NAME
Latin1 - Source code filter to escape Latin-1
SYNOPSIS
use Latin1;
use Latin1 version; --- require version
# "no Latin1;" not supported
or
$ perl Latin1.pm Latin-1_script.pl > Escaped_script.pl.e
then
$ perl Escaped_script.pl.e
Latin-1_script.pl --- script written in Latin-1
Escaped_script.pl.e --- escaped script
emulate Perl5.6 on perl5.00503
use warnings;
use warnings::register;
dummy functions:
utf8::upgrade(...);
utf8::downgrade(...);
utf8::encode(...);
utf8::decode(...);
utf8::is_utf8(...);
utf8::valid(...);
bytes::chr(...);
bytes::index(...);
bytes::length(...);
bytes::ord(...);
bytes::rindex(...);
bytes::substr(...);
ABSTRACT
Let's start with a bit of history: jperl 4.019+1.3 introduced Latin-1 support. You could apply chop() and regexps even to complex CJK characters.
JPerl in CPAN Perl Ports (Binary Distributions)
said before,
As of Perl 5.8.0 it is suggested that instead of JPerl (which is
based on a quite old release of Perl) you should just use Perl 5.8.0,
since it can do all that JPerl did, and more.
But was it really so?
In this country, Latin-1 is widely used on mainframe I/O, the personal computer, and the cellular phone. This software treats Latin-1 directly, but doesn't treat Latin-1. Therefor there is not UTF8 flag.
A difficult solution makes the problem more difficult. Shall we escape from the encode problem?
Yet Another Future Of
JPerl is very useful software. -- Oops, note, this "JPerl" means Japanized or Japanese Perl, so is unrelated to Java and JVM. Therefore, I named this software better, fitter Latin1.
Now, the last version of JPerl is 5.005_04 and is not maintained now.
Japanization modifier WATANABE Hirofumi said,
"Because WATANABE am tired I give over maintaing JPerl."
at Slide #15: "The future of JPerl" of
ftp://ftp.oreilly.co.jp/pcjp98/watanabe/jperlconf.ppt
in The Perl Confernce Japan 1998.
When I heard it, I thought that someone excluding me would maintain JPerl. And I slept every night hanging a sock. Night and day, I kept having hope. After 10 years, I noticed that white beard exists in the sock :-)
This software is a source code filter to escape Perl script encoded by Latin-1 given from STDIN or command line parameter. The character code is never converted by escaping the script. Neither the value of the character nor the length of the character string change even if it escapes.
What's this software good for ...
Upper Compatibility like Perl4 to Perl5
Maximum Portability like jcode.pl
Handles Raw Latin-1, No UTF8 flag like JPerl
Remains One Interpreter like Encode module
Code Set Independent like Ruby
There's more than one way to do it like Perl itself
Let's make yet another future by JPerl's future.
JRE: JPerl Runtime Environment
+---------------------------------------+
| JPerl Application Script | Your Script
+---------------------------------------+
| Source Code Filter, Runtime Routine | ex. Latin1.pm, Elatin1.pm
+---------------------------------------+
| PVM 5.00503 or later | ex. perl 5.00503
+---------------------------------------+
A Perl Virtual Machine (PVM) enables a set of computer software programs and data structures to use a virtual machine model for the execution of other computer programs and scripts. The model used by a PVM accepts a form of computer intermediate language commonly referred to as Perl byteorientedcode. This language conceptually represents the instruction set of a byte-oriented, capability architecture.
Basic Idea Of Source Code Filter
I discovered this mail again recently.
[Tokyo.pm] jus Benkyoukai
http://mail.pm.org/pipermail/tokyo-pm/1999-September/001854.html
save as: SJIS.pm
package SJIS;
use Filter::Util::Call;
sub multibyte_filter {
my $status;
if (($status = filter_read()) > 0 ) {
s/([\x81-\x9f\xe0-\xef])([\x40-\x7e\x80-\xfc])/
sprintf("\\x%02x\\x%02x",ord($1),ord($2))
/eg;
}
$status;
}
sub import {
filter_add(\&multibyte_filter);
}
1;
I am glad that I could confirm my idea is not so wrong.
Software Composition
Latin1.pm --- source code filter to escape Latin-1
Elatin1.pm --- run-time routines for Latin1.pm
perl55.bat --- find and run perl5.5 without %PATH% settings
perl56.bat --- find and run perl5.6 without %PATH% settings
perl58.bat --- find and run perl5.8 without %PATH% settings
perl510.bat --- find and run perl5.10 without %PATH% settings
perl512.bat --- find and run perl5.12 without %PATH% settings
perl514.bat --- find and run perl5.14 without %PATH% settings
perl64.bat --- find and run perl64 without %PATH% settings
strict.pm_ --- dummy strict.pm
warnings.pm_ --- poor warnings.pm
warnings/register.pm_ --- poor warnings/register.pm
Rename and install strict.pm_ of this distribution to strict.pm if your system
doesn't have strict.pm.
Upper Compatibility By Escaping
This software adds the function by 'Escaping' it always, and nothing of the past is broken. Therefore, 'Possible job' never becomes 'Impossible job'. This approach is effective in the field where the retreat is never permitted. Modern Perl/perl can not always solve the problem. Often, it means an incompatible upgrade part to traditional Perl should be rewound.
Escaping Your Script (You do)
You need write 'use Latin1;' in your script.
---------------------------------
Before After
---------------------------------
(nothing) use Latin1;
---------------------------------
Escaping Character Classes (Elatin1.pm provides)
The character classes are redefined as follows to backward compatibility.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Before After
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
. (?:[^\x0A])
(?:[\x00-\xFF]) (/s modifier)
\d [0-9]
\s [\x09\x0A\x0C\x0D\x20]
\w [0-9A-Z_a-z]
\D (?:[^0-9])
\S (?:[^\x09\x0A\x0C\x0D\x20])
\W (?:[^0-9A-Z_a-z])
\h [\x09\x20]
\v [\x0C\x0A\x0D]
\H (?:[^\x09\x20])
\V (?:[^\x0C\x0A\x0D])
\C [\x00-\xFF]
\X X (so, just 'X')
\R (?:\x0D\x0A|[\x0A\x0D])
\N (?:[^\x0A])
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Also POSIX-style character classes.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Before After
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
[:alnum:] [\x30-\x39\x41-\x5A\x61-\x7A]
[:alpha:] [\x41-\x5A\x61-\x7A]
[:ascii:] [\x00-\x7F]
[:blank:] [\x09\x20]
[:cntrl:] [\x00-\x1F\x7F]
[:digit:] [\x30-\x39]
[:graph:] [\x21-\x7F]
[:lower:] [\x61-\x7A]
[:print:] [\x20-\x7F]
[:punct:] [\x21-\x2F\x3A-\x3F\x40\x5B-\x5F\x60\x7B-\x7E]
[:space:] [\x09\x0A\x0B\x0C\x0D\x20]
[:upper:] [\x41-\x5A]
[:word:] [\x30-\x39\x41-\x5A\x5F\x61-\x7A]
[:xdigit:] [\x30-\x39\x41-\x46\x61-\x66]
[:^alnum:] (?:[^\x30-\x39\x41-\x5A\x61-\x7A])
[:^alpha:] (?:[^\x41-\x5A\x61-\x7A])
[:^ascii:] (?:[^\x00-\x7F])
[:^blank:] (?:[^\x09\x20])
[:^cntrl:] (?:[^\x00-\x1F\x7F])
[:^digit:] (?:[^\x30-\x39])
[:^graph:] (?:[^\x21-\x7F])
[:^lower:] (?:[^\x61-\x7A])
[:^print:] (?:[^\x20-\x7F])
[:^punct:] (?:[^\x21-\x2F\x3A-\x3F\x40\x5B-\x5F\x60\x7B-\x7E])
[:^space:] (?:[^\x09\x0A\x0B\x0C\x0D\x20])
[:^upper:] (?:[^\x41-\x5A])
[:^word:] (?:[^\x30-\x39\x41-\x5A\x5F\x61-\x7A])
[:^xdigit:] (?:[^\x30-\x39\x41-\x46\x61-\x66])
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Also \b and \B are redefined as follows to backward compatibility.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Before After
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\b (?:\A(?=[0-9A-Z_a-z])|(?<=[\x00-\x2F\x40\x5B-\x5E\x60\x7B-\xFF])(?=[0-9A-Z_a-z])|(?<=[0-9A-Z_a-z])(?=[\x00-\x2F\x40\x5B-\x5E\x60\x7B-\xFF]|\z))
\B (?:(?<=[0-9A-Z_a-z])(?=[0-9A-Z_a-z])|(?<=[\x00-\x2F\x40\x5B-\x5E\x60\x7B-\xFF])(?=[\x00-\x2F\x40\x5B-\x5E\x60\x7B-\xFF]))
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Escaping Built-in Functions (Latin1.pm and Elatin1.pm provide)
Insert 'Elatin1::' at head of function name. Elatin1.pm provides your script Elatin1::* functions.
---------------------------------
Before After
---------------------------------
lc Elatin1::lc
lcfirst Elatin1::lcfirst
uc Elatin1::uc
ucfirst Elatin1::ucfirst
chr Elatin1::chr
glob Elatin1::glob
---------------------------------
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Before After
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
use Perl::Module; BEGIN { require 'Perl/Module.pm'; Perl::Module->import() if Perl::Module->can('import'); }
use Perl::Module @list; BEGIN { require 'Perl/Module.pm'; Perl::Module->import(@list) if Perl::Module->can('import'); }
use Perl::Module (); BEGIN { require 'Perl/Module.pm'; }
no Perl::Module; BEGIN { require 'Perl/Module.pm'; Perl::Module->unimport() if Perl::Module->can('unimport'); }
no Perl::Module @list; BEGIN { require 'Perl/Module.pm'; Perl::Module->unimport(@list) if Perl::Module->can('unimport'); }
no Perl::Module (); BEGIN { require 'Perl/Module.pm'; }
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Un-Escaping bytes::* Functions (Latin1.pm provides)
Latin1.pm remove 'bytes::' at head of function name.
------------------------------------
Before After
------------------------------------
bytes::chr chr
bytes::index index
bytes::length length
bytes::ord ord
bytes::rindex rindex
bytes::substr substr
------------------------------------
Un-Escaping \ Of \N, \p, \P and \X (Latin1.pm provides)
Latin1.pm remove '\' at head of alphanumeric regexp metasymbols \N, \p, \P and \X. By this method, you can avoid the trap of the abstraction.
------------------------------------
Before After
------------------------------------
\N{CHARNAME} N{CHARNAME}
\p{L} p{L}
\p{^L} p{^L}
\p{\^L} p{\^L}
\pL pL
\P{L} P{L}
\P{^L} P{^L}
\P{\^L} P{\^L}
\PL PL
\X X
------------------------------------
Escaping Built-in Standard Module (Elatin1.pm provides)
Elatin1.pm does "BEGIN { unshift @INC, '/Perl/site/lib/Latin1' }" at head. Store the standard module modified for Latin1 software in this directory to override built-in standard modules.
Escaping Standard Module Content (You do)
You need copy built-in standard module to /Perl/site/lib/Latin1 and change 'use utf8;' to 'use Latin1;' in its. You need help yourself for now.
Back to and see 'Escaping Your Script'. Enjoy hacking!!
Perl5.6 Emulation On perl5.005
Using warnings pragma on perl5.00503 by rename files.
warnings.pm_ --> warnings.pm
warnings/register.pm_ --> warnings/register.pm
Ignore Pragmas And Modules
-----------------------------------------------------------
Before After
-----------------------------------------------------------
use strict; use strict; no strict qw(refs);
use 5.12.0; use 5.12.0; no strict qw(refs);
require utf8; # require utf8;
require bytes; # require bytes;
require charnames; # require charnames;
require I18N::Japanese; # require I18N::Japanese;
require I18N::Collate; # require I18N::Collate;
require I18N::JExt; # require I18N::JExt;
require File::DosGlob; # require File::DosGlob;
require Wild; # require Wild;
require Wildcard; # require Wildcard;
require Japanese; # require Japanese;
use utf8; # use utf8;
use bytes; # use bytes;
use charnames; # use charnames;
use I18N::Japanese; # use I18N::Japanese;
use I18N::Collate; # use I18N::Collate;
use I18N::JExt; # use I18N::JExt;
use File::DosGlob; # use File::DosGlob;
use Wild; # use Wild;
use Wildcard; # use Wildcard;
use Japanese; # use Japanese;
no utf8; # no utf8;
no bytes; # no bytes;
no charnames; # no charnames;
no I18N::Japanese; # no I18N::Japanese;
no I18N::Collate; # no I18N::Collate;
no I18N::JExt; # no I18N::JExt;
no File::DosGlob; # no File::DosGlob;
no Wild; # no Wild;
no Wildcard; # no Wildcard;
no Japanese; # no Japanese;
-----------------------------------------------------------
Comment out pragma to ignore utf8 environment, and Elatin1.pm provides these
functions.
Dummy utf8::upgrade
$num_octets = utf8::upgrade($string); Returns the number of octets necessary to represent the string.
Dummy utf8::downgrade
$success = utf8::downgrade($string[, FAIL_OK]); Returns true always.
Dummy utf8::encode
utf8::encode($string); Returns nothing.
Dummy utf8::decode
$success = utf8::decode($string); Returns true always.
Dummy utf8::is_utf8
$flag = utf8::is_utf8(STRING); Returns false always.
Dummy utf8::valid
$flag = utf8::valid(STRING); Returns true always.
Dummy bytes::chr
This function is same as chr.
Dummy bytes::index
This function is same as index.
Dummy bytes::length
This function is same as length.
Dummy bytes::ord
This function is same as ord.
Dummy bytes::rindex
This function is same as rindex.
Dummy bytes::substr
This function is same as substr.
Environment Variable
This software uses the flock function for exclusive control. The execution of the
program is blocked until it becomes possible to read or write the file.
You can have it not block in the flock function by defining environment variable
SJIS_NONBLOCK.
Example:
SET SJIS_NONBLOCK=1
(The value '1' doesn't have the meaning)
BUGS AND LIMITATIONS
Please patches and report problems to author are welcome.
Modifier /a /d /l And /u Of Regular Expression
The concept of this software is not to use two or more encoding methods at the same time. Therefore, modifier /a /d /l and /u are not supported. \d means [0-9] always.
AUTHOR
INABA Hitoshi <ina@cpan.org>
This project was originated by INABA Hitoshi.
LICENSE AND COPYRIGHT
This software is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself. See perlartistic.
This software is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.
My Goal
P.401 See chapter 15: Unicode of ISBN 0-596-00027-8 Programming Perl Third Edition.
Before the introduction of Unicode support in perl, The eq operator just compared the byte-strings represented by two scalars. Beginning with perl 5.8, eq compares two byte-strings with simultaneous consideration of the UTF8 flag.
Information processing model beginning with perl 5.8
+----------------------+---------------------+
| Text strings | |
+----------+-----------| Binary strings |
| UTF8 | Latin-1 | |
+----------+-----------+---------------------+
| UTF8 | Not UTF8 |
| Flagged | Flagged |
+--------------------------------------------+
http://perl-users.jp/articles/advent-calendar/2010/casual/4
You should memorize this figure.
(Why is only Latin-1 special?)
This change consequentially made a big gap between a past script and new script. Both scripts cannot re-use the code mutually any longer. Because a new method puts a strain in the programmer, it will still take time to replace all the in existence scripts.
The biggest problem of new method is that the UTF8 flag can't synchronize to real encode of string. Thus you must debug about UTF8 flag, before your script. How to solve it by returning to a past method, I will quote page 402 of Programming Perl, 3rd ed. again.
Information processing model beginning with this software
+-----------------------------------+
| Octet Strings | aka Binary strings
+-----------------------------------+
| Character Strings | aka Text strings
+-----------------------------------+
| ASCII Compatible Encoding | ex. Latin-1
+-----------------------------------+
(No UTF8 Flag)
You need not memorize this figure.
Ideally, I'd like to achieve these five Goals:
Goal #1:
Old byte-oriented programs should not spontaneously break on the old byte-oriented data they used to work on.
It has already been achieved by Latin-1 designed for combining with old byte-oriented ASCII.
Goal #2:
Old byte-oriented programs should magically start working on the new character-oriented data when appropriate.
Still now, 1 octet is counted with 1 by embedded functions length, substr, index, rindex and pos that handle length and position of string. In this part, there is no change. The length of 1 character of 2 octet code is 2.
On the other hand, the regular expression in the script is added the multibyte anchoring processing with this software, instead of you.
figure of Goal #1 and Goal #2.
GOAL#1 GOAL#2 (a) (b) (c) (d) (e) +--------------+-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+ | data | Old | Old | New | Old | New | +--------------+-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+ | script | Old | Old | New | +--------------+-------+---------------+---------------+ | interpreter | Old | New | +--------------+-------+-------------------------------+ Old --- Old byte-oriented New --- New character-oriented
There is a combination from (a) to (e) in data, script and interpreter of old and new. Let's add the Encode module and this software did not exist at time of be written this document and JPerl did exist.
(a) (b) (c) (d) (e) JPerl Encode,Latin1 +--------------+-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+ | data | Old | Old | New | Old | New | +--------------+-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+ | script | Old | Old | New | +--------------+-------+---------------+---------------+ | interpreter | Old | New | +--------------+-------+-------------------------------+ Old --- Old byte-oriented New --- New character-oriented
The reason why JPerl is very excellent is that it is at the position of (c). That is, it is not necessary to do a special description to the script to process new character-oriented string.
Contrasting is Encode module and describing "use Latin1;" on this software, in this case, a new description is necessary.
Goal #3:
Programs should run just as fast in the new character-oriented mode as in the old byte-oriented mode.
It is impossible. Because the following time is necessary.
(1) Time of escape script for old byte-oriented perl.
Goal #4:
Perl should remain one language, rather than forking into a byte-oriented Perl and a character-oriented Perl.
JPerl forked the perl interpreter so as not to fork the Perl language. But the Perl core team might not hope for the perl interpreter's fork. As a result, the Perl language forked, and the community was reduced through necessity.
A character-oriented perl is not necessary to make it specially, because a byte-oriented perl can already treat the binary data. This software is only an application program of Perl, a filter program. If perl can be executed, this software will be able to be executed.
And you will get support from the Perl community, when you solve the problem by the Perl script.
Goal #5:
JPerl users will be able to maintain JPerl by Perl.
May the JPerl be with you, always.
Back when Programming Perl, 3rd ed. was written, UTF8 flag was not born and Perl is designed to make the easy jobs easy. This software provide programming environment like at that time.
SEE ALSO
Programming Perl, Second Edition
By Larry Wall, Tom Christiansen, Randal L. Schwartz
January 1900 (really so?)
Pages: 670
ISBN 10: 1-56592-149-6 | ISBN 13: 9781565921498
http://shop.oreilly.com/product/9781565921498.do
Programming Perl, Third Edition
By Larry Wall, Tom Christiansen, Jon Orwant
Third Edition July 2000
Pages: 1104
ISBN 10: 0-596-00027-8 | ISBN 13: 9780596000271
http://shop.oreilly.com/product/9780596000271.do
Perl Cookbook, Second Edition
By Tom Christiansen, Nathan Torkington
Second Edition August 2003
Pages: 964
ISBN 10: 0-596-00313-7 | ISBN 13: 9780596003135
http://shop.oreilly.com/product/9780596003135.do
Perl in a Nutshell, Second Edition
By Stephen Spainhour, Ellen Siever, Nathan Patwardhan
Second Edition June 2002
Pages: 760
Series: In a Nutshell
ISBN 10: 0-596-00241-6 | ISBN 13: 9780596002411
http://shop.oreilly.com/product/9780596002411.do
Learning Perl on Win32 Systems
By Randal L. Schwartz, Erik Olson, Tom Christiansen
August 1997
Pages: 306
ISBN 10: 1-56592-324-3 | ISBN 13: 9781565923249
http://shop.oreilly.com/product/9781565923249.do
Learning Perl, Fifth Edition
By Randal L. Schwartz, Tom Phoenix, brian d foy
June 2008
Pages: 352
Print ISBN:978-0-596-52010-6 | ISBN 10: 0-596-52010-7
Ebook ISBN:978-0-596-10316-3 | ISBN 10: 0-596-10316-6
http://shop.oreilly.com/product/9780596520113.do
Perl RESOURCE KIT UNIX EDITION
Futato, Irving, Jepson, Patwardhan, Siever
ISBN 10: 1-56592-370-7
http://shop.oreilly.com/product/9781565923706.do
Understanding Japanese Information Processing
By Ken Lunde
January 1900
Pages: 470
ISBN 10: 1-56592-043-0 | ISBN 13: 9781565920439
http://shop.oreilly.com/product/9781565920439.do
CJKV Information Processing
Chinese, Japanese, Korean & Vietnamese Computing
By Ken Lunde
First Edition January 1999
Pages: 1128
ISBN 10: 1-56592-224-7 | ISBN 13: 9781565922242
http://shop.oreilly.com/product/9781565922242.do
Mastering Regular Expressions, Second Edition
By Jeffrey E. F. Friedl
Second Edition July 2002
Pages: 484
ISBN 10: 0-596-00289-0 | ISBN 13: 9780596002893
http://shop.oreilly.com/product/9780596002893.do
Mastering Regular Expressions, Third Edition
By Jeffrey E. F. Friedl
Third Edition August 2006
Pages: 542
ISBN 10: 0-596-52812-4 | ISBN 13:9780596528126
http://shop.oreilly.com/product/9780596528126.do
Regular Expressions Cookbook
By Jan Goyvaerts, Steven Levithan
May 2009
Pages: 512
ISBN 10:0-596-52068-9 | ISBN 13: 978-0-596-52068-7
http://shop.oreilly.com/product/9780596520694.do
PERL PUROGURAMINGU
Larry Wall, Randal L.Schwartz, Yoshiyuki Kondo
December 1997
ISBN 4-89052-384-7
http://www.context.co.jp/~cond/books/old-books.html
JIS KANJI JITEN
Kouji Shibano
Pages: 1456
ISBN 4-542-20129-5
http://www.webstore.jsa.or.jp/lib/lib.asp?fn=/manual/mnl01_12.htm
UNIX MAGAZINE
1993 Aug
Pages: 172
T1008901080816 ZASSHI 08901-8
http://ascii.asciimw.jp/books/books/detail/978-4-7561-5008-0.shtml
MacPerl Power and Ease
By Vicki Brown, Chris Nandor
April 1998
Pages: 350
ISBN 10: 1881957322 | ISBN 13: 978-1881957324
http://www.amazon.com/Macperl-Power-Ease-Vicki-Brown/dp/1881957322
Other Tools
http://search.cpan.org/dist/jacode/
http://search.cpan.org/dist/Char/
BackPAN
http://backpan.perl.org/authors/id/I/IN/INA/
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
This software was made referring to software and the document that the following hackers or persons had made. I am thankful to all persons.
Rick Yamashita, Shift_JIS
ttp://furukawablog.spaces.live.com/Blog/cns!1pmWgsL289nm7Shn7cS0jHzA!2225.entry (dead link)
ttp://shino.tumblr.com/post/116166805/1981-us-jis
(add 'h' at head)
http://www.wdic.org/w/WDIC/%E3%82%B7%E3%83%95%E3%83%88JIS
Larry Wall, Perl
http://www.perl.org/
Kazumasa Utashiro, jcode.pl
ftp://ftp.iij.ad.jp/pub/IIJ/dist/utashiro/perl/
http://log.utashiro.com/pub/2006/07/jkondo_a580.html
Jeffrey E. F. Friedl, Mastering Regular Expressions
http://regex.info/
SADAHIRO Tomoyuki, The right way of using Shift_JIS
http://homepage1.nifty.com/nomenclator/perl/shiftjis.htm
Yukihiro "Matz" Matsumoto, YAPC::Asia2006 Ruby on Perl(s)
http://www.rubyist.net/~matz/slides/yapc2006/
jscripter, For jperl users
http://homepage1.nifty.com/kazuf/jperl.html
Bruce., Unicode in Perl
http://www.rakunet.org/tsnet/TSabc/18/546.html
Hiroaki Izumi, Perl5.8/Perl5.10 is not useful on the Windows.
http://www.aritia.jp/hizumi/perl/perlwin.html
TSUKAMOTO Makio, Perl memo/file path of Windows
http://digit.que.ne.jp/work/wiki.cgi?Perl%E3%83%A1%E3%83%A2%2FWindows%E3%81%A7%E3%81%AE%E3%83%95%E3%82%A1%E3%82%A4%E3%83%AB%E3%83%91%E3%82%B9
chaichanPaPa, Matching Shift_JIS file name
http://d.hatena.ne.jp/chaichanPaPa/20080802/1217660826
SUZUKI Norio, Jperl
http://homepage2.nifty.com/kipp/perl/jperl/
WATANABE Hirofumi, Jperl
http://www.cpan.org/src/5.0/jperl/
http://search.cpan.org/~watanabe/
ftp://ftp.oreilly.co.jp/pcjp98/watanabe/jperlconf.ppt
Chuck Houpt, Michiko Nozu, MacJPerl
http://habilis.net/macjperl/index.j.html
Kenichi Ishigaki, Pod-PerldocJp, Welcome to modern Perl world
http://search.cpan.org/dist/Pod-PerldocJp/
http://gihyo.jp/dev/serial/01/modern-perl/0031
http://gihyo.jp/dev/serial/01/modern-perl/0032
http://gihyo.jp/dev/serial/01/modern-perl/0033
Dan Kogai, Encode module
http://search.cpan.org/dist/Encode/
http://www.archive.org/details/YAPCAsia2006TokyoPerl58andUnicodeMythsFactsandChanges (video)
http://yapc.g.hatena.ne.jp/jkondo/ (audio)
Juerd, Perl Unicode Advice
http://juerd.nl/site.plp/perluniadvice
daily dayflower, 2008-06-25 perluniadvice
http://d.hatena.ne.jp/dayflower/20080625/1214374293
Jesse Vincent, Compatibility is a virtue
http://www.nntp.perl.org/group/perl.perl5.porters/2010/05/msg159825.html
Tokyo-pm archive
http://mail.pm.org/pipermail/tokyo-pm/
http://mail.pm.org/pipermail/tokyo-pm/1999-September/001844.html
http://mail.pm.org/pipermail/tokyo-pm/1999-September/001854.html
ruby-list
http://blade.nagaokaut.ac.jp/ruby/ruby-list/index.shtml
http://blade.nagaokaut.ac.jp/cgi-bin/scat.rb/ruby/ruby-list/2440
http://blade.nagaokaut.ac.jp/cgi-bin/scat.rb/ruby/ruby-list/2446
http://blade.nagaokaut.ac.jp/cgi-bin/scat.rb/ruby/ruby-list/2569
http://blade.nagaokaut.ac.jp/cgi-bin/scat.rb/ruby/ruby-list/9427
http://blade.nagaokaut.ac.jp/cgi-bin/scat.rb/ruby/ruby-list/9431
http://blade.nagaokaut.ac.jp/cgi-bin/scat.rb/ruby/ruby-list/10500
http://blade.nagaokaut.ac.jp/cgi-bin/scat.rb/ruby/ruby-list/10501
http://blade.nagaokaut.ac.jp/cgi-bin/scat.rb/ruby/ruby-list/10502
http://blade.nagaokaut.ac.jp/cgi-bin/scat.rb/ruby/ruby-list/12385
http://blade.nagaokaut.ac.jp/cgi-bin/scat.rb/ruby/ruby-list/12392
http://blade.nagaokaut.ac.jp/cgi-bin/scat.rb/ruby/ruby-list/12393
http://blade.nagaokaut.ac.jp/cgi-bin/scat.rb/ruby/ruby-list/19156