1N/Aour $
VERSION =
do {
my @r = (q$
Revision:
1.23 $ =~ /\d+/g);
sprintf "%d.".
"%02d" x $
#r, @r }; 1N/AEncode::Byte - Single Byte Encodings 1N/A $greek = encode("iso-8859-7", $utf8); # loads Encode::Byte implicitly 1N/A $utf8 = decode("iso-8859-7", $greek); # ditto 1N/AThis module implements various single byte encodings. For most cases it uses 1N/A\x80-\xff (upper half) to map non-ASCII characters. Encodings 1N/Asupported are as follows. 1N/A Canonical Alias Description 1N/A -------------------------------------------------------------------- 1N/A (iso-8859-1 is in built-in) 1N/A iso-8859-2 latin2 [ISO] 1N/A iso-8859-3 latin3 [ISO] 1N/A iso-8859-4 latin4 [ISO] 1N/A iso-8859-9 latin5 [ISO] 1N/A iso-8859-10 latin6 [ISO] 1N/A (iso-8859-12 is nonexistent) 1N/A iso-8859-13 latin7 [ISO] 1N/A iso-8859-14 latin8 [ISO] 1N/A iso-8859-15 latin9 [ISO] 1N/A iso-8859-16 latin10 [ISO] 1N/A koi8-r cp878 [RFC1489] 1N/A # all cp* are also available as ibm-*, ms-*, and windows-* 1N/A cp1258 WinVietnamese 1N/A # More vendor encodings 1N/A AdobeStandardEncoding 1N/A gsm0338 # used in GSM handsets 1N/ATo find how to use this module in detail, see L<Encode>.