in reply to Re: Unicode encoding
in thread Unicode encoding

Actually you can change the code page to utf8 for cmd.exe (for $^O >= win2k):
system(chcp => 65001, '2>nul', '1>nul')
But you'll also need a font to display the chars :) Lucida Console can't display everything AFAIK. However, it'll be enough for your local code page. It's good enough for Turkish for example.

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Re^3: Unicode encoding
by Juerd (Abbot) on Jun 21, 2009 at 23:40 UTC

    But you'll also need a font to display the chars :) Lucida Console can't display everything AFAIK.

    No font contains every glyph that Unicode supports. That's why good software supports falling back to other fonts; cmd.exe is not good software in this regard :)

Re^3: Unicode encoding
by ikegami (Patriarch) on Jun 22, 2009 at 04:12 UTC

    Your system call is wrong. You're telling Perl to pass '2>nul' and '1>nul' as parameters to chcp while they only make sense in a command passed to the shell. The call should be

    system('chcp 65001 2>nul 1>nul')

    which is short for

    system(cmd => ( '/c' => 'chcp 65001 2>nul 1>nul' ) )

    If you want to avoid calling the shell, you need the following:

    open(my $fh, '>', 'nul') or die "open nul: $!\n"; my $pid = open3( undef, # Use parent's STDIN '>&'.fileno($fh), # STDOUT = nul undef, # STDERR = STDOUT chcp => 65001, ); waitpid($pid, 0);

    Now, system is buggy on Windows, so your code might actually function as you intend it to. But if it does, you're relying on a bug in Perl.