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The Lounge What is on Your Mind? The worlds first classical Chinese program language. Post 303043889 by Neo on Monday 10th of February 2020 11:22:43 AM
Old 02-10-2020
The Chinese are becoming very advanced in computer technology.

The amount of research going on in China these days is staggering.

One of my ACM papers, Intrusion Detection Systems and Multisensor Data Fusion: Creating Cyberspace Situational Awareness, is referenced by Chinese researchers much more often than Western researchers (for a number of years). I know this because I get notices from various sources when one of my published papers are referred in the academic literature.
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Encode::CN(3pm) 					 Perl Programmers Reference Guide					   Encode::CN(3pm)

NAME
Encode::CN - China-based Chinese Encodings SYNOPSIS
use Encode qw/encode decode/; $euc_cn = encode("euc-cn", $utf8); # loads Encode::CN implicitly $utf8 = decode("euc-cn", $euc_cn); # ditto DESCRIPTION
This module implements China-based Chinese charset encodings. Encodings supported are as follows. Canonical Alias Description -------------------------------------------------------------------- euc-cn /euc.*cn$/i EUC (Extended Unix Character) /cn.*euc$/i /GB[-_ ]?2312(?:D.*$|$)/i (see below) gb2312-raw The raw (low-bit) GB2312 character map gb12345-raw Traditional chinese counterpart to GB2312 (raw) iso-ir-165 GB2312 + GB6345 + GB8565 + additions MacChineseSimp GB2312 + Apple Additions cp936 Code Page 936, also known as GBK (Extended GuoBiao) hz 7-bit escaped GB2312 encoding -------------------------------------------------------------------- To find how to use this module in detail, see Encode. NOTES
Due to size concerns, "GB 18030" (an extension to "GBK") is distributed separately on CPAN, under the name Encode::HanExtra. That module also contains extra Taiwan-based encodings. BUGS
When you see "charset=gb2312" on mails and web pages, they really mean "euc-cn" encodings. To fix that, "gb2312" is aliased to "euc-cn". Use "gb2312-raw" when you really mean it. The ASCII region (0x00-0x7f) is preserved for all encodings, even though this conflicts with mappings by the Unicode Consortium. See <http://www.debian.or.jp/~kubota/unicode-symbols.html.en> to find out why it is implemented that way. SEE ALSO
Encode perl v5.8.0 2002-06-01 Encode::CN(3pm)
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