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Operating Systems OS X (Apple) MacOS 10.15.2 Catalina display crash and system panic Post 303043950 by Neo on Tuesday 11th of February 2020 10:40:45 PM
Old 02-11-2020
I think the issue is related to Apple's decision to drop support for 32 bit applications, and this causes some unforeseen bugs and crashes, especially in older systems.

I am running Catalina 10.15.2 but I would like to go back to Mojave.

Maybe it's time to go back?

However, I'm reluctant to downgrade; and maybe the bugs will get squashed over time?

I may try to upgrade to Catalina 10.15.4 and continue to skip 10.15.3
 

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utf8(3pm)						 Perl Programmers Reference Guide						 utf8(3pm)

NAME
utf8 - Perl pragma to enable/disable UTF-8 (or UTF-EBCDIC) in source code SYNOPSIS
use utf8; no utf8; DESCRIPTION
The "use utf8" pragma tells the Perl parser to allow UTF-8 in the program text in the current lexical scope (allow UTF-EBCDIC on EBCDIC based platforms). The "no utf8" pragma tells Perl to switch back to treating the source text as literal bytes in the current lexical scope. This pragma is primarily a compatibility device. Perl versions earlier than 5.6 allowed arbitrary bytes in source code, whereas in future we would like to standardize on the UTF-8 encoding for source text. Until UTF-8 becomes the default format for source text, this pragma should be used to recognize UTF-8 in the source. When UTF-8 becomes the standard source format, this pragma will effectively become a no-op. For convenience in what follows the term UTF-X is used to refer to UTF-8 on ASCII and ISO Latin based platforms and UTF-EBCDIC on EBCDIC based platforms. Enabling the "utf8" pragma has the following effect: o Bytes in the source text that have their high-bit set will be treated as being part of a literal UTF-8 character. This includes most literals such as identifier names, string constants, and constant regular expression patterns. On EBCDIC platforms characters in the Latin 1 character set are treated as being part of a literal UTF-EBCDIC character. Note that if you have bytes with the eighth bit on in your script (for example embedded Latin-1 in your string literals), "use utf8" will be unhappy since the bytes are most probably not well-formed UTF-8. If you want to have such bytes and use utf8, you can disable utf8 until the end the block (or file, if at top level) by "no utf8;". Utility functions The following functions are defined in the "utf8::" package by the perl core. o $num_octets = utf8::upgrade($string); Converts (in-place) internal representation of string to Perl's internal UTF-X form. Returns the number of octets necessary to repre- sent the string as UTF-X. Can be used to make sure that the UTF-8 flag is on, so that "w" or "lc()" work as expected on strings con- taining characters in the range 0x80-0xFF. Note that this should not be used to convert a legacy byte encoding to Unicode: use Encode for that. Affected by the encoding pragma. o utf8::downgrade($string[, FAIL_OK]) Converts (in-place) internal representation of string to be un-encoded bytes. Returns true on success. On failure dies or, if the value of FAIL_OK is true, returns false. Can be used to make sure that the UTF-8 flag is off, e.g. when you want to make sure that the substr() or length() function works with the usually faster byte algorithm. Note that this should not be used to convert Unicode back to a legacy byte encoding: use Encode for that. Not affected by the encoding pragma. o utf8::encode($string) Converts (in-place) $string from logical characters to octet sequence representing it in Perl's UTF-X encoding. Same as Encode::encode_utf8(). Note that this should not be used to convert a legacy byte encoding to Unicode: use Encode for that. o $flag = utf8::decode($string) Attempts to convert $string in-place from Perl's UTF-X encoding into logical characters. Same as Encode::decode_utf8(). Note that this should not be used to convert Unicode back to a legacy byte encoding: use Encode for that. o $flag = utf8::valid(STRING) [INTERNAL] Test whether STRING is in a consistent state. Will return true if string is held as bytes, or is well-formed UTF-8 and has the UTF-8 flag on. Main reason for this routine is to allow Perl's testsuite to check that operations have left strings in a consis- tent state. "utf8::encode" is like "utf8::upgrade", but the UTF8 flag is cleared. See perlunicode for more on the UTF8 flag and the C API functions "sv_utf8_upgrade", "sv_utf8_downgrade", "sv_utf8_encode", and "sv_utf8_decode", which are wrapped by the Perl functions "utf8::upgrade", "utf8::downgrade", "utf8::encode" and "utf8::decode". Note that in the Perl 5.8.0 implementation the functions utf8::valid, utf8::encode, utf8::decode, utf8::upgrade, and utf8::downgrade are always available, without a "require utf8" statement-- this may change in future releases. BUGS
One can have Unicode in identifier names, but not in package/class or subroutine names. While some limited functionality towards this does exist as of Perl 5.8.0, that is more accidental than designed; use of Unicode for the said purposes is unsupported. One reason of this unfinishedness is its (currently) inherent unportability: since both package names and subroutine names may need to be mapped to file and directory names, the Unicode capability of the filesystem becomes important-- and there unfortunately aren't portable answers. SEE ALSO
perlunicode, bytes perl v5.8.0 2002-06-01 utf8(3pm)
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