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NAME

       encoding - Manipulate encodings

SYNOPSIS

       encoding option ?arg arg ...?
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INTRODUCTION

       Strings  in  Tcl are logically a sequence of 16-bit Unicode characters.  These strings are
       represented in memory as a sequence of bytes that may be  in  one  of  several  encodings:
       modified  UTF-8  (which  uses  1 to 3 bytes per character), 16-bit “Unicode” (which uses 2
       bytes per character, with an endianness that is dependent on the host  architecture),  and
       binary  (which  uses  a  single  byte per character but only handles a restricted range of
       characters).  Tcl does not guarantee to always use the same encoding for the same string.

       Different operating system interfaces  or  applications  may  generate  strings  in  other
       encodings such as Shift-JIS.  The encoding command helps to bridge the gap between Unicode
       and these other formats.

DESCRIPTION

       Performs one of several encoding related  operations,  depending  on  option.   The  legal
       options are:

       encoding convertfrom ?encoding? data
              Convert  data  to  Unicode from the specified encoding.  The characters in data are
              treated as binary data where the lower 8-bits of  each  character  is  taken  as  a
              single  byte.   The  resulting  sequence  of  bytes  is  treated as a string in the
              specified encoding.  If encoding is not specified, the current system  encoding  is
              used.

       encoding convertto ?encoding? string
              Convert string from Unicode to the specified encoding.  The result is a sequence of
              bytes that represents the converted string.  Each  byte  is  stored  in  the  lower
              8-bits  of  a Unicode character (indeed, the resulting string is a binary string as
              far as Tcl is concerned, at least initially).  If encoding is  not  specified,  the
              current system encoding is used.

       encoding dirs ?directoryList?
              Tcl  can  load  encoding  data  files from the file system that describe additional
              encodings for it to work with. This command sets the search path for *.enc encoding
              data  files  to  the list of directories directoryList. If directoryList is omitted
              then the command returns the current list of directories that make  up  the  search
              path.  It  is  an error for directoryList to not be a valid list. If, when a search
              for an encoding data file is happening, an element in directoryList does not  refer
              to a readable, searchable directory, that element is ignored.

       encoding names
              Returns  a  list  containing  the  names of all of the encodings that are currently
              available.  The encodings “utf-8” and “iso8859-1” are guaranteed to be  present  in
              the list.

       encoding system ?encoding?
              Set  the  system  encoding  to  encoding.  If  encoding is omitted then the command
              returns the current system encoding.  The system  encoding  is  used  whenever  Tcl
              passes strings to system calls.

EXAMPLE

       The  following  example  converts  a  byte  sequence  in Japanese euc-jp encoding to a TCL
       string:

              set s [encoding convertfrom euc-jp "\xA4\xCF"]

       The result is the unicode codepoint: “\u306F”, which is the Hiragana letter HA.

SEE ALSO

       Tcl_GetEncoding(3tcl)

KEYWORDS

       encoding, unicode