Thank you.
I have tried to set the header of the web page as you described, but I have
seen that the special chars like şţăîâŞŢĂΠare not recognized correctly,
even though the browser recognizes that the encoding is UTF-8.
However, I have seen that the page returned by Google is viewed correctly
On Friday, March 26, 2004 12:50 AM, Shaun Fryer <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
:
: > 4. Decoded file is streamed to user, who saves the file locally.
: > Jason
[snip]
: #!/usr/bin/perl
:
: ##
: To download a file via a GET request
: http:/
I have tried those modules and others like Encode, and they produce UTF-8
strings, but without printing those first 3 special chars which made the
browser and other programs to recognize that it is a UTF-8 file.
Are you talking about the Byte Order Marks (BOM) ? The browser doesn't need
these to
I have tried those modules and others like Encode, and they produce UTF-8
strings, but without printing those first 3 special chars which made the
browser and other programs to recognize that it is a UTF-8 file.
Thank you anyway.
Teddy
- Original Message -
From: "Wiggins d Anconia" <[EM
You certainly can.
There's another alias - "[EMAIL PROTECTED]" to which you can send
unicode related questions.
To set the HTTP header correctly you should use the following:
print header (-charset => 'utf-8')';
as opposed to the standard :
print header;
-which sets the page encoding to iso-88
> Hi all,
>
> Does anyone know how could I print a UTF-8 HTML page (like Google's one)?
>
> Which modules I need to use?
>
> Is perl able to do that?
>
> Thank you.
>
You may find some useful help in,
perldoc perluniintro
perldoc perlunicode
perldoc utf8
I suspect it can, just don't know mu