There are two stages to processing Unicode text. The first is "how
can I input it and output it without losing information". The second
is "how do I treat text according to local language conventions".
tchrist's post covers both, but the second part is where 99% of the
text in his post comes from. Most programs don't even handle IO
correctly, so it's important to understand that before you even begin
to worry about normalization and collation.
This post aims to solve that first problem
When you read data into Perl, it doesn't care what encoding it is. It
allocates some memory and stashes the bytes away there. If you say
print $str, it just blits those bytes out to your terminal, which is
probably set to assume everything that is written to it is UTF-8, and
your text shows up.
Marvelous.
Except, it's not. If you try to treat the data as text, you'll see
that Something Bad is happening. You need go no further than length
to see that what Perl thinks about your string and what you think
about your string disagree. Write a one-liner like: perl -E
'while(<>){ chomp say length }' and type in 文字化け and you get 12... not
the correct answer, 4.
That's because Perl assumes your string is not text. You have to tell
it that it's text before it will give you the right answer.
That's easy enough; the Encode module has the functions to do that.
The generic entry point is Encode::decode (or use Encode
qw(decode), of course). That function takes some string from the
outside world (what we'll call "octets", a fancy of way of saying
"8-bit bytes"), and turns it into some text that Perl will understand.
The first argument is a character encoding name, like "UTF-8" or
"ASCII" or "EUC-JP". The second argument is the string. The return
value is the Perl scalar containing the text.
(There is also Encode::decode_utf8, which assumes UTF-8 for the
encoding.)
If we rewrite our one-liner:
perl -MEncode=decode -E 'while(<>){ chomp; say length decode("UTF-8", $_) }'
we type in 文字化け and get "4" as the result. Success.
That, right there, is the solution to 99% of Unicode problems in Perl.
The key is, whenever any text comes into your program, you must decode
it. The Internet cannot transmit characters. Files cannot store
characters. There are no characters in your database. There are only
octets, and you can't treat octets as characters in Perl. You must
decode the encoded octets into Perl characters with the Encode module.
The other half of the problem is getting data out of your program.
That's easy to; you just say use Encode qw(encode), decide what the
encoding your data will be in (UTF-8 to terminals that understand
UTF-8, UTF-16 for files on Windows, etc.), and then output the result
of encode( $encoding, $data ) instead of just outputting $data.
This operation converts Perl's characters, which is what your program
operates on, to octets that can be used by the outside world. It
would be a lot easier if we could just send characters over the
Internet or to our terminals, but we can't: octets only. So we have
to convert characters to octets, otherwise the Results Are Undefined.
To summarize: encode all outputs, decode all inputs.
Now we'll talk about three issues that make this a little challenging.
The first is libraries. Do they handle text correctly? The answer
is... they try. If you download a web page, LWP will give you your
result back as text. If you call the right method on the result, that
is (and that happens to be decoded_content, not content, which is
just the octet stream that it got from the server.) Database drivers
can be flaky; if you use DBD::SQLite with just Perl, it will work out,
but if some other tool has put text stored as some encoding other than
UTF-8 in your database... well... it's not going to be handled
correctly until you write code to handle it correctly.
Outputting data is usually easier, but if you see "wide character in
print", then you know you're messing up the encoding somewhere. That
warning means "hey, you're trying to leak Perl characters to the
outside world and that doesn't make any sense". Your program appears
to work (because the other end usually handles the raw Perl characters
correctly), but it is very broken and could stop working at any
moment. Fix it with an explicit Encode::encode!
The second problem is UTF-8 encoded source code. Unless you say use
utf8 at the top of each file, Perl will not assume that your source
code is UTF-8. This means that each time you say something like my
$var = 'ほげ', you're injecting garbage into your program that will
totally break everything horribly. You don't have to "use utf8", but
if you don't, you must not use any non-ASCII characters in your
program.
The third problem is how Perl handles The Past. A long time ago,
there was no such thing as Unicode, and perl assumed that everything
was Latin-1 text or binary. So when data comes into your program and
you start treating it as text, Perl treats each octet as a Latin-1
character. That's why, when we asked for the length of "文字化け", we
got 12. Perl assumed that we were operating on the Latin-1 string
"æååã" (which is 12 characters, some of which are non-printing).
This is called an "implicit upgrade", and it's a perfectly reasonable
thing to do, but it's not what you want if your text is not Latin-1.
That's why it's critical to explicitly decode input: if you don't do
it, Perl will, and it might do it wrong.
People run into trouble where half their data is a proper character
string, and some is still binary. Perl will interpret the part that's
still binary as though it's Latin-1 text and then combine it with the
correct character data. This will make it look like handling your
characters correctly broke your program, but in reality, you just
haven't fixed it enough.
Here's an example: you have a program that reads a UTF-8-encoded text
file, you tack on a Unicode PILE OF POO to each line, and you print
it out. You write it like:
while(<>){
chomp;
say "$_ 💩";
}
And then run on some UTF-8 encoded data, like:
perl poo.pl input-data.txt
It prints the UTF-8 data with a poo at the end of each line. Perfect,
my program works!
But nope, you're just doing binary concatenation. You're reading
octets from the file, removing a \n with chomp, and then tacking on
the bytes in the UTF-8 representation of the PILE OF POO character.
When you revise your program to decode the data from the file and
encode the output, you'll notice that you get garbage ("ð©") instead of the
poo. This will lead you to believe that decoding the input file is
the wrong thing to do. It's not.
The problem is that the poo is being implicitly upgraded as latin-1.
If you use utf8 to make the literal text instead of binary, then it
will work again!
(That's the number one problem I see when helping people with
Unicode. They did part right and that broke their program. That's
what's sad about undefined results: you can have a working program for
a long time, but when you start to repair it, it breaks. Don't worry;
if you are adding encode/decode statements to your program and it
breaks, it just means you have more work to do. Next time, when you
design with Unicode in mind from the beginning, it will be much easier!)
That's really all you need to know about Perl and Unicode. If you
tell Perl what your data is, it has the best Unicode support among all
popular programming languages. If you assume it will magically know
what sort of text you are feeding it, though, then you're going to
trash your data irrevocably. Just because your program works today on
your UTF-8 terminal doesn't mean it will work tomorrow on a UTF-16
encoded file. So make it safe now, and save yourself the headache of
trashing your users' data!
The easy part of handling Unicode is encoding output and decoding
input. The hard part is finding all your input and output, and
determining which encoding it is. But that's why you get the big
bucks :)