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author | Jarkko Hietaniemi <jhi@iki.fi> | 2003-08-26 08:54:02 +0000 |
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committer | Jarkko Hietaniemi <jhi@iki.fi> | 2003-08-26 08:54:02 +0000 |
commit | 756189a56ad5859c77093ea1770647e4355c6aeb (patch) | |
tree | 0bb188be581fa4d7bd4e896c737f54799ee02144 /README.bs2000 | |
parent | 0c45d622c9a2e592a5401e1add3c9e8a9170179a (diff) | |
download | perl-756189a56ad5859c77093ea1770647e4355c6aeb.tar.gz |
PerlIO on EBCDIC on BS2000 advice from Thomas Dorner.
(This information looks interesting enough to be mentioned
elsewhere, too.)
p4raw-id: //depot/perl@20903
Diffstat (limited to 'README.bs2000')
-rw-r--r-- | README.bs2000 | 34 |
1 files changed, 34 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/README.bs2000 b/README.bs2000 index 1a0f5b7e1a..a7746c64e2 100644 --- a/README.bs2000 +++ b/README.bs2000 @@ -174,6 +174,40 @@ Perl code: Although one would expect the quantities $y and $z to be the same and equal to 100000 they will differ and instead will be 0 and 100000 respectively. +=head2 Using PerlIO and different encodings on ASCII and EBCDIC partitions + +Since version 5.8 Perl uses the new PerlIO on BS2000. This enables +you using different encodings per IO channel. For example you may use + + use Encode; + open($f, ">:encoding(ascii)", "test.ascii"); + print $f "Hello World!\n"; + open($f, ">:encoding(posix-bc)", "test.ebcdic"); + print $f "Hello World!\n"; + open($f, ">:encoding(latin1)", "test.latin1"); + print $f "Hello World!\n"; + open($f, ">:encoding(utf8)", "test.utf8"); + print $f "Hello World!\n"; + +to get two files containing "Hello World!\n" in ASCII, EBCDIC, ISO +Latin-1 (in this example identical to ASCII) respective UTF-EBCDIC (in +this example identical to normal EBCDIC). See the documentation of +Encode::PerlIO for details. + +As the PerlIO layer uses raw IO internally, all this totally ignores +the type of your filesystem (ASCII or EBCDIC) and the IO_CONVERSION +environment variable. If you want to get the old behavior, that the +BS2000 IO functions determine conversion depending on the filesystem +PerlIO still is your friend. You use IO_CONVERSION as usual and tell +Perl, that it should use the native IO layer: + + export IO_CONVERSION=YES + export PERLIO=stdio + +Now your IO would be ASCII on ASCII partitions and EBCDIC on EBCDIC +partitions. See the documentation of PerlIO (without C<Encode::>!) +for further posibilities. + =head1 AUTHORS Thomas Dorner |