Did you know ... | Search Documentation: |
Foreign stream encoding |
IOSTREAM
has a field encoding
that is
managed at initialization from SIO_TEXT
. The available
encodings are defined as a C enum as below.
typedef enum { ENC_UNKNOWN = 0, /* invalid/unknown */ ENC_OCTET, /* raw 8 bit input */ ENC_ASCII, /* US-ASCII (0..127) */ ENC_ISO_LATIN_1, /* ISO Latin-1 (0..256) */ ENC_ANSI, /* default (multibyte) codepage */ ENC_UTF8, ENC_UNICODE_BE, /* big endian unicode file */ ENC_UNICODE_LE, /* little endian unicode file */ ENC_WCHAR /* wchar_t */ } IOENC;
Binary streams always have the encoding ENC_OCTET
.
The default encoding of a text stream depends on the Prolog flag
encoding. The
encoding is used by all functions that perform text I/O on a stream. The
encoding can be changed at any moment using Ssetenc()
which is available from Prolog using the set_stream/2
encoding(Encoding)
property. Functions that explicitly
manage the encoding are:
NULL
, return the old encoding. This function may
fail, returning -1 if the Scontrol_function() of the stream
returns -1 on the SIO_SETENCODING
request. On succcess it
returns 0. If
new_enc is ENC_OCTET
the stream is switched to
binary mode. Otherwise text mode is enabled.SIO_BOM
is set on the stream. Possibly resulting encodings are ENC_UTF8
,
ENC_UNICODE_BE
and ENC_UNICODE_LE
.ENC_UTF8
, ENC_UNICODE_BE
or
ENC_UNICODE_LE
it writes the code point \ufeff
(a zero-width white space) to the stream in the current encoding and
sets the SIO_BOM
flag on the stream.