Sortix cross-volatile manual
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ICONV(1) | Linux Programmer's Manual | ICONV(1) |
NAME
iconv - character set conversionDESCRIPTION
The iconv program converts text from one encoding to another encoding. More precisely, it converts from the encoding given for the -f option to the encoding given for the -t option. Either of these encodings defaults to the encoding of the current locale. All the inputfiles are read and converted in turn; if no inputfile is given, the standard input is used. The converted text is printed to standard output.- -f encoding, --from-code=encoding
- Specifies the encoding of the input.
- -t encoding, --to-code=encoding
- Specifies the encoding of the output.
- -c
- When this option is given, characters that cannot be converted are silently discarded, instead of leading to a conversion error.
- --unicode-subst=formatstring
- When this option is given, Unicode characters that cannot be represented in the target encoding are replaced with a placeholder string that is constructed from the given formatstring, applied to the Unicode code point. The formatstring must be a format string in the same format as for the printf command or the printf() function, taking either no argument or exactly one unsigned integer argument.
- --byte-subst=formatstring
- When this option is given, bytes in the input that are not valid in the source encoding are replaced with a placeholder string that is constructed from the given formatstring, applied to the byte's value. The formatstring must be a format string in the same format as for the printf command or the printf() function, taking either no argument or exactly one unsigned integer argument.
- --widechar-subst=formatstring
- When this option is given, wide characters in the input that are not valid in the source encoding are replaced with a placeholder string that is constructed from the given formatstring, applied to the byte's value. The formatstring must be a format string in the same format as for the printf command or the printf() function, taking either no argument or exactly one unsigned integer argument.
- -s, --silent
- When this option is given, error messages about invalid or unconvertible characters are omitted, but the actual converted text is unaffected.
EXAMPLES
- iconv -f ISO-8859-1 -t UTF-8
- converts input from the old West-European encoding ISO-8859-1 to Unicode.
iconv -f KOI8-R --byte-subst="<0x%x>"
--unicode-subst="<U+%04X>"
converts input from the old Russian encoding KOI8-R to the locale encoding, substituting an angle bracket notation with hexadecimal numbers for invalid bytes and for valid but unconvertible characters.
- iconv --list
- lists the supported encodings.
CONFORMING TO
POSIX:2001SEE ALSO
iconv_open(3), locale(7)March 31, 2007 | GNU |