2 our $VERSION = do { my @r = (q$Revision: 0.94 $ =~ /\d+/g); sprintf "%d."."%02d" x $#r, @r };
7 XSLoader::load('Encode::CN',$VERSION);
9 Encode::define_alias( qr/euc.*cn$/i => '"euc-cn"' );
10 Encode::define_alias( qr/cn.*euc/i => '"euc-cn"' );
16 Encode::CN - China-based Chinese Encodings
20 use Encode qw/encode decode/;
21 $euc_cn = encode("euc-cn", $utf8); # loads Encode::CN implicitly
22 $utf8 = decode("euc-cn", $euc_cn); # ditto
26 This module implements China-based Chinese charset encodings.
27 Encodings supported are as follows.
29 Canonical Alias Description
30 --------------------------------------------------------------------
31 euc-cn /euc.*cn$/i EUC (Extended Unix Character)
33 gb2312 The raw (low-bit) GB2312 character map
34 gb12345 Traditional chinese counterpart to
36 iso-ir-165 GB2312 + GB6345 + GB8565 + additions
37 cp936 Code Page 936, also known as GBK
39 hz 7-bit escaped GB2312 encoding
41 To find how to use this module in detail, see L<Encode>.
45 Due to size concerns, C<GB 18030> (an extension to C<GBK>) is distributed
46 separately on CPAN, under the name L<Encode::HanExtra>. That module
47 also contains extra Taiwan-based encodings.
51 ASCII part (0x00-0x7f) is preserved for all encodings, even though it
52 conflicts with mappings by the Unicode Consortium. See
54 F<http://www.debian.or.jp/~kubota/unicode-symbols.html.en>
56 to find why it is implemented that way.