Sortix volatile manual
This manual documents Sortix volatile, a development build that has not been officially released. You can instead view this document in the latest official manual.
ENCGUESS(1) | Perl Programmers Reference Guide | ENCGUESS(1) |
NAME
encguess - guess character encodings of filesVERSION
$Id: encguess,v 0.2 2016/08/04 03:15:58 dankogai Exp $SYNOPSIS
encguess [switches] filename...
SWITCHES
- -h
- show this message and exit.
- -s
- specify a list of "suspect encoding types" to test, seperated by either ":" or ","
- -S
- output a list of all acceptable encoding types that can be used with the -s param
- -u
- suppress display of unidentified types
EXAMPLES:
- •
-
Guess encoding of a file named "test.txt", using only the default suspect types.
encguess test.txt
- •
-
Guess the encoding type of a file named "test.txt", using the suspect types "euc-jp,shiftjis,7bit-jis".
encguess -s euc-jp,shiftjis,7bit-jis test.txt
encguess -s euc-jp:shiftjis:7bit-jis test.txt
- •
-
Guess the encoding type of several files, do not display results for unidentified files.
encguess -us euc-jp,shiftjis,7bit-jis test*.txt
DESCRIPTION
The encoding identification is done by checking one encoding type at a time until all but the right type are eliminated. The set of encoding types to try is defined by the -s parameter and defaults to ascii, utf8 and UTF-16/32 with BOM. This can be overridden by passing one or more encoding types via the -s parameter. If you need to pass in multiple suspect encoding types, use a quoted string with the a space separating each value.SEE ALSO
Encode::Guess, Encode::DetectLICENSE AND COPYRIGHT
Copyright 2015 Michael LaGrasta and Dan Kogai.2024-11-23 | perl v5.32.0 |