diff options
Diffstat (limited to 'lib/encoding.pm')
-rw-r--r-- | lib/encoding.pm | 23 |
1 files changed, 21 insertions, 2 deletions
diff --git a/lib/encoding.pm b/lib/encoding.pm index 6f5970f2ca..94ee3231fb 100644 --- a/lib/encoding.pm +++ b/lib/encoding.pm @@ -57,14 +57,33 @@ encoding pragma you can change this default. The pragma is a per script, not a per block lexical. Only the last C<use encoding> matters, and it affects B<the whole script>. +Notice that only literals (string or regular expression) having only +legacy code points are affected: if you mix data like this + + \xDF\x{100} + +the data is assumed to be in (Latin 1 and) Unicode, not in your native +encoding. In other words, this will match in "greek": + + "\xDF" =~ /\x{3af}/ + +but this will not + + "\xDF\x{100}" =~ /\x{3af}\x{100}/ + +since the C<\xDF> on the left will B<not> be upgraded to C<\x{3af}> +because of the C<\x{100}> on the left. You should not be mixing your +legacy data and Unicode in the same string. + If no encoding is specified, the environment variable L<PERL_ENCODING> is consulted. If that fails, "latin1" (ISO 8859-1) is assumed. If no encoding can be found, C<Unknown encoding '...'> error will be thrown. =head1 KNOWN PROBLEMS -Literals in regular expressions are not affected by this pragma. -They very probably should. +For native multibyte encodings (either fixed or variable length) +the current implementation of the regular expressions may introduce +recoding errors for longer regular expression literals than 127 bytes. =head1 SEE ALSO |