Letter P

perl-Encode - character encodings

Website: http://www.perl.org/
License: GPL+ or Artistic
Description:
The Encode module provides the interfaces between Perl's strings and
the rest of the system. Perl strings are sequences of characters.
The repertoire of characters that Perl can represent is at least that
defined by the Unicode Consortium. On most platforms the ordinal values
of the characters (as returned by ord(ch)) is the "Unicode codepoint"
for the character (the exceptions are those platforms where the legacy
encoding is some variant of EBCDIC rather than a super-set of ASCII - see perlebcdic).
Traditionally, computer data has been moved around in 8-bit chunks often
called "bytes". These chunks are also known as "octets" in networking
standards. Perl is widely used to manipulate data of many types - not only
strings of characters representing human or computer languages but also
"binary" data being the machine's representation of numbers, pixels in
an image - or just about anything.
When Perl is processing "binary data", the programmer wants Perl to process
"sequences of bytes". This is not a problem for Perl - as a byte has 256
possible values, it easily fits in Perl's much larger "logical character".

Packages

perl-Encode-2.39-4m.mo7.x86_64 [1.3 MiB] Changelog by Yohsuke Ooi (2011-01-14):
- (6:5.12.1-4m)
- [SECURITY] CVE-2010-2761 CVE-2010-4410
- update CGI.pm to 3.50 by applying patch

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