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HTML::HTML5::Entities(3) |
User Contributed Perl Documentation |
HTML::HTML5::Entities(3) |
HTML::HTML5::Entities - drop-in replacement for HTML::Entities
use HTML::Entities;
my $enc = encode_entities('fish & chips');
print "$enc\n"; # fish & chips
my $dec = decode_entities($enc);
print "$dec\n"; # fish & chips
This is a drop-in replacement for HTML::Entities, providing the character
entities defined in HTML5. Some caveats:
- The implementation is pure perl, hence in some cases slower, especially
decoding.
- It will not work in Perl < 5.8.1.
- "decode_entities($string, ...)"
- This routine replaces HTML entities found in the
$string with the corresponding Unicode character.
If multiple strings are provided as arguments they are each decoded
separately and the same number of strings are returned.
If called in void context the arguments are decoded
in-place.
This routine is exported by default.
- "_decode_entities($string, \%entity2char)"
- "_decode_entities($string, \%entity2char, $expand_prefix)"
- This will in-place replace HTML entities in
$string. The %entity2char
hash must be provided. Named entities not found in the
%entity2char hash are left alone. Numeric entities
are always expanded.
If $expand_prefix is TRUE then
entities without trailing ";" in
%entity2char will even be expanded as a prefix
of a longer unrecognized name.
$string = "foo bar";
_decode_entities($string, { nb => "@", nbsp => "\xA0" }, 1);
print $string; # will print "foo bar"
This routine is exported by default.
- "encode_entities($string)"
- "encode_entities($string, $unsafe_chars)"
- This routine replaces unsafe characters in $string
with their entity representation. A second argument can be given to
specify which characters to consider unsafe (i.e., which to escape). This
may be a regular expression.
If called in void context the string is encoded in-place.
This routine is exported by default.
- "encode_entities_numeric($string)"
- This routine works just like encode_entities, except that the replacement
entities are always numeric.
This routine is not exported by default.
- "num_entity($string)"
- Given a single character string, encodes it as a numeric entity.
This routine is not exported by default.
The following functions cannot be exported. They behave the same
as the exportable functions.
- "HTML::Entities::decode($string, ...)"
- "HTML::Entities::encode($string)"
- "HTML::Entities::encode($string, $unsafe_characters)"
- "HTML::Entities::encode_numeric($string)"
- "HTML::Entities::encode_numeric($string,
$unsafe_characters)"
- "HTML::Entities::encode_numerically($string)"
- "HTML::Entities::encode_numerically($string,
$unsafe_characters)"
- $HTML::HTML5::Entities::hex
- This variable controls whether numeric entities will use hexadecimal or
decimal notation. It is TRUE (hexadecimal) by default, but can be set to
FALSE.
It only affects the encoding functions. Decoding always
understands both notations.
- %HTML::HTML5::Entities::char2entity
- %HTML::HTML5::Entities::entity2char
- There contain the mapping from all characters to the corresponding
entities (and vice versa, respectively). These variables may be exported.
Note that %char2entity is a more
conservative set of mappings, intended to be safe for serialising
strings to HTML4, HTML5 and XHTML 1.x. And for hysterical raisins,
%entity2char does not include the leading
ampersands, while %char2entity does.
Please report any bugs to
<http://rt.cpan.org/Dist/Display.html?Queue=HTML-HTML5-Entities>.
HTML::Entities, HTML::HTML5::Parser, HTML::HTML5::Writer.
Toby Inkster <tobyink@cpan.org>.
Copyright (c) 1995-2006 by Gisle Aas.
Copyright (c) 2012 by Toby Inkster.
This is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it
under the same terms as the Perl 5 programming language system itself.
Copyright (c) 2004-2007 by Apple Computer Inc, Mozilla Foundation, and Opera
Software ASA.
Copyright (c) 2007-2011 by Wakaba <w@suika.fam.cx>.
Copyright (c) 2009-2012 by Toby Inkster
<tobyink@cpan.org>.
THIS PACKAGE IS PROVIDED "AS IS" AND WITHOUT ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED
WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, WITHOUT LIMITATION, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF
MERCHANTIBILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.
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