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I have some Perl code that translates new-lines and line-feeds to a normalized form. The input text is Japanese, so that there will be multi-byte characters.

Is it still possible to do this transformation on a byte-by-byte basis (which I think it currently does), or do I have to detect the character set and enable Unicode support? In other words, are the popular encodings (Shift-JIS, EUC-JP, UTF-8, ISO-2022-JP) using bytes as part of their character set that could be mistaken for ASCII control characters?

I need only CR and LF to work.

Update: Added ISO-2022-JP. And that is the one that looks the most troublesome with its funky escape sequences ...

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None of the 4 encodings that you mention (Shift-JIS, UTF-8, EUC-JP, ISO-2022-JP) use the CR or LF character inside Japanese characters. For UTF-8 and EUC-JP, there is no overlap whatsoever between low ascii characters and bytes inside Japanese characters. However, for Shift-JIS, and ISO-2022-JP, there is overlap, but not in the range where you find CR and LF.

For ISO-2022-JP,
First-byte range: 0x21 - 0x7E
Second-byte range: 0x21 - 0x7E

And the escape sequence characters to switch back and forth between various character sets are:

0x1B, 0x28, 0x24, 0x40, 0x42, and 0x4A

As you can see, none of the characters used to encode Japanese characters in ISO-2022-JP overlap with CR or LF.

For Shift-JIS,
First-byte range: 0x81 - 0x9F, 0xE0 - 0xEF
Second-byte range: 0x40 - 0x7E, 0x80 - 0xFC
Half-width katakana: 0xA1 - 0xDF

Again, there is no overlap with CR and LF.

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All of those character sets are identical to ASCII for the first 128 code points--that is, they only use one byte to encode ASCII characters, including CR (0x0D) and LF (0x0A). You shouldn't have any problem.

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I am worried that even though ASCII stays the same, the second byte of a multi-byte character could also look like ASCII. Or are the extra bytes all from the "upper half" ? – Thilo Apr 7 at 7:03
At least for UTF-8, that seems to be the case: every "second" byte looks like '10xx xxxx'. – Thilo Apr 7 at 7:06
In Shift-JIS, the second byte won't necessarily have the high-order bit set, but it looks like the minimum value it can have is 0x40. In EUC-JP, the second and third bytes will always be 0x80 or higher. – Alan Moore Apr 7 at 7:45
Seems I am safe then, except for ISO-2022-JP ... – Thilo Apr 7 at 7:51
Who downvoted me? If it was because of ISO-2022-JP, that wasn't part of the question when I answered it, but (as the other two responders have pointed out) it's no more a problem than the other encodings. – Alan Moore Apr 9 at 4:43
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ISO-2022-JP uses Shift-In/Shift-Out to assign different meanings to the 94 printable ASCII characters, leaving the control characters including CR and LF untouched.

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