Kelly Jones wrote:
I "cpan Text::Unidecode" on 2 machines and then ran this code:

use utf8;
use Text::Unidecode;
print unidecode("\x{5317}\x{4EB0}")."\n";
print unidecode("\xd0\x90\xd0\xbb")."\n";
print unidecode("\xe3\x82\xa2")."\n";

On both machines, the first line correctly prints "Bei Jing", the
author's test case.

Second line: "Al" on one machine (correct), "DD>>" on the other.

Third line: "a" on one machine (correct), "aC/" on the other.

Thoughts?

By putting in "use utf8;", you sign a contract that your source file is UTF-8 encoded. Why would you need that?

--
Ruud

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