Note: This is taken from the Chicken Wiki, where a more recent version could be available.

charconv

Description

Character encoding utilities

Author

Alex Shinn

Requirements

Download

charconv.egg

Documentation

This module provides a convenience layer over top of the iconv module, as well as automatic detection of character encoding schemes. It implicitly assumes you are using UTF8 internally for your strings (you can use the utf8 module to change string semantics to use UTF8 as well). Given that, all you need to do is specify the external encoding you are working with.

Input/output procedures

The following are direct analogs of the equivalent R5RS procedures:

<procedure>(open-encoded-input-file FILE ENC)</procedure> <procedure>(call-with-encoded-input-file FILE ENC PROC)</procedure> <procedure>(with-input-from-encoded-file FILE ENC THUNK)</procedure> <procedure>(open-encoded-output-file FILE ENC)</procedure> <procedure>(call-with-encoded-output-file FILE ENC PROC)</procedure> <procedure>(with-output-to-encoded-file FILE ENC THUNK)</procedure>

Example:

<example> <init>(use charconv)</init> <expr>(with-input-from-encoded-file "/usr/share/edict/edict" "EUC-JP" read-line)</expr> </example>

<procedure>(read-encoded-string ENC [N [PORT]])</procedure>

An analog of string using byte-count (not character count). May read additional bytes to ensure you read along a character boundary. If you really want exactly N bytes regardless of character boundaries, you should combine read-string with ces-convert below.

Utility procedures

The following are copied from the Gauche API. CES stands for Character Encoding Scheme.

<procedure>(ces-equivalent? CES-A CES-B)</procedure>

Returns #t if CES-A and CES-B are equivalent (aliases), #f otherwise.

<procedure>(ces-upper-compatible? CES-A CES-B)</procedure>

Returns #t if a string encoded in CES-B can be considered a string in CES-A without conversion.

<procedure>(ces-convert STR FROM [TO])</procedure>

Return a new string of STR converted from encoding FROM to encoding TO.

Detection procedures

<procedure>(detect-file-encoding FILE [LOCALE])</procedure> <procedure>(detect-encoding STRING [LOCALE])</procedure>

The detection procedures can correctly identify most common 'types' of encodings, such as UTF-8/16/32, EUC-*, ISO-2022-*, Shift_JIS or single-byte, without any need for specifying the locale. However, currently it doesn't include any statistical or linguistic routines, without which it can't distinguish between EUC-JP and EUC-KR, or between any of the single-byte encodings (including ISO-8859-*). In these cases you can specify a locale, such that in the event of a single-byte encoding a "de" locale would result in the default German single-byte encoding, ISO-8859-1.

The detect-file-encoding procedure also recognizes the Emacs-style

 -*- coding: foo -*-

signature in either of the first two lines.

Automatic detection

You can also use the automatic detection implicitly in the input procedures by specifying an encoding of "*" or "*<LOCALE>". For example,

<example> <expr>(open-encoded-input-file file "*") ; guess with no locale</expr> <expr>(open-encoded-input-file file "*DE") ; guess with a German locale</expr> </example>

For compatibility with the Gauche convention, the encoding "*JP" is equivalent to "*JA", the Japanese locale.

Changelog

License

 Copyright (c) 2004-2005, Alex Shinn
 All rights reserved.
 
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