GNU LIBICONV - character set conversion library This library provides an iconv() implementation, for use on systems which don't have one, or whose implementation cannot convert from/to Unicode. It provides support for the encodings: European languages ASCII, ISO-8859-{1,2,3,4,5,7,9,10,13,14,15,16}, KOI8-R, KOI8-U, KOI8-RU, CP{1250,1251,1252,1253,1254,1257}, CP{850,866}, Mac{Roman,CentralEurope,Iceland,Croatian,Romania}, Mac{Cyrillic,Ukraine,Greek,Turkish}, Macintosh Semitic languages ISO-8859-{6,8}, CP{1255,1256}, CP862, Mac{Hebrew,Arabic} Japanese EUC-JP, SHIFT-JIS, CP932, ISO-2022-JP, ISO-2022-JP-2, ISO-2022-JP-1 Chinese EUC-CN, HZ, GBK, GB18030, EUC-TW, BIG5, CP950, BIG5-HKSCS, ISO-2022-CN, ISO-2022-CN-EXT Korean EUC-KR, CP949, ISO-2022-KR, JOHAB Armenian ARMSCII-8 Georgian Georgian-Academy, Georgian-PS Thai TIS-620, CP874, MacThai Laotian MuleLao-1, CP1133 Vietnamese VISCII, TCVN, CP1258 Platform specifics HP-ROMAN8, NEXTSTEP Full Unicode UTF-8 UCS-2, UCS-2BE, UCS-2LE UCS-4, UCS-4BE, UCS-4LE UTF-16, UTF-16BE, UTF-16LE UTF-32, UTF-32BE, UTF-32LE UTF-7 JAVA Full Unicode, in terms of `uint16_t' or `uint32_t' (with machine dependent endianness and alignment) UCS-2-INTERNAL, UCS-4-INTERNAL Locale dependent, in terms of `char' or `wchar_t' (with machine dependent endianness and alignment, and with OS and locale dependent semantics) char, wchar_t It can convert from any of these encodings to any other, through Unicode conversion. It has also some limited support for transliteration, i.e. when a character cannot be represented in the target character set, it can be approximated through one or several similarly looking characters. Transliteration is activated when "//TRANSLIT" is appended to the target encoding name. libiconv is for you if your application needs to support multiple character encodings, but that support lacks from your system. Installation: As usual for GNU packages: $ ./configure --prefix=/usr/local $ make $ make install This library can be built and installed in two variants: - The library mode. This works on all systems, and uses a library `libiconv.so' and a header file `'. (Both are installed through "make install".) To use it, simply #include and use the functions. To use it in an autoconfiguring package: - If you don't use automake, append extras/iconv.m4 to your aclocal.m4 file. - If you do use automake, add extras/iconv.m4 to your m4 macro repository. - Also add @LIBICONV@ to your exe or lib link lines (eg, via _LDADD target). - The libc plug/override mode. This works on GNU/Linux, Solaris and OSF/1 systems only. It is a way to get good iconv support without having glibc-2.1. It installs a library `libiconv_plug.so'. This library can be used with LD_PRELOAD, to override the iconv* functions present in the C library. On GNU/Linux and Solaris: $ export LD_PRELOAD=/usr/local/lib/libiconv_plug.so On OSF/1: $ export _RLD_LIST=/usr/local/lib/libiconv_plug.so:DEFAULT A program's source need not be modified, the program need not even be recompiled. Just set the LD_PRELOAD environment variable, that's it! Distribution: ftp://ftp.gnu.org/pub/gnu/libiconv/libiconv-1.7.tar.gz ftp://ftp.ilog.fr/pub/Users/haible/gnu/libiconv-1.7.tar.gz Homepage: http://clisp.cons.org/~haible/packages-libiconv.html Bruno Haible