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|
=head1 NAME
perlunicode - Unicode support in Perl
=head1 DESCRIPTION
=head2 Important Caveats
WARNING: While the implementation of Unicode support in Perl is now
fairly complete it is still evolving to some extent.
In particular the way Unicode is handled on EBCDIC platforms is still
rather experimental. On such a platform references to UTF-8 encoding
in this document and elsewhere should be read as meaning UTF-EBCDIC as
specified in Unicode Technical Report 16 unless ASCII vs EBCDIC issues
are specifically discussed. There is no C<utfebcdic> pragma or
":utfebcdic" layer, rather "utf8" and ":utf8" are re-used to mean
platform's "natural" 8-bit encoding of Unicode. See L<perlebcdic> for
more discussion of the issues.
The following areas are still under development.
=over 4
=item Input and Output Disciplines
A filehandle can be marked as containing perl's internal Unicode
encoding (UTF-8 or UTF-EBCDIC) by opening it with the ":utf8" layer.
Other encodings can be converted to perl's encoding on input, or from
perl's encoding on output by use of the ":encoding()" layer. There is
not yet a clean way to mark the Perl source itself as being in an
particular encoding.
=item Regular Expressions
The regular expression compiler does now attempt to produce
polymorphic opcodes. That is the pattern should now adapt to the data
and automatically switch to the Unicode character scheme when
presented with Unicode data, or a traditional byte scheme when
presented with byte data. The implementation is still new and
(particularly on EBCDIC platforms) may need further work.
=item C<use utf8> still needed to enable UTF-8/UTF-EBCDIC in scripts
The C<utf8> pragma implements the tables used for Unicode support.
These tables are automatically loaded on demand, so the C<utf8> pragma
need not normally be used.
However, as a compatibility measure, this pragma must be explicitly
used to enable recognition of UTF-8 in the Perl scripts themselves on
ASCII based machines or recognize UTF-EBCDIC on EBCDIC based machines.
B<NOTE: this should be the only place where an explicit C<use utf8> is
needed>.
=back
=head2 Byte and Character semantics
Beginning with version 5.6, Perl uses logically wide characters to
represent strings internally. This internal representation of strings
uses either the UTF-8 or the UTF-EBCDIC encoding.
In future, Perl-level operations can be expected to work with
characters rather than bytes, in general.
However, as strictly an interim compatibility measure, Perl aims to
provide a safe migration path from byte semantics to character
semantics for programs. For operations where Perl can unambiguously
decide that the input data is characters, Perl now switches to
character semantics. For operations where this determination cannot
be made without additional information from the user, Perl decides in
favor of compatibility, and chooses to use byte semantics.
This behavior preserves compatibility with earlier versions of Perl,
which allowed byte semantics in Perl operations, but only as long as
none of the program's inputs are marked as being as source of Unicode
character data. Such data may come from filehandles, from calls to
external programs, from information provided by the system (such as %ENV),
or from literals and constants in the source text.
If the C<-C> command line switch is used, (or the
${^WIDE_SYSTEM_CALLS} global flag is set to C<1>), all system calls
will use the corresponding wide character APIs. Note that this is
currently only implemented on Windows since other platforms API
standard on this area.
Regardless of the above, the C<bytes> pragma can always be used to
force byte semantics in a particular lexical scope. See L<bytes>.
The C<utf8> pragma is primarily a compatibility device that enables
recognition of UTF-(8|EBCDIC) in literals encountered by the parser.
Note that this pragma is only required until a future version of Perl
in which character semantics will become the default. This pragma may
then become a no-op. See L<utf8>.
Unless mentioned otherwise, Perl operators will use character semantics
when they are dealing with Unicode data, and byte semantics otherwise.
Thus, character semantics for these operations apply transparently; if
the input data came from a Unicode source (for example, by adding a
character encoding discipline to the filehandle whence it came, or a
literal UTF-8 string constant in the program), character semantics
apply; otherwise, byte semantics are in effect. To force byte semantics
on Unicode data, the C<bytes> pragma should be used.
Notice that if you concatenate strings with byte semantics and strings
with Unicode character data, the bytes will by default be upgraded
I<as if they were ISO 8859-1 (Latin-1)> (or if in EBCDIC, after a
translation to ISO 8859-1). To change this, use the C<encoding>
pragma, see L<encoding>.
Under character semantics, many operations that formerly operated on
bytes change to operating on characters. For ASCII data this makes no
difference, because UTF-8 stores ASCII in single bytes, but for any
character greater than C<chr(127)>, the character B<may> be stored in
a sequence of two or more bytes, all of which have the high bit set.
For C1 controls or Latin 1 characters on an EBCDIC platform the
character may be stored in a UTF-EBCDIC multi byte sequence. But by
and large, the user need not worry about this, because Perl hides it
from the user. A character in Perl is logically just a number ranging
from 0 to 2**32 or so. Larger characters encode to longer sequences
of bytes internally, but again, this is just an internal detail which
is hidden at the Perl level.
=head2 Effects of character semantics
Character semantics have the following effects:
=over 4
=item *
Strings and patterns may contain characters that have an ordinal value
larger than 255.
Presuming you use a Unicode editor to edit your program, such
characters will typically occur directly within the literal strings as
UTF-8 (or UTF-EBCDIC on EBCDIC platforms) characters, but you can also
specify a particular character with an extension of the C<\x>
notation. UTF-X characters are specified by putting the hexadecimal
code within curlies after the C<\x>. For instance, a Unicode smiley
face is C<\x{263A}>.
=item *
Identifiers within the Perl script may contain Unicode alphanumeric
characters, including ideographs. (You are currently on your own when
it comes to using the canonical forms of characters--Perl doesn't
(yet) attempt to canonicalize variable names for you.)
=item *
Regular expressions match characters instead of bytes. For instance,
"." matches a character instead of a byte. (However, the C<\C> pattern
is provided to force a match a single byte ("C<char>" in C, hence C<\C>).)
=item *
Character classes in regular expressions match characters instead of
bytes, and match against the character properties specified in the
Unicode properties database. So C<\w> can be used to match an
ideograph, for instance.
=item *
Named Unicode properties and block ranges make be used as character
classes via the new C<\p{}> (matches property) and C<\P{}> (doesn't
match property) constructs. For instance, C<\p{Lu}> matches any
character with the Unicode uppercase property, while C<\p{M}> matches
any mark character. Single letter properties may omit the brackets,
so that can be written C<\pM> also. Many predefined character classes
are available, such as C<\p{IsMirrored}> and C<\p{InTibetan}>.
The C<\p{Is...}> test for "general properties" such as "letter",
"digit", while the C<\p{In...}> test for Unicode scripts and blocks.
The official Unicode script and block names have spaces and dashes and
separators, but for convenience you can have dashes, spaces, and
underbars at every word division, and you need not care about correct
casing. It is recommended, however, that for consistency you use the
following naming: the official Unicode script, block, or property name
(see below for the additional rules that apply to block names),
with whitespace and dashes replaced with underbar, and the words
"uppercase-first-lowercase-rest". That is, "Latin-1 Supplement"
becomes "Latin_1_Supplement".
You can also negate both C<\p{}> and C<\P{}> by introducing a caret
(^) between the first curly and the property name: C<\p{^In_Tamil}> is
equal to C<\P{In_Tamil}>.
The C<In> and C<Is> can be left out: C<\p{Greek}> is equal to
C<\p{In_Greek}>, C<\P{Pd}> is equal to C<\P{Pd}>.
Short Long
L Letter
Lu Uppercase_Letter
Ll Lowercase_Letter
Lt Titlecase_Letter
Lm Modifier_Letter
Lo Other_Letter
M Mark
Mn Nonspacing_Mark
Mc Spacing_Mark
Me Enclosing_Mark
N Number
Nd Decimal_Number
Nl Letter_Number
No Other_Number
P Punctuation
Pc Connector_Punctuation
Pd Dash_Punctuation
Ps Open_Punctuation
Pe Close_Punctuation
Pi Initial_Punctuation
(may behave like Ps or Pe depending on usage)
Pf Final_Punctuation
(may behave like Ps or Pe depending on usage)
Po Other_Punctuation
S Symbol
Sm Math_Symbol
Sc Currency_Symbol
Sk Modifier_Symbol
So Other_Symbol
Z Separator
Zs Space_Separator
Zl Line_Separator
Zp Paragraph_Separator
C Other
Cc Control
Cf Format
Cs Surrogate
Co Private_Use
Cn Unassigned
There's also C<L&> which is an alias for C<Ll>, C<Lu>, and C<Lt>.
The following reserved ranges have C<In> tests:
CJK_Ideograph_Extension_A
CJK_Ideograph
Hangul_Syllable
Non_Private_Use_High_Surrogate
Private_Use_High_Surrogate
Low_Surrogate
Private_Surrogate
CJK_Ideograph_Extension_B
Plane_15_Private_Use
Plane_16_Private_Use
For example C<"\x{AC00}" =~ \p{HangulSyllable}> will test true.
(Handling of surrogates is not implemented yet, because Perl
uses UTF-8 and not UTF-16 internally to represent Unicode.)
Additionally, because scripts differ in their directionality
(for example Hebrew is written right to left), all characters
have their directionality defined:
BidiL Left-to-Right
BidiLRE Left-to-Right Embedding
BidiLRO Left-to-Right Override
BidiR Right-to-Left
BidiAL Right-to-Left Arabic
BidiRLE Right-to-Left Embedding
BidiRLO Right-to-Left Override
BidiPDF Pop Directional Format
BidiEN European Number
BidiES European Number Separator
BidiET European Number Terminator
BidiAN Arabic Number
BidiCS Common Number Separator
BidiNSM Non-Spacing Mark
BidiBN Boundary Neutral
BidiB Paragraph Separator
BidiS Segment Separator
BidiWS Whitespace
BidiON Other Neutrals
=head2 Scripts
The scripts available for C<\p{In...}> and C<\P{In...}>, for example
\p{InCyrillic>, are as follows, for example C<\p{InLatin}> or C<\P{InHan}>:
Arabic
Armenian
Bengali
Bopomofo
Canadian-Aboriginal
Cherokee
Cyrillic
Deseret
Devanagari
Ethiopic
Georgian
Gothic
Greek
Gujarati
Gurmukhi
Han
Hangul
Hebrew
Hiragana
Inherited
Kannada
Katakana
Khmer
Lao
Latin
Malayalam
Mongolian
Myanmar
Ogham
Old-Italic
Oriya
Runic
Sinhala
Syriac
Tamil
Telugu
Thaana
Thai
Tibetan
Yi
There are also extended property classes that supplement the basic
properties, defined by the F<PropList> Unicode database:
ASCII_Hex_Digit
Bidi_Control
Dash
Diacritic
Extender
Hex_Digit
Hyphen
Ideographic
Join_Control
Noncharacter_Code_Point
Other_Alphabetic
Other_Lowercase
Other_Math
Other_Uppercase
Quotation_Mark
White_Space
and further derived properties:
Alphabetic Lu + Ll + Lt + Lm + Lo + Other_Alphabetic
Lowercase Ll + Other_Lowercase
Uppercase Lu + Other_Uppercase
Math Sm + Other_Math
ID_Start Lu + Ll + Lt + Lm + Lo + Nl
ID_Continue ID_Start + Mn + Mc + Nd + Pc
Any Any character
Assigned Any non-Cn character
Common Any character (or unassigned code point)
not explicitly assigned to a script
=head2 Blocks
In addition to B<scripts>, Unicode also defines B<blocks> of
characters. The difference between scripts and blocks is that the
scripts concept is closer to natural languages, while the blocks
concept is more an artificial grouping based on groups of 256 Unicode
characters. For example, the C<Latin> script contains letters from
many blocks. On the other hand, the C<Latin> script does not contain
all the characters from those blocks, it does not for example contain
digits because digits are shared across many scripts. Digits and
other similar groups, like punctuation, are in a category called
C<Common>.
For more about scripts see the UTR #24:
http://www.unicode.org/unicode/reports/tr24/
For more about blocks see
http://www.unicode.org/Public/UNIDATA/Blocks.txt
Because there are overlaps in naming (there are, for example, both
a script called C<Katakana> and a block called C<Katakana>, the block
version has C<Block> appended to its name, C<\p{InKatakanaBlock}>.
Notice that this definition was introduced in Perl 5.8.0: in Perl
5.6 only the blocks were used; in Perl 5.8.0 scripts became the
preferential Unicode character class definition; this meant that
the definitions of some character classes changed (the ones in the
below list that have the C<Block> appended).
Alphabetic Presentation Forms
Arabic Block
Arabic Presentation Forms-A
Arabic Presentation Forms-B
Armenian Block
Arrows
Basic Latin
Bengali Block
Block Elements
Bopomofo Block
Bopomofo Extended
Box Drawing
Braille Patterns
Byzantine Musical Symbols
CJK Compatibility
CJK Compatibility Forms
CJK Compatibility Ideographs
CJK Compatibility Ideographs Supplement
CJK Radicals Supplement
CJK Symbols and Punctuation
CJK Unified Ideographs
CJK Unified Ideographs Extension A
CJK Unified Ideographs Extension B
Cherokee Block
Combining Diacritical Marks
Combining Half Marks
Combining Marks for Symbols
Control Pictures
Currency Symbols
Cyrillic Block
Deseret Block
Devanagari Block
Dingbats
Enclosed Alphanumerics
Enclosed CJK Letters and Months
Ethiopic Block
General Punctuation
Geometric Shapes
Georgian Block
Gothic Block
Greek Block
Greek Extended
Gujarati Block
Gurmukhi Block
Halfwidth and Fullwidth Forms
Hangul Compatibility Jamo
Hangul Jamo
Hangul Syllables
Hebrew Block
High Private Use Surrogates
High Surrogates
Hiragana Block
IPA Extensions
Ideographic Description Characters
Kanbun
Kangxi Radicals
Kannada Block
Katakana Block
Khmer Block
Lao Block
Latin 1 Supplement
Latin Extended Additional
Latin Extended-A
Latin Extended-B
Letterlike Symbols
Low Surrogates
Malayalam Block
Mathematical Alphanumeric Symbols
Mathematical Operators
Miscellaneous Symbols
Miscellaneous Technical
Mongolian Block
Musical Symbols
Myanmar Block
Number Forms
Ogham Block
Old Italic Block
Optical Character Recognition
Oriya Block
Private Use
Runic Block
Sinhala Block
Small Form Variants
Spacing Modifier Letters
Specials
Superscripts and Subscripts
Syriac Block
Tags
Tamil Block
Telugu Block
Thaana Block
Thai Block
Tibetan Block
Unified Canadian Aboriginal Syllabics
Yi Radicals
Yi Syllables
=item *
The special pattern C<\X> match matches any extended Unicode sequence
(a "combining character sequence" in Standardese), where the first
character is a base character and subsequent characters are mark
characters that apply to the base character. It is equivalent to
C<(?:\PM\pM*)>.
=item *
The C<tr///> operator translates characters instead of bytes. Note
that the C<tr///CU> functionality has been removed, as the interface
was a mistake. For similar functionality see pack('U0', ...) and
pack('C0', ...).
=item *
Case translation operators use the Unicode case translation tables
when provided character input. Note that C<uc()> (also known as C<\U>
in doublequoted strings) translates to uppercase, while C<ucfirst>
(also known as C<\u> in doublequoted strings) translates to titlecase
(for languages that make the distinction). Naturally the
corresponding backslash sequences have the same semantics.
=item *
Most operators that deal with positions or lengths in the string will
automatically switch to using character positions, including
C<chop()>, C<substr()>, C<pos()>, C<index()>, C<rindex()>,
C<sprintf()>, C<write()>, and C<length()>. Operators that
specifically don't switch include C<vec()>, C<pack()>, and
C<unpack()>. Operators that really don't care include C<chomp()>, as
well as any other operator that treats a string as a bucket of bits,
such as C<sort()>, and the operators dealing with filenames.
=item *
The C<pack()>/C<unpack()> letters "C<c>" and "C<C>" do I<not> change,
since they're often used for byte-oriented formats. (Again, think
"C<char>" in the C language.) However, there is a new "C<U>" specifier
that will convert between UTF-8 characters and integers. (It works
outside of the utf8 pragma too.)
=item *
The C<chr()> and C<ord()> functions work on characters. This is like
C<pack("U")> and C<unpack("U")>, not like C<pack("C")> and
C<unpack("C")>. In fact, the latter are how you now emulate
byte-oriented C<chr()> and C<ord()> for Unicode strings.
(Note that this reveals the internal UTF-8 encoding of strings and
you are not supposed to do that unless you know what you are doing.)
=item *
The bit string operators C<& | ^ ~> can operate on character data.
However, for backward compatibility reasons (bit string operations
when the characters all are less than 256 in ordinal value) one should
not mix C<~> (the bit complement) and characters both less than 256 and
equal or greater than 256. Most importantly, the DeMorgan's laws
(C<~($x|$y) eq ~$x&~$y>, C<~($x&$y) eq ~$x|~$y>) won't hold.
Another way to look at this is that the complement cannot return
B<both> the 8-bit (byte) wide bit complement B<and> the full character
wide bit complement.
=item *
lc(), uc(), lcfirst(), and ucfirst() work for the following cases:
=over 8
=item *
the case mapping is from a single Unicode character to another
single Unicode character
=item *
the case mapping is from a single Unicode character to more
than one Unicode character
=back
What doesn't yet work are the followng cases:
=over 8
=item *
the "final sigma" (Greek)
=item *
anything to with locales (Lithuanian, Turkish, Azeri)
=back
See the Unicode Technical Report #21, Case Mappings, for more details.
=item *
And finally, C<scalar reverse()> reverses by character rather than by byte.
=back
=head2 Character encodings for input and output
See L<Encode>.
=head1 CAVEATS
As of yet, there is no method for automatically coercing input and
output to some encoding other than UTF-8 or UTF-EBCDIC. This is planned
in the near future, however.
Whether an arbitrary piece of data will be treated as "characters" or
"bytes" by internal operations cannot be divined at the current time.
Use of locales with utf8 may lead to odd results. Currently there is
some attempt to apply 8-bit locale info to characters in the range
0..255, but this is demonstrably incorrect for locales that use
characters above that range (when mapped into Unicode). It will also
tend to run slower. Avoidance of locales is strongly encouraged.
=head1 UNICODE REGULAR EXPRESSION SUPPORT LEVEL
The following list of Unicode regular expression support describes
feature by feature the Unicode support implemented in Perl as of Perl
5.8.0. The "Level N" and the section numbers refer to the Unicode
Technical Report 18, "Unicode Regular Expression Guidelines".
=over 4
=item *
Level 1 - Basic Unicode Support
2.1 Hex Notation - done [1]
Named Notation - done [2]
2.2 Categories - done [3][4]
2.3 Subtraction - MISSING [5][6]
2.4 Simple Word Boundaries - done [7]
2.5 Simple Loose Matches - MISSING [8]
2.6 End of Line - MISSING [9][10]
[ 1] \x{...}
[ 2] \N{...}
[ 3] . \p{Is...} \P{Is...}
[ 4] now scripts (see UTR#24 Script Names) in addition to blocks
[ 5] have negation
[ 6] can use look-ahead to emulate subtracion
[ 7] include Letters in word characters
[ 8] see UTR#21 Case Mappings
[ 9] see UTR#13 Unicode Newline Guidelines
[10] should do ^ and $ also on \x{2028} and \x{2029}
=item *
Level 2 - Extended Unicode Support
3.1 Surrogates - MISSING
3.2 Canonical Equivalents - MISSING [11][12]
3.3 Locale-Independent Graphemes - MISSING [13]
3.4 Locale-Independent Words - MISSING [14]
3.5 Locale-Independent Loose Matches - MISSING [15]
[11] see UTR#15 Unicode Normalization
[12] have Unicode::Normalize but not integrated to regexes
[13] have \X but at this level . should equal that
[14] need three classes, not just \w and \W
[15] see UTR#21 Case Mappings
=item *
Level 3 - Locale-Sensitive Support
4.1 Locale-Dependent Categories - MISSING
4.2 Locale-Dependent Graphemes - MISSING [16][17]
4.3 Locale-Dependent Words - MISSING
4.4 Locale-Dependent Loose Matches - MISSING
4.5 Locale-Dependent Ranges - MISSING
[16] see UTR#10 Unicode Collation Algorithms
[17] have Unicode::Collate but not integrated to regexes
=back
=head1 SEE ALSO
L<bytes>, L<utf8>, L<perlretut>, L<perlvar/"${^WIDE_SYSTEM_CALLS}">
=cut
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