Thanks to visit codestin.com
Credit goes to perldoc.perl.org

You are viewing the version of this documentation from Perl blead. This is the main development branch of Perl. (git commit 70a73bdabb7ed570cb8451b2d38ec69a4feeb0f6)

CONTENTS

NAME

Encode::KR - Korean Encodings

SYNOPSIS

use Encode qw/encode decode/; 
$euc_kr = encode("euc-kr", $utf8);   # loads Encode::KR implicitly
$utf8   = decode("euc-kr", $euc_kr); # ditto

DESCRIPTION

This module implements Korean charset encodings. Encodings supported are as follows.

Canonical   Alias		Description
--------------------------------------------------------------------
euc-kr      /\beuc.*kr$/i	EUC (Extended Unix Character)
        /\bkr.*euc$/i
ksc5601-raw			Korean standard code set (as is)
cp949	      /(?:x-)?uhc$/i
            /(?:x-)?windows-949$/i
            /\bks_c_5601-1987$/i
                              Code Page 949 (EUC-KR + 8,822 
                              (additional Hangul syllables)
MacKorean			EUC-KR + Apple Vendor Mappings
johab       JOHAB             A supplementary encoding defined in 
                                           Annex 3 of KS X 1001:1998
iso-2022-kr                   iso-2022-kr                  [RFC1557]
--------------------------------------------------------------------

To find how to use this module in detail, see Encode.

BUGS

When you see charset=ks_c_5601-1987 on mails and web pages, they really mean "cp949" encodings. To fix that, the following aliases are set;

qr/(?:x-)?uhc$/i         => '"cp949"'
qr/(?:x-)?windows-949$/i => '"cp949"'
qr/ks_c_5601-1987$/i     => '"cp949"'

The ASCII region (0x00-0x7f) is preserved for all encodings, even though this conflicts with mappings by the Unicode Consortium.

SEE ALSO

Encode