
Badger::Codec::Encode - codec wrapper around Encode

use Badger::Codec::Encode;
my $codec = Badger::Codec::Encode->new();
my $encoded = $codec->encode( utf8 => "...some utf8 data..." );
my $decoded = $codec->decode( utf8 => $encoded );

This module is a subclass of Badger::Codec implementing a very thin wrapper around the Encode module. It exists only to provide a consistent API with other Badger::Codec modules and to facilitate codec chaining.
You would normally use a codec via the Badger::Codecs module.
use Badger::Codecs
codec => 'encode';
my $encoding = 'UTF-8';
my $uncoded = "...some UTF-8 data...";
my $encoded = encode($encoding, $uncoded);
my $decoded = decode($encoding, $encoded)
The above example is identical to using the Encode module directly:
use Encode; # also exports encode()/decode()
In addition, a Badger::Codec::Encode object will be available via the codec() subroutine.
my $encoded = codec->encode($encoding, $uncoded);
my $decoded = codec->decode($encoding, $encoded)

Method for encoding data which forwards all arguments to the Encode encode() method. The first argument is the encoding, the second is the data to encode.
$encoded = Badger::Codec::Encode->encode( utf8 => $data );
Method for decoding data which forwards all arguments to the Encode decode() method. The first argument is the encoding, the second is the data to decode.
$decoded = Badger::Codec::Encode->decode( utf8 => $encoded );
This method returns a reference to the real subroutine that's doing all the encoding work, i.e. the encode() function in Encode.
This method returns a reference to the real subroutine that's doing all the encoding work, i.e. the decode() method in Encode.

Andy Wardley <abw@wardley.org>

Copyright (C) 2005-2008 Andy Wardley. All rights reserved.

Encode, Badger::Codecs, Badger::Codec, Badger::Codec::Unicode.