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ibm866 is a robust JavaScript implementation of the ibm866 character encoding as defined by the Encoding Standard.
This encoding is known under the following names: 866, cp866, csibm866, and ibm866.
Via npm:
npm install ibm866
Via Bower:
bower install ibm866
Via Component:
component install mathiasbynens/ibm866
In a browser:
<script src="ibm866.js"></script>
In Narwhal, Node.js, and RingoJS:
var ibm866 = require('ibm866');
In Rhino:
load('ibm866.js');
Using an AMD loader like RequireJS:
require(
{
'paths': {
'ibm866': 'path/to/ibm866'
}
},
['ibm866'],
function(ibm866) {
console.log(ibm866);
}
);
ibm866.version
A string representing the semantic version number.
ibm866.labels
An array of strings, each representing a label for this encoding.
ibm866.encode(input, options)
This function takes a plain text string (the input
parameter) and encodes it according to ibm866. The return value is a ‘byte string’, i.e. a string of which each item represents an octet as per ibm866.
var encodedData = ibm866.encode(text);
The optional options
object and its mode
property can be used to set the error mode. For encoding, the error mode can be 'fatal'
(the default) or 'html'
.
var encodedData = ibm866.encode(text, {
'mode': 'html'
});
// If `text` contains a symbol that cannot be represented in ibm866,
// instead of throwing an error, it will return an HTML entity for the symbol.
ibm866.decode(input, options)
This function takes a byte string (the input
parameter) and decodes it according to ibm866.
var text = ibm866.decode(encodedData);
The optional options
object and its mode
property can be used to set the error mode. For decoding, the error mode can be 'replacement'
(the default) or 'fatal'
.
var text = ibm866.decode(encodedData, {
'mode': 'fatal'
});
// If `encodedData` contains an invalid byte for the ibm866 encoding,
// instead of replacing it with U+FFFD in the output, an error is thrown.
ibm866 is designed to work in at least Node.js v0.10.0, Narwhal 0.3.2, RingoJS 0.8-0.9, PhantomJS 1.9.0, Rhino 1.7RC4, as well as old and modern versions of Chrome, Firefox, Safari, Opera, and Internet Explorer.
After cloning this repository, run npm install
to install the dependencies needed for development and testing. You may want to install Istanbul globally using npm install istanbul -g
.
Once that’s done, you can run the unit tests in Node using npm test
or node tests/tests.js
. To run the tests in Rhino, Ringo, Narwhal, and web browsers as well, use grunt test
.
To generate the code coverage report, use grunt cover
.
Similar modules for other single-byte legacy encodings are available.
Mathias Bynens |
ibm866 is available under the MIT license.
FAQs
A robust ibm866 encoder/decoder written in JavaScript.
We found that ibm866 demonstrated a not healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released a year ago. It has 2 open source maintainers collaborating on the project.
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