Hello, Dan! - several typos - excludes GBK from that section because it is discussed in Microsoft-related
Just routine. /Anton/ P.S. You've done a cozy text aligment-arrangement, nice to look at! :-) --- ext/Encode/lib/Encode/Supported.pod.orig Wed Apr 10 01:13:28 2002 +++ ext/Encode/lib/Encode/Supported.pod Wed Apr 10 13:30:06 2002 @@ -489,7 +489,7 @@ UTF-16 UTF-16BE UTF-16LE -are a IANA-registered C<charset>s. See [RFC 2781] for details. +are IANA-registered C<charset>s. See [RFC 2781] for details. Jungshik Shin reports that UTF-16 with a BOM is well accepted by MS IE 5/6 and NS 4/6. Beware however that @@ -525,7 +525,6 @@ ISO-IR-165 [RFC1345] - GBK VISCII GB 12345 GB 18030 (**) (see links bellow) @@ -712,7 +711,7 @@ L<http://www.ecma.ch/ecma1/STAND/ECMA-035.HTM> -The very dspecification of ISO-2022 is available from the link above. +The very specification of ISO-2022 is available from the link above. =back @@ -729,7 +728,7 @@ Most of the C<canonical names> in Encode derive from this list so you can directly apply the string you have extracted from MIME -header of mails and we pages. +header of mails and web pages. =back --- ext/Encode/lib/Encode/Unicode.pm.orig Wed Apr 10 01:13:28 2002 +++ ext/Encode/lib/Encode/Unicode.pm Wed Apr 10 13:33:23 2002 @@ -403,7 +403,7 @@ half-character is now called a I<Surrogate Pair> and UTF-16 is the name of the encoding that embraces them. -Here is a fomula to ensurrogate a Unicode character \x{10000} and +Here is a formula to ensurrogate a Unicode character \x{10000} and above; $hi = ($uni - 0x10000) / 0x400 + 0xD800;