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482 строки
16 KiB
Plaintext
482 строки
16 KiB
Plaintext
== Encodings
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=== The Basics
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A {character encoding}[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Character_encoding],
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often shortened to _encoding_, is a mapping between:
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- A sequence of 8-bit bytes (each byte in the range <tt>0..255</tt>).
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- Characters in a specific character set.
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Some character sets contain only 1-byte characters;
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{US-ASCII}[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ASCII], for example, has 256 1-byte characters.
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This string, encoded in US-ASCII, has six characters that are stored as six bytes:
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s = 'Hello!'.encode('US-ASCII') # => "Hello!"
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s.encoding # => #<Encoding:US-ASCII>
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s.bytes # => [72, 101, 108, 108, 111, 33]
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Other encodings may involve multi-byte characters.
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{UTF-8}[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/UTF-8], for example,
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encodes more than one million characters, encoding each in one to four bytes.
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The lowest-valued of these characters correspond to ASCII characters,
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and so are 1-byte characters:
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s = 'Hello!' # => "Hello!"
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s.bytes # => [72, 101, 108, 108, 111, 33]
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Other characters, such as the Euro symbol, are multi-byte:
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s = "\u20ac" # => "€"
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s.bytes # => [226, 130, 172]
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=== The \Encoding \Class
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==== \Encoding Objects
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Ruby encodings are defined by constants in class \Encoding.
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There can be only one instance of \Encoding for each of these constants.
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\Method Encoding.list returns an array of \Encoding objects (one for each constant):
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Encoding.list.size # => 103
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Encoding.list.first.class # => Encoding
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Encoding.list.take(3)
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# => [#<Encoding:ASCII-8BIT>, #<Encoding:UTF-8>, #<Encoding:US-ASCII>]
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==== Names and Aliases
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\Method Encoding#name returns the name of an \Encoding:
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Encoding::ASCII_8BIT.name # => "ASCII-8BIT"
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Encoding::WINDOWS_31J.name # => "Windows-31J"
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An \Encoding object has zero or more aliases;
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method Encoding#names returns an array containing the name and all aliases:
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Encoding::ASCII_8BIT.names
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# => ["ASCII-8BIT", "BINARY"]
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Encoding::WINDOWS_31J.names
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#=> ["Windows-31J", "CP932", "csWindows31J", "SJIS", "PCK"]
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\Method Encoding.aliases returns a hash of all alias/name pairs:
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Encoding.aliases.size # => 71
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Encoding.aliases.take(3)
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# => [["BINARY", "ASCII-8BIT"], ["CP437", "IBM437"], ["CP720", "IBM720"]]
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\Method Encoding.name_list returns an array of all the encoding names and aliases:
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Encoding.name_list.size # => 175
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Encoding.name_list.take(3)
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# => ["ASCII-8BIT", "UTF-8", "US-ASCII"]
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\Method +name_list+ returns more entries than method +list+
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because it includes both the names and their aliases.
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\Method Encoding.find returns the \Encoding for a given name or alias, if it exists:
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Encoding.find("US-ASCII") # => #<Encoding:US-ASCII>
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Encoding.find("US-ASCII").class # => Encoding
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==== Default Encodings
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\Method Encoding.find, above, also returns a default \Encoding
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for each of these special names:
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- +external+: the default external \Encoding:
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Encoding.find("external") # => #<Encoding:UTF-8>
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- +internal+: the default internal \Encoding (may be +nil+):
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Encoding.find("internal") # => nil
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- +locale+: the default \Encoding for a string from the environment:
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Encoding.find("locale") # => #<Encoding:UTF-8> # Linux
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Encoding.find("locale") # => #<Encoding:IBM437> # Windows
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- +filesystem+: the default \Encoding for a string from the filesystem:
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Encoding.find("filesystem") # => #<Encoding:UTF-8>
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\Method Encoding.default_external returns the default external \Encoding:
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Encoding.default_external # => #<Encoding:UTF-8>
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\Method Encoding.default_external= sets that value:
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Encoding.default_external = 'US-ASCII' # => "US-ASCII"
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Encoding.default_external # => #<Encoding:US-ASCII>
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\Method Encoding.default_internal returns the default internal \Encoding:
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Encoding.default_internal # => nil
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\Method Encoding.default_internal= sets the default internal \Encoding:
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Encoding.default_internal = 'US-ASCII' # => "US-ASCII"
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Encoding.default_internal # => #<Encoding:US-ASCII>
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==== Compatible Encodings
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\Method Encoding.compatible? returns whether two given objects are encoding-compatible
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(that is, whether they can be concatenated);
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returns the \Encoding of the concatenated string, or +nil+ if incompatible:
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rus = "\u{442 435 441 442}"
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eng = 'text'
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Encoding.compatible?(rus, eng) # => #<Encoding:UTF-8>
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s0 = "\xa1\xa1".force_encoding('iso-8859-1') # => "\xA1\xA1"
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s1 = "\xa1\xa1".force_encoding('euc-jp') # => "\x{A1A1}"
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Encoding.compatible?(s0, s1) # => nil
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=== \String \Encoding
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A Ruby String object has an encoding that is an instance of class \Encoding.
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The encoding may be retrieved by method String#encoding.
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The default encoding for a string literal is the script encoding;
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see {Script Encoding}[rdoc-ref:encodings.rdoc@Script+Encoding].
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's'.encoding # => #<Encoding:UTF-8>
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The default encoding for a string created with method String.new is:
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- For a \String object argument, the encoding of that string.
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- For a string literal, the script encoding;
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see {Script Encoding}[rdoc-ref:encodings.rdoc@Script+Encoding].
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In either case, any encoding may be specified:
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s = String.new(encoding: 'UTF-8') # => ""
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s.encoding # => #<Encoding:UTF-8>
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s = String.new('foo', encoding: 'ASCII-8BIT') # => "foo"
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s.encoding # => #<Encoding:ASCII-8BIT>
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The encoding for a string may be changed:
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s = "R\xC3\xA9sum\xC3\xA9" # => "Résumé"
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s.encoding # => #<Encoding:UTF-8>
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s.force_encoding('ISO-8859-1') # => "R\xC3\xA9sum\xC3\xA9"
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s.encoding # => #<Encoding:ISO-8859-1>
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Changing the assigned encoding does not alter the content of the string;
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it changes only the way the content is to be interpreted:
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s # => "R\xC3\xA9sum\xC3\xA9"
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s.force_encoding('UTF-8') # => "Résumé"
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The actual content of a string may also be altered;
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see {Transcoding a String}[#label-Transcoding+a+String].
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Here are a couple of useful query methods:
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s = "abc".force_encoding("UTF-8") # => "abc"
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s.ascii_only? # => true
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s = "abc\u{6666}".force_encoding("UTF-8") # => "abc晦"
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s.ascii_only? # => false
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s = "\xc2\xa1".force_encoding("UTF-8") # => "¡"
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s.valid_encoding? # => true
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s = "\xc2".force_encoding("UTF-8") # => "\xC2"
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s.valid_encoding? # => false
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=== \Symbol and \Regexp Encodings
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The string stored in a Symbol or Regexp object also has an encoding;
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the encoding may be retrieved by method Symbol#encoding or Regexp#encoding.
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The default encoding for these, however, is:
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- US-ASCII, if all characters are US-ASCII.
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- The script encoding, otherwise;
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see (Script Encoding)[rdoc-ref:encodings.rdoc@Script+Encoding].
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=== Filesystem \Encoding
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The filesystem encoding is the default \Encoding for a string from the filesystem:
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Encoding.find("filesystem") # => #<Encoding:UTF-8>
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=== Locale \Encoding
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The locale encoding is the default encoding for a string from the environment,
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other than from the filesystem:
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Encoding.find('locale') # => #<Encoding:IBM437>
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=== Stream Encodings
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Certain stream objects can have two encodings; these objects include instances of:
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- IO.
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- File.
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- ARGF.
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- StringIO.
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The two encodings are:
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- An _external_ _encoding_, which identifies the encoding of the stream.
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- An _internal_ _encoding_, which (if not +nil+) specifies the encoding
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to be used for the string constructed from the stream.
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==== External \Encoding
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The external encoding, which is an \Encoding object, specifies how bytes read
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from the stream are to be interpreted as characters.
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The default external encoding is:
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- UTF-8 for a text stream.
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- ASCII-8BIT for a binary stream.
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The default external encoding is returned by method Encoding.default_external,
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and may be set by:
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- Ruby command-line options <tt>--external_encoding</tt> or <tt>-E</tt>.
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You can also set the default external encoding using method Encoding.default_external=,
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but doing so may cause problems; strings created before and after the change
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may have a different encodings.
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For an \IO or \File object, the external encoding may be set by:
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- Open options +external_encoding+ or +encoding+, when the object is created;
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see {Open Options}[rdoc-ref:IO@Open+Options].
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For an \IO, \File, \ARGF, or \StringIO object, the external encoding may be set by:
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- \Methods +set_encoding+ or (except for \ARGF) +set_encoding_by_bom+.
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==== Internal \Encoding
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The internal encoding, which is an \Encoding object or +nil+,
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specifies how characters read from the stream
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are to be converted to characters in the internal encoding;
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those characters become a string whose encoding is set to the internal encoding.
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The default internal encoding is +nil+ (no conversion).
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It is returned by method Encoding.default_internal,
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and may be set by:
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- Ruby command-line options <tt>--internal_encoding</tt> or <tt>-E</tt>.
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You can also set the default internal encoding using method Encoding.default_internal=,
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but doing so may cause problems; strings created before and after the change
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may have a different encodings.
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For an \IO or \File object, the internal encoding may be set by:
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- Open options +internal_encoding+ or +encoding+, when the object is created;
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see {Open Options}[rdoc-ref:IO@Open+Options].
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For an \IO, \File, \ARGF, or \StringIO object, the internal encoding may be set by:
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- \Method +set_encoding+.
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=== Script \Encoding
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A Ruby script has a script encoding, which may be retrieved by:
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__ENCODING__ # => #<Encoding:UTF-8>
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The default script encoding is UTF-8;
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a Ruby source file may set its script encoding with a magic comment
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on the first line of the file (or second line, if there is a shebang on the first).
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The comment must contain the word +coding+ or +encoding+,
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followed by a colon, space and the Encoding name or alias:
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# encoding: ISO-8859-1
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__ENCODING__ #=> #<Encoding:ISO-8859-1>
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=== Transcoding
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_Transcoding_ is the process of changing a sequence of characters
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from one encoding to another.
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As far as possible, the characters remain the same,
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but the bytes that represent them may change.
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The handling for characters that cannot be represented in the destination encoding
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may be specified by @Encoding+Options.
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==== Transcoding a \String
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Each of these methods transcodes a string:
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- String#encode: Transcodes +self+ into a new string
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according to given encodings and options.
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- String#encode!: Like String#encode, but transcodes +self+ in place.
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- String#scrub: Transcodes +self+ into a new string
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by replacing invalid byte sequences with a given or default replacement string.
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- String#scrub!: Like String#scrub, but transcodes +self+ in place.
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- String#unicode_normalize: Transcodes +self+ into a new string
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according to Unicode normalization.
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- String#unicode_normalize!: Like String#unicode_normalize,
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but transcodes +self+ in place.
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=== Transcoding a Stream
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Each of these methods may transcode a stream;
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whether it does so depends on the external and internal encodings:
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- IO.foreach: Yields each line of given stream to the block.
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- IO.new: Creates and returns a new \IO object for the given integer file descriptor.
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- IO.open: Creates a new \IO object.
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- IO.pipe: Creates a connected pair of reader and writer \IO objects.
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- IO.popen: Creates an \IO object to interact with a subprocess.
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- IO.read: Returns a string with all or a subset of bytes from the given stream.
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- IO.readlines: Returns an array of strings, which are the lines from the given stream.
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- IO.write: Writes a given string to the given stream.
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This example writes a string to a file, encoding it as ISO-8859-1,
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then reads the file into a new string, encoding it as UTF-8:
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s = "R\u00E9sum\u00E9"
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path = 't.tmp'
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ext_enc = 'ISO-8859-1'
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int_enc = 'UTF-8'
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File.write(path, s, external_encoding: ext_enc)
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raw_text = File.binread(path)
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transcoded_text = File.read(path, external_encoding: ext_enc, internal_encoding: int_enc)
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p raw_text
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p transcoded_text
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Output:
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"R\xE9sum\xE9"
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"Résumé"
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=== \Encoding Options
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A number of methods in the Ruby core accept keyword arguments as encoding options.
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Some of the options specify or utilize a _replacement_ _string_, to be used
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in certain transcoding operations.
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A replacement string may be in any encoding that can be converted
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to the encoding of the destination string.
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These keyword-value pairs specify encoding options:
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- For an invalid byte sequence:
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- <tt>:invalid: nil</tt> (default): Raise exception.
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- <tt>:invalid: :replace</tt>: Replace each invalid byte sequence
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with the replacement string.
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Examples:
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s = "\x80foo\x80"
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s.encode('ISO-8859-3') # Raises Encoding::InvalidByteSequenceError.
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s.encode('ISO-8859-3', invalid: :replace) # => "?foo?"
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- For an undefined character:
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- <tt>:undef: nil</tt> (default): Raise exception.
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- <tt>:undef: :replace</tt>: Replace each undefined character
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with the replacement string.
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Examples:
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s = "\x80foo\x80"
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"\x80".encode('UTF-8', 'ASCII-8BIT') # Raises Encoding::UndefinedConversionError.
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s.encode('UTF-8', 'ASCII-8BIT', undef: :replace) # => "<22>foo<6F>"
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- Replacement string:
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- <tt>:replace: nil</tt> (default): Set replacement string to default value:
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<tt>"\uFFFD"</tt> ("<22>") for a Unicode encoding, <tt>'?'</tt> otherwise.
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- <tt>:replace: _some_string_</tt>: Set replacement string to the given +some_string+;
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overrides +:fallback+.
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Examples:
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s = "\xA5foo\xA5"
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options = {:undef => :replace, :replace => 'xyzzy'}
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s.encode('UTF-8', 'ISO-8859-3', **options) # => "xyzzyfooxyzzy"
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- Replacement fallback:
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One of these may be specified:
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- <tt>:fallback: nil</tt> (default): No replacement fallback.
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- <tt>:fallback: _hash_like_object_</tt>: Set replacement fallback to the given
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+hash_like_object+; the replacement string is <tt>_hash_like_object_[X]</tt>.
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- <tt>:fallback: _method_</tt>: Set replacement fallback to the given
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+method+; the replacement string is <tt>_method_(X)</tt>.
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- <tt>:fallback: _proc_</tt>: Set replacement fallback to the given
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+proc+; the replacement string is <tt>_proc_[X]</tt>.
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Examples:
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s = "\u3042foo\u3043"
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hash = {"\u3042" => 'xyzzy'}
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hash.default = 'XYZZY'
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s.encode('ASCII', fallback: h) # => "xyzzyfooXYZZY"
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def (fallback = "U+%.4X").escape(x)
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self % x.unpack("U")
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end
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"\u{3042}".encode("US-ASCII", fallback: fallback.method(:escape)) # => "U+3042"
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proc = Proc.new {|x| x == "\u3042" ? 'xyzzy' : 'XYZZY' }
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s.encode('ASCII', fallback: proc) # => "XYZZYfooXYZZY"
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- XML entities:
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One of these may be specified:
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- <tt>:xml: nil</tt> (default): No handling for XML entities.
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- <tt>:xml: :text</tt>: Treat source text as XML;
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replace each undefined character
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with its upper-case hexdecimal numeric character reference,
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except that:
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- <tt>&</tt> is replaced with <tt>&</tt>.
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- <tt><</tt> is replaced with <tt><</tt>.
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- <tt>></tt> is replaced with <tt>></tt>.
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- <tt>:xml: :attr</tt>: Treat source text as XML attribute value;
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replace each undefined character
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with its upper-case hexdecimal numeric character reference,
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except that:
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- The replacement string <tt>r</tt> is double-quoted (<tt>"r"</tt>).
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- Each embedded double-quote is replaced with <tt>"</tt>.
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- <tt>&</tt> is replaced with <tt>&</tt>.
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- <tt><</tt> is replaced with <tt><</tt>.
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- <tt>></tt> is replaced with <tt>></tt>.
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Examples:
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s = 'foo"<&>"bar' + "\u3042"
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s.encode('ASCII', xml: :text) # => "foo\"<&>\"barあ"
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s.encode('ASCII', xml: :attr) # => "\"foo"<&>"barあ\""
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- Newlines:
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One of these may be specified:
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- <tt>:cr_newline: true</tt>: Replace each line-feed character (<tt>"\n"</tt>)
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with a carriage-return character (<tt>"\r"</tt>).
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- <tt>:crlf_newline: true</tt>: Replace each line-feed character (<tt>"\n"</tt>)
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with a carriage-return/line-feed string (<tt>"\r\n"</tt>).
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- <tt>:universal_newline: true</tt>: Replace each carriage-return
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character (<tt>"\r"</tt>) and each carriage-return/line-feed string
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(<tt>"\r\n"</tt>) with a line-feed character (<tt>"\n"</tt>).
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Examples:
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s = "\n \r \r\n" # => "\n \r \r\n"
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s.encode('ASCII', cr_newline: true) # => "\r \r \r\r"
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s.encode('ASCII', crlf_newline: true) # => "\r\n \r \r\r\n"
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s.encode('ASCII', universal_newline: true) # => "\n \n \n"
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