Why do my Perl tests fail with use encoding 'utf8'?
Do not use the encoding
pragma. It’s broken. (Juerd Waalboer gave a great talk where he mentioned this at YAPC::EU 2k8.)
It does at least two things at once that do not belong together:
- It specifies an encoding for your source file.
- It specifies an encoding for your file input/output.
And to add injury to insult it also does #1 in a broken fashion: it reinterprets \xNN
sequences as being undecoded octets as opposed to treating them like codepoints, and decodes them, preventing you from being able to express characters outside the encoding you specified and making your source code mean different things depending on the encoding. That’s just astonishingly wrong.
Write your source code in ASCII or UTF-8 only. In the latter case, the utf8
pragma is the correct thing to use. If you don’t want to use UTF-8, but you do want to include non-ASCII charcters, escape or decode them explicitly.
And use I/O layers explicitly or set them using the open
pragma to have I/O automatically transcoded properly.
It works fine on my computer (on perl 5.10). Maybe you should try replacing that use encoding 'utf8'
with use utf8
.
What version of perl are you using? I think older versions had bugs with UTF-8 in regexps.