class Encoding
An Encoding instance represents a character encoding usable in Ruby. It is defined as a constant under the Encoding namespace. It has a name and, optionally, aliases:
Encoding::US_ASCII.name # => "US-ASCII" Encoding::US_ASCII.names # => ["US-ASCII", "ASCII", "ANSI_X3.4-1968", "646"]
A Ruby method that accepts an encoding as an argument will accept:
-
An Encoding object.
-
The name of an encoding.
-
An alias for an encoding name.
These are equivalent:
'foo'.encode(Encoding::US_ASCII) # Encoding object. 'foo'.encode('US-ASCII') # Encoding name. 'foo'.encode('ASCII') # Encoding alias.
For a full discussion of encodings and their uses, see the Encodings document.
Encoding::ASCII_8BIT is a special-purpose encoding that is usually used for a string of bytes, not a string of characters. But as the name indicates, its characters in the ASCII range are considered as ASCII characters. This is useful when you use other ASCII-compatible encodings.
Public Class Methods
Source
static VALUE rb_enc_aliases(VALUE klass) { VALUE aliases[2]; aliases[0] = rb_hash_new(); aliases[1] = rb_ary_new(); st_foreach(global_enc_table.names, rb_enc_aliases_enc_i, (st_data_t)aliases); return aliases[0]; }
Returns the hash of available encoding alias and original encoding name.
Encoding.aliases #=> {"BINARY"=>"ASCII-8BIT", "ASCII"=>"US-ASCII", "ANSI_X3.4-1968"=>"US-ASCII", "SJIS"=>"Windows-31J", "eucJP"=>"EUC-JP", "CP932"=>"Windows-31J"}
Source
static VALUE enc_compatible_p(VALUE klass, VALUE str1, VALUE str2) { rb_encoding *enc; if (!enc_capable(str1)) return Qnil; if (!enc_capable(str2)) return Qnil; enc = rb_enc_compatible(str1, str2); if (!enc) return Qnil; return rb_enc_from_encoding(enc); }
Checks the compatibility of two objects.
If the objects are both strings they are compatible when they are concatenatable. The encoding of the concatenated string will be returned if they are compatible, nil if they are not.
Encoding.compatible?("\xa1".force_encoding("iso-8859-1"), "b") #=> #<Encoding:ISO-8859-1> Encoding.compatible?( "\xa1".force_encoding("iso-8859-1"), "\xa1\xa1".force_encoding("euc-jp")) #=> nil
If the objects are non-strings their encodings are compatible when they have an encoding and:
-
Either encoding is US-ASCII compatible
-
One of the encodings is a 7-bit encoding
Source
static VALUE get_default_external(VALUE klass) { return rb_enc_default_external(); }
Returns default external encoding.
The default external encoding is used by default for strings created from the following locations:
-
CSV
-
File
data read from disk -
SDBM
While strings created from these locations will have this encoding, the encoding may not be valid. Be sure to check String#valid_encoding?
.
File
data written to disk will be transcoded to the default external encoding when written, if default_internal
is not nil.
The default external encoding is initialized by the -E option. If -E isn’t set, it is initialized to UTF-8 on Windows and the locale on other operating systems.
Source
static VALUE set_default_external(VALUE klass, VALUE encoding) { rb_warning("setting Encoding.default_external"); rb_enc_set_default_external(encoding); return encoding; }
Sets default external encoding. You should not set Encoding::default_external
in ruby code as strings created before changing the value may have a different encoding from strings created after the value was changed., instead you should use ruby -E
to invoke ruby with the correct default_external.
See Encoding::default_external
for information on how the default external encoding is used.
Source
static VALUE get_default_internal(VALUE klass) { return rb_enc_default_internal(); }
Returns default internal encoding. Strings will be transcoded to the default internal encoding in the following places if the default internal encoding is not nil:
-
CSV
-
File
data read from disk -
Strings returned from
Readline
-
Strings returned from SDBM
-
Values from
ENV
-
Values in ARGV including $PROGRAM_NAME
Additionally String#encode
and String#encode!
use the default internal encoding if no encoding is given.
The script encoding (__ENCODING__), not default_internal
, is used as the encoding of created strings.
Encoding::default_internal
is initialized with -E option or nil otherwise.
Source
static VALUE set_default_internal(VALUE klass, VALUE encoding) { rb_warning("setting Encoding.default_internal"); rb_enc_set_default_internal(encoding); return encoding; }
Sets default internal encoding or removes default internal encoding when passed nil. You should not set Encoding::default_internal
in ruby code as strings created before changing the value may have a different encoding from strings created after the change. Instead you should use ruby -E
to invoke ruby with the correct default_internal.
See Encoding::default_internal
for information on how the default internal encoding is used.
Source
static VALUE enc_find(VALUE klass, VALUE enc) { int idx; if (is_obj_encoding(enc)) return enc; idx = str_to_encindex(enc); if (idx == UNSPECIFIED_ENCODING) return Qnil; return rb_enc_from_encoding_index(idx); }
Search the encoding with specified name. name should be a string.
Encoding.find("US-ASCII") #=> #<Encoding:US-ASCII>
Names which this method accept are encoding names and aliases including following special aliases
- “external”
-
default external encoding
- “internal”
-
default internal encoding
- “locale”
-
locale encoding
- “filesystem”
-
filesystem encoding
An ArgumentError
is raised when no encoding with name. Only Encoding.find("internal")
however returns nil when no encoding named “internal”, in other words, when Ruby has no default internal encoding.
Source
static VALUE enc_list(VALUE klass) { VALUE ary = rb_ary_new2(0); rb_ary_replace(ary, rb_encoding_list); return ary; }
Returns the list of loaded encodings.
Encoding.list #=> [#<Encoding:ASCII-8BIT>, #<Encoding:UTF-8>, #<Encoding:ISO-2022-JP (dummy)>] Encoding.find("US-ASCII") #=> #<Encoding:US-ASCII> Encoding.list #=> [#<Encoding:ASCII-8BIT>, #<Encoding:UTF-8>, #<Encoding:US-ASCII>, #<Encoding:ISO-2022-JP (dummy)>]
Source
VALUE rb_locale_charmap(VALUE klass) { #if NO_LOCALE_CHARMAP return rb_usascii_str_new_cstr("US-ASCII"); #else return locale_charmap(rb_usascii_str_new_cstr); #endif }
Returns the locale charmap name. It returns nil if no appropriate information.
Debian GNU/Linux LANG=C Encoding.locale_charmap #=> "ANSI_X3.4-1968" LANG=ja_JP.EUC-JP Encoding.locale_charmap #=> "EUC-JP" SunOS 5 LANG=C Encoding.locale_charmap #=> "646" LANG=ja Encoding.locale_charmap #=> "eucJP"
The result is highly platform dependent. So Encoding.find(Encoding.locale_charmap)
may cause an error. If you need some encoding object even for unknown locale, Encoding.find
(“locale”) can be used.
Source
static VALUE rb_enc_name_list(VALUE klass) { VALUE ary = rb_ary_new2(global_enc_table.names->num_entries); st_foreach(global_enc_table.names, rb_enc_name_list_i, (st_data_t)ary); return ary; }
Returns the list of available encoding names.
Encoding.name_list #=> ["US-ASCII", "ASCII-8BIT", "UTF-8", "ISO-8859-1", "Shift_JIS", "EUC-JP", "Windows-31J", "BINARY", "CP932", "eucJP"]
Public Instance Methods
Source
static VALUE enc_ascii_compatible_p(VALUE enc) { return RBOOL(rb_enc_asciicompat(must_encoding(enc))); }
Returns whether ASCII-compatible or not.
Encoding::UTF_8.ascii_compatible? #=> true Encoding::UTF_16BE.ascii_compatible? #=> false
Source
static VALUE enc_dummy_p(VALUE enc) { return RBOOL(ENC_DUMMY_P(must_encoding(enc))); }
Returns true for dummy encodings. A dummy encoding is an encoding for which character handling is not properly implemented. It is used for stateful encodings.
Encoding::ISO_2022_JP.dummy? #=> true Encoding::UTF_8.dummy? #=> false
Source
static VALUE enc_inspect(VALUE self) { rb_encoding *enc; if (!is_data_encoding(self)) { not_encoding(self); } if (!(enc = DATA_PTR(self)) || rb_enc_from_index(rb_enc_to_index(enc)) != enc) { rb_raise(rb_eTypeError, "broken Encoding"); } return rb_enc_sprintf(rb_usascii_encoding(), "#<%"PRIsVALUE":%s%s%s>", rb_obj_class(self), rb_enc_inspect_name(enc), (ENC_DUMMY_P(enc) ? " (dummy)" : ""), rb_enc_autoload_p(enc) ? " (autoload)" : ""); }
Returns a string which represents the encoding for programmers.
Encoding::UTF_8.inspect #=> "#<Encoding:UTF-8>" Encoding::ISO_2022_JP.inspect #=> "#<Encoding:ISO-2022-JP (dummy)>"
Source
static VALUE enc_names(VALUE self) { VALUE args[2]; args[0] = (VALUE)rb_to_encoding_index(self); args[1] = rb_ary_new2(0); st_foreach(global_enc_table.names, enc_names_i, (st_data_t)args); return args[1]; }
Returns the list of name and aliases of the encoding.
Encoding::WINDOWS_31J.names #=> ["Windows-31J", "CP932", "csWindows31J", "SJIS", "PCK"]
Source
static VALUE enc_name(VALUE self) { return rb_fstring_cstr(rb_enc_name((rb_encoding*)DATA_PTR(self))); }
Returns the name of the encoding.
Encoding::UTF_8.name #=> "UTF-8"