From 07a53ebdb5fd09075c876ce76adac3ee8542e11c Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: "B. Watson" Date: Sun, 6 Nov 2016 16:57:59 -0500 Subject: perl/perl-Net-LibIDN: Update README. --- perl/perl-Net-LibIDN/README | 17 +++++++++-------- 1 file changed, 9 insertions(+), 8 deletions(-) (limited to 'perl/perl-Net-LibIDN/README') diff --git a/perl/perl-Net-LibIDN/README b/perl/perl-Net-LibIDN/README index e495139df4..b437dffdf5 100644 --- a/perl/perl-Net-LibIDN/README +++ b/perl/perl-Net-LibIDN/README @@ -1,14 +1,15 @@ Net::LibIDN - Perl bindings for GNU Libidn -Provides bindings for GNU Libidn, a C library for handling Internationalized -Domain Names according to IDNA (RFC 3490), in a way very much inspired by -Turbo Fredriksson's PHP-IDN. -There is currently no support for Perl's unicode capabilities (man -perlunicode). All input strings are assumed to be octet strings, all output -strings are generated as octet strings. Thus, if you require Perl's unicode -features, you will have to convert your strings manually. For example: +Provides bindings for GNU Libidn, a C library for handling +Internationalized Domain Names according to IDNA (RFC 3490), in a way +very much inspired by Turbo Fredriksson's PHP-IDN. There is currently +no support for Perl's unicode capabilities (man perlunicode). All input +strings are assumed to be octet strings, all output strings are generated +as octet strings. Thus, if you require Perl's unicode features, you will +have to convert your strings manually. For example: use Encode; use Data::Dumper; print Dumper(Net::LibIDN::idn_to_unicode('xn--uro-j50a.com', 'utf-8')); - print Dumper(decode('utf-8', Net::LibIDN::idn_to_unicode('xn--uro-j50a.com', 'utf-8'))); + print Dumper(decode( + 'utf-8', Net::LibIDN::idn_to_unicode('xn--uro-j50a.com', 'utf-8'))); -- cgit v1.2.3