HTML::Entities - Encode or decode strings with HTML entities |
HTML::Entities - Encode or decode strings with HTML entities
use HTML::Entities;
$a = "Våre norske tegn bør æres"; decode_entities($a); encode_entities($a, "\200-\377");
For example, this:
$input = "vis-à-vis Beyoncé's naïve\npapier-mâché résumé"; print encode_entities($input), "\n"
Prints this out:
vis-à-vis Beyoncé's naïve papier-mâché résumé
This module deals with encoding and decoding of strings with HTML character entities. The module provides the following functions:
If multiple strings are provided as argument they are each decoded separately and the same number of strings are returned.
If called in void context the arguments are decoded in-place.
This routine is exported by default.
The keys in %entity2char are the entity names to be expanded and their values are what they should expand into. The values do not have to be single character strings. If a key has ``;'' as suffix, then occurrences in $string are only expanded if properly terminated with ``;''. Entities without ``;'' will be expanded regardless of how they are terminated for compatibility with how common browsers treat entities in the Latin-1 range.
If $expand_prefix is TRUE then entities without trailing ``;'' in %entity2char will even be expanded as a prefix of a longer unrecognized name. The longest matching name in %entity2char will be used. This is mainly present for compatibility with an MSIE misfeature.
$string = "foo bar"; _decode_entities($string, { nb => "@", nbsp => "\xA0" }, 1); print $string; # will print "foo bar"
This routine is exported by default.
The default set of characters to encode are control chars, high-bit chars, and
the <
, &
, >
, '
and "
characters. But this,
for example, would encode just the <
, &
, >
, and ``
>> characters:
$encoded = encode_entities($input, '<>&"');
and this would only encode non-plain ascii:
$encoded = encode_entities($input, '^\n\x20-\x25\x27-\x7e');
This routine is exported by default.
&#xhexnum;
and never &entname;
. For
example, encode_entities("r\xF4le")
returns ``rôle'', but
encode_entities_numeric("r\xF4le")
returns ``rôle''.
This routine is not exported by default. But you can always
export it with use HTML::Entities qw(encode_entities_numeric);
or even use HTML::Entities qw(:DEFAULT encode_entities_numeric);
All these routines modify the string passed as the first argument, if called in a void context. In scalar and array contexts, the encoded or decoded string is returned (without changing the input string).
If you prefer not to import these routines into your namespace, you can call them as:
use HTML::Entities (); $decoded = HTML::Entities::decode($a); $encoded = HTML::Entities::encode($a); $encoded = HTML::Entities::encode_numeric($a);
The module can also export the %char2entity and the %entity2char hashes, which contain the mapping from all characters to the corresponding entities (and vice versa, respectively).
Copyright 1995-2006 Gisle Aas. All rights reserved.
This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.
HTML::Entities - Encode or decode strings with HTML entities |