最終更新:2010-11-08 (月) 13:01:29 (4911d)
iconv
Top / iconv
http://www.gnu.org/software/libiconv/
対応エンコーディング
European languages
- ASCII
- ISO-8859-1? - Latin-1?
- ISO-8859-2? - Latin-2?
- ISO-8859-3? - Latin-3?
- ISO-8859-4? - Latin-4?
- ISO-8859-5?
- ISO-8859-7?
- ISO-8859-9? - Latin-5?
- ISO-8859-10? - Latin-6?
- ISO-8859-13? - Latin-7?
- ISO-8859-14? - Latin-8?
- ISO-8859-15? - Latin-9?
- ISO-8859-16? - Latin-10?
- KOI8-R?
- KOI8-U?
- KOI8-RU?
- CP1250?,CP1251?,CP1252?,CP1253?,CP1254?,CP1257?
- CP850?,CP866?,CP1131?
- Mac{Roman,CentralEurope?,Iceland,Croatian,Romania}
- Mac{Cyrillic,Ukraine,Greek,Turkish}
- Macintosh?
Semitic languages
Japanese
Chinese
- EUC-CN?
- HZ
- GBK?
- CP936?
- GB18030?
- EUC-TW?
- BIG5?
- CP950?
- BIG5-HKSCS?
- BIG5-HKSCS:2001?
- BIG5-HKSCS:1999?
- ISO-2022-CN?
- ISO-2022-CN-EXT?
Korean
Armenian
- ARMSCII-8?
Georgian
Tajik
- KOI8-T?
Kazakh
Thai
Laotian
Vietnamese
Platform specifics
Full Unicode
- UTF-8
- UCS-2?
- UCS-2BE?
- UCS-2LE?
- UCS-4?
- UCS-4BE?
- UCS-4LE?
- UTF-16
- UTF-16BE?
- UTF-16LE?
- UTF-32?
- UTF-32BE?
- UTF-32LE?
- UTF-7?
- C99
- Java
Full Unicode
- in terms of uint16_t? or uint32_t (with machine dependent endianness and alignment)
- UCS-2-INTERNAL?
- UCS-4-INTERNAL?
Locale dependent
- in terms of `char' or `wchar_t' (with machine dependent endianness and alignment
- and with OS and locale dependent semantics)
- char
- wchar_t The empty encoding name "" is equivalent to "char": it denotes the locale dependent character encoding.
When configured with the option --enable-extra-encodings
it also provides support for a few extra encodings:
European languages
Semitic languages
- CP864?
Japanese
Chinese
- BIG5-2003? (experimental)
Turkmen
- TDS565?