CHARCONV - CHARACTER SET AND ENCODING CONVERTER.
charconv v1.1.0 - Copyright (C) 1992,2001 Bisqwit (http://iki.fi/bisqwit/
This is free software; see the source for copying conditions. There is no warranty; not even for merchantability or fitness for a particular purpose.
Usage: charconv [-h] <incharset> <outcharset>
Reads stdin, outputs stdout. Does incharset->outcharset conversion via unicode.
-h = Input is html (THIS BUGS)
Available character sets/encodings:
- unihtml (&#number; codes)
- utf8linux (with vt100 escape codes)
- utf7mod (imap modified)
- koi8-r - jis-x-0201 - shift_jis - big5 - iso-8859-1 - iso-8859-2 - iso-8859-3 - iso-8859-4 - iso-8859-5 - iso-8859-6 - iso-8859-7 - iso-8859-8 - iso-8859-9 - iso-8859-10 - iso-8859-13 - iso-8859-14 - iso-8859-15 - cp437 - cp737 - cp775 - cp850 - cp852 - cp855 - cp857 - cp860 - cp861 - cp862 - cp863 - cp864 - cp865 - cp866 - cp869 - cp874 - cp1250 - cp1252 - cp1254 - cp1256 - cp1258 - cp1251 - cp1253 - cp1255 - cp1257 - cp856 - cp1006 - cp424 - roman - iso-2022-jp - utf8 - utf7 - euc-jp
Typoes are allowed to some degree in the character set names, and some general aliases like latin* and iso* are known.
Too much information? Pipe to a pager.
To install charconv, do:
make
make install
To select (out) some character sets and encodings, edit the unicode/everything script.
To change the installation path, edit Makefile and change the BINDIR-setting.
To compile, you need (at least):
gnu make
g++ (3.0.1 works fine)
- Optional
- php (is used to renerate parts of makefiles)
Current primary source distribution site (no homepage):
