NAME
Lingua::KO::MacKorean - transcoding between Mac OS Korean encoding and Unicode
SYNOPSIS
(1) using function names exported by default:
use Lingua::KO::MacKorean;
$wchar = decodeMacKorean($octet);
$octet = encodeMacKorean($wchar);
(2) using function names exported on request:
use Lingua::KO::MacKorean qw(decode encode);
$wchar = decode($octet);
$octet = encode($wchar);
(3) using function names fully qualified:
use Lingua::KO::MacKorean ();
$wchar = Lingua::KO::MacKorean::decode($octet);
$octet = Lingua::KO::MacKorean::encode($wchar);
# $wchar : a string in Perl's Unicode format
# $octet : a string in Mac OS Korean encoding
DESCRIPTION
This module provides decoding from/encoding to Mac OS Korean encoding (denoted MacKorean hereafter).
In order to ensure roundtrip mapping, MacKorean encoding has some characters with mapping from a single MacKorean character to a sequence of Unicode characters and vice versa. Such characters include 0xAAF9
(MacKorean) from/to 0xF862+0x0028+0x0032+0x0031+0x0029
(Unicode) for "Parenthesized number twenty-one"
.
This module provides functions to transcode between MacKorean and Unicode, without information loss for every MacKorean character.
Functions
$wchar = decode($octet)
$wchar = decode($handler, $octet)
$wchar = decodeMacKorean($octet)
$wchar = decodeMacKorean($handler, $octet)
-
Converts MacKorean to Unicode.
decodeMacKorean()
is an alias fordecode()
exported by default.If the
$handler
is not specified, any MacKorean character that is not mapped to Unicode is deleted; if the$handler
is a code reference, a string returned from that coderef is inserted there. if the$handler
is a scalar reference, a string (aPV
) in that reference (the referent) is inserted there.The 1st argument for the
$handler
coderef is a string of the unmapped MacKorean character (e.g."\xC9\xA1"
). $octet = encode($wchar)
$octet = encode($handler, $wchar)
$octet = encodeMacKorean($wchar)
$octet = encodeMacKorean($handler, $wchar)
-
Converts Unicode to MacKorean.
encodeMacKorean()
is an alias forencode()
exported by default.If the
$handler
is not specified, any Unicode character that is not mapped to MacKorean is deleted; if the$handler
is a code reference, a string returned from that coderef is inserted there. if the$handler
is a scalar reference, a string (aPV
) in that reference (the referent) is inserted there.The 1st argument for the
$handler
coderef is the Unicode code point (unsigned integer) of the unmapped character.E.g.
sub hexNCR { sprintf("&#x%x;", shift) } # hexadecimal NCR sub decNCR { sprintf("&#%d;" , shift) } # decimal NCR print encodeMacKorean("ABC\x{100}\x{10000}"); # "ABC" print encodeMacKorean(\"", "ABC\x{100}\x{10000}"); # "ABC" print encodeMacKorean(\"?", "ABC\x{100}\x{10000}"); # "ABC??" print encodeMacKorean(\&hexNCR, "ABC\x{100}\x{10000}"); # "ABCĀ𐀀" print encodeMacKorean(\&decNCR, "ABC\x{100}\x{10000}"); # "ABCĀ𐀀"
CAVEAT
Sorry, the author is not working on a Mac OS. Please let him know if you find something wrong.
AUTHOR
SADAHIRO Tomoyuki <SADAHIRO@cpan.org>
Copyright(C) 2003-2007, SADAHIRO Tomoyuki. Japan. All rights reserved.
This module is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.
SEE ALSO
- Map (external version) from Mac OS Korean encoding to Unicode 3.2 and later (version: c02 2005-Apr-05)
-
http://www.unicode.org/Public/MAPPINGS/VENDORS/APPLE/KOREAN.TXT
- Registry (external version) of Apple use of Unicode corporate-zone characters (version: c03 2005-Apr-04)
-
http://www.unicode.org/Public/MAPPINGS/VENDORS/APPLE/CORPCHAR.TXT