Test::utf8 - handy utf8 tests
# check the string is good
is_valid_string($string); # check the string is valid
is_sane_utf8($string); # check not double encoded
# check the string has certain attributes
is_flagged_utf8($string1); # has utf8 flag set
is_within_ascii($string2); # only has ascii chars in it
isnt_within_ascii($string3); # has chars outside the ascii range
is_within_latin_1($string4); # only has latin-1 chars in it
isnt_within_ascii($string5); # has chars outside the latin-1 range
This module is a collection of tests useful for dealing with utf8 strings in
Perl.
This module has two types of tests: The validity tests check if a
string is valid and not corrupt, whereas the characteristics tests will
check that string has a given set of characteristics.
- is_valid_string($string, $testname)
- Checks if the string is "valid", i.e. this passes and returns
true unless the internal utf8 flag hasn't been set on scalar that isn't
made up of a valid utf-8 byte sequence.
This should never happen and, in theory, this test
should always pass. Unless you (or a module you use) goes monkeying
around inside a scalar using Encode's private functions or XS code you
shouldn't ever end up in a situation where you've got a corrupt scalar.
But if you do, and you do, then this function should help you detect the
problem.
To be clear, here's an example of the error case this can
detect:
my $mark = "Mark";
my $leon = "L\x{e9}on";
is_valid_string($mark); # passes, not utf-8
is_valid_string($leon); # passes, not utf-8
my $iloveny = "I \x{2665} NY";
is_valid_string($iloveny); # passes, proper utf-8
my $acme = "L\x{c3}\x{a9}on";
Encode::_utf8_on($acme); # (please don't do things like this)
is_valid_string($acme); # passes, proper utf-8 byte sequence upgraded
Encode::_utf8_on($leon); # (this is why you don't do things like this)
is_valid_string($leon); # fails! the byte \x{e9} isn't valid utf-8
- is_sane_utf8($string, $name)
- This test fails if the string contains something that looks like it might
be dodgy utf8, i.e. containing something that looks like the multi-byte
sequence for a latin-1 character but perl hasn't been instructed to treat
as such. Strings that are not utf8 always automatically pass.
Some examples may help:
# This will pass as it's a normal latin-1 string
is_sane_utf8("Hello L\x{e9}eon");
# this will fail because the \x{c3}\x{a9} looks like the
# utf8 byte sequence for e-acute
my $string = "Hello L\x{c3}\x{a9}on";
is_sane_utf8($string);
# this will pass because the utf8 is correctly interpreted as utf8
Encode::_utf8_on($string)
is_sane_utf8($string);
Obviously this isn't a hundred percent reliable. The edge case
where this will fail is where you have
"\x{c2}" (which is "LATIN CAPITAL
LETTER WITH CIRCUMFLEX") or
"\x{c3}" (which is "LATIN CAPITAL
LETTER WITH TILDE") followed by one of the latin-1 punctuation
symbols.
# a capital letter A with tilde surrounded by smart quotes
# this will fail because it'll see the "\x{c2}\x{94}" and think
# it's actually the utf8 sequence for the end smart quote
is_sane_utf8("\x{93}\x{c2}\x{94}");
However, since this hardly comes up this test is reasonably
reliable in most cases. Still, care should be applied in cases where
dynamic data is placed next to latin-1 punctuation to avoid false
negatives.
There exists two situations to cause this test to fail; The
string contains utf8 byte sequences and the string hasn't been flagged
as utf8 (this normally means that you got it from an external source
like a C library; When Perl needs to store a string internally as utf8
it does it's own encoding and flagging transparently) or a utf8 flagged
string contains byte sequences that when translated to characters
themselves look like a utf8 byte sequence. The test diagnostics tells
you which is the case.
These routines allow you to check the range of characters in a string. Note that
these routines are blind to the actual encoding perl internally uses to store
the characters, they just check if the string contains only characters that
can be represented in the named encoding:
- is_within_ascii
- Tests that a string only contains characters that are in the ASCII
character set.
- is_within_latin_1
- Tests that a string only contains characters that are in latin-1.
Simply check if a scalar is or isn't flagged as utf8 by perl's
internals:
- is_flagged_utf8($string, $name)
- Passes if the string is flagged by perl's internals as utf8, fails if it's
not.
- isnt_flagged_utf8($string,$name)
- The opposite of "is_flagged_utf8",
passes if and only if the string isn't flagged as utf8 by perl's
internals.
Note: you can refer to this function as
"isn't_flagged_utf8" if you really
want to.
Written by Mark Fowler mark@twoshortplanks.com
Copyright Mark Fowler 2004,2012. All rights reserved.
This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or
modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.
None known. Please report any to me via the CPAN RT system. See
http://rt.cpan.org/ for more details.
Test::DoubleEncodedEntities for testing for double encoded HTML entities.