man Encode::CN () - China-based Chinese Encodings
NAME
Encode::CN - China-based Chinese Encodings
SYNOPSIS
use Encode qw/encode decode/; $euc_cn = encode("euc-cn", $utf8); # loads Encode::CN implicitly $utf8 = decode("euc-cn", $euc_cn); # ditto
DESCRIPTION
This module implements China-based Chinese charset encodings. Encodings supported are as follows.
Canonical Alias Description -------------------------------------------------------------------- euc-cn /\beuc.*cn$/i EUC (Extended Unix Character) /\bcn.*euc$/i /\bGB[-_ ]?2312(?:\D.*$|$)/i (see below) gb2312-raw The raw (low-bit) GB2312 character map gb12345-raw Traditional chinese counterpart to GB2312 (raw) iso-ir-165 GB2312 + GB6345 + GB8565 + additions MacChineseSimp GB2312 + Apple Additions cp936 Code Page 936, also known as GBK (Extended GuoBiao) hz 7-bit escaped GB2312 encoding --------------------------------------------------------------------
To find how to use this module in detail, see Encode.
NOTES
Due to size concerns, CWGB 18030 (an extension to CWGBK) is distributed separately on CPAN, under the name Encode::HanExtra. That module also contains extra Taiwan-based encodings.
BUGS
When you see CWcharset=gb2312 on mails and web pages, they really mean CWeuc-cn encodings. To fix that, CWgb2312 is aliased to CWeuc-cn. Use CWgb2312-raw when you really mean it.
The ASCII region (0x00-0x7f) is preserved for all encodings, even though this conflicts with mappings by the Unicode Consortium. See
<http://www.debian.or.jp/~kubota/unicode-symbols.html.en>
to find out why it is implemented that way.
SEE ALSO
Encode