);
guess($data)
So you should instead try this;
my $decoder = Encode::Guess->guess($data);
On success, $decoder is an object that is documented in the Encode::Encoding manpage. So you can now do this;
my $utf8 = $decoder->decode($data);
On failure, $decoder now contains an error message so the whole thing would be as follows;
my $decoder = Encode::Guess->guess($data); die $decoder unless ref($decoder); my $utf8 = $decoder->decode($data);
guess_encoding
function which is exported by
default. It takes $data to check and it also takes the list of
suspects by option. The optional suspect list is not reflected to
the internal suspects list.
my $decoder = guess_encoding($data, qw/euc-jp euc-kr euc-cn/); die $decoder unless ref($decoder); my $utf8 = $decoder->decode($data); # check only ascii and utf8 my $decoder = guess_encoding($data);
use Encode::Guess; # perhaps ok my $decoder = guess_encoding($data, 'latin1'); # definitely NOT ok my $decoder = guess_encoding($data, qw/latin1 greek/);
The reason is that Encode::Guess guesses encoding by trial and error. It first splits $data into lines and tries to decode the line for each suspect. It keeps it going until all but one encoding is eliminated out of suspects list. ISO-8859 series is just too successful for most cases (because it fills almost all code points in \x00-\xff).
Do not mix national standard encodings and the corresponding vendor encodings.# a very bad idea my $decoder = guess_encoding($data, qw/shiftjis MacJapanese cp932/);
The reason is that vendor encoding is usually a superset of national standard so it becomes too ambiguous for most cases.
On the other hand, mixing various national standard encodings automagically works unless $data is too short to allow for guessing.# This is ok if $data is long enough my $decoder = guess_encoding($data, qw/euc-cn euc-jp shiftjis 7bit-jis euc-kr big5-eten/);DO NOT PUT TOO MANY SUSPECTS! Don't you try something like this!
my $decoder = guess_encoding($data, Encode->encodings(":all"));
It is, after all, just a guess. You should alway be explicit when it comes to encodings. But there are some, especially Japanese, environment that guess-coding is a must. Use this module with care.
Encode::Guess does not work on EBCDIC platforms.
the Encode manpage, the Encode::Encoding manpage
Encode::Guess -- Guesses encoding from data |