Doesn't look like you set a file name or a MIME type in the result that would cause it to be interpreted as a document.
-----Original Message----- From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Chris Wagner Sent: Friday, December 01, 2006 6:58 PM To: perl-win32-users@listserv.ActiveState.com Subject: Re: Japanese chars and ARGV Greetings Al-kun. Since STDIN is giving u a byte string instead of a character string u can do ur own decoding of the string. I think the following example will do what u want. I'm assuming ur unicode char's are 16 bits. $text = "asdfgh"; # $ARGV[0] print length $text, "\n"; @asc = unpack "S*", $text; print join "|", @asc, "\n"; $uni = pack "U*", @asc; print length $uni; ^D 6 29537|26212|26727| 3 The S format turns ur 6 bytes into 3 integers(machine native). U can then feed those 3 integers to the U format to get a unicode string. This is merely a workaround; Perl by all rights should take unicode directly from STDIN. Maybe declaring a unicode pragma on STDIN might help. matane At 04:04 PM 12/1/2006 -0400, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: >Stumped on this, and some of the examples in the perluniintro just seem wrong. > >On a Japanese version of Windows when you execute a Perl to run a script, the length() fcn returns >the wrong number of characters for anything you pass in as @ARGV[0], and the split() fcn seems to >work the same way. -- REMEMBER THE WORLD TRADE CENTER ---=< WTC 911 >=-- "...ne cede malis" 00000100 _______________________________________________ Perl-Win32-Users mailing list Perl-Win32-Users@listserv.ActiveState.com To unsubscribe: http://listserv.ActiveState.com/mailman/mysubs _______________________________________________ Perl-Win32-Users mailing list Perl-Win32-Users@listserv.ActiveState.com To unsubscribe: http://listserv.ActiveState.com/mailman/mysubs