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authorNicholas Clark <nick@ccl4.org>2007-06-24 15:46:40 +0000
committerNicholas Clark <nick@ccl4.org>2007-06-24 15:46:40 +0000
commit38a44b824c7566670d69f5e214106e1866ce72fe (patch)
tree8938dc96d0dae69214f68d7f8ce3fd0b5ef95b7d /pod/perlretut.pod
parentcb23d5b19261a41b403a114d55551ddac48af175 (diff)
downloadperl-38a44b824c7566670d69f5e214106e1866ce72fe.tar.gz
s/\bunicode\b/Unicode/; # For everything not dual life
p4raw-id: //depot/perl@31455
Diffstat (limited to 'pod/perlretut.pod')
-rw-r--r--pod/perlretut.pod4
1 files changed, 2 insertions, 2 deletions
diff --git a/pod/perlretut.pod b/pod/perlretut.pod
index da3e82c74f..360ee73173 100644
--- a/pod/perlretut.pod
+++ b/pod/perlretut.pod
@@ -1841,7 +1841,7 @@ substituted.
With the advent of 5.6.0, Perl regexps can handle more than just the
standard ASCII character set. Perl now supports I<Unicode>, a standard
for representing the alphabets from virtually all of the world's written
-languages, and a host of symbols. Perl's text strings are unicode strings, so
+languages, and a host of symbols. Perl's text strings are Unicode strings, so
they can contain characters with a value (codepoint or character number) higher
than 255
@@ -1890,7 +1890,7 @@ A list of full names is found in the file NamesList.txt in the
lib/perl5/X.X.X/unicore directory (where X.X.X is the perl
version number as it is installed on your system).
-The answer to requirement 2), as of 5.6.0, is that a regexp uses unicode
+The answer to requirement 2), as of 5.6.0, is that a regexp uses Unicode
characters. Internally, this is encoded to bytes using either UTF-8 or a
native 8 bit encoding, depending on the history of the string, but
conceptually it is a sequence of characters, not bytes. See