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Home/ Questions/Q 9242443
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: June 18, 20262026-06-18T08:34:49+00:00 2026-06-18T08:34:49+00:00

Do these three versions all behave differently? use open qw( :encoding(UTF-8) :std ); use

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Do these three versions all behave differently?

use open qw( :encoding(UTF-8) :std );  
use open qw( :encoding(UTF8) :std );  
use open qw( :utf8 :std );  
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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-06-18T08:34:50+00:00Added an answer on June 18, 2026 at 8:34 am

    Firstly, :utf8 only markes the text as UTF-8 it does not check that it is valid. See this post on PerlMonks for information.

    :encoding is an Extension Layer to PerlIO, perl perldoc perliol

    “:encoding” use Encoding;
    makes this layer available, although PerlIO.pm “knows” where to find it. It is an example of a layer which takes an argument as it is called thus: open( $fh, “<:encoding(iso-8859-7)”, $pathname );

    The other two questions are answered in the FAQ perldoc perlunifaq

    What is the difference between “:encoding” and “:utf8”? Because UTF-8 is one of Perl’s internal formats, you can often just skip the encoding or decoding step, and manipulate the UTF8 flag directly. Instead of “:encoding(UTF-8)”, you can simply use “:utf8”, which skips the encoding step if the data was already represented as UTF8 internally. This is widely accepted as good behavior when you’re writing, but it can be dangerous when reading, because it causes internal inconsistency when you have invalid byte sequences. Using “:utf8” for input can sometimes result in security breaches, so please use “:encoding(UTF-8)” instead. Instead of “decode” and “encode”, you could use “_utf8_on” and “_utf8_off”, but this is considered bad style. Especially “_utf8_on” can be dangerous, for the same reason that “:utf8” can. There are some shortcuts for oneliners; see “-C” in perlrun.

    What’s the difference between “UTF-8” and “utf8”? “UTF-8” is the official standard. “utf8” is Perl’s way of being liberal in what it accepts. If you have to communicate with things that aren’t so liberal, you may want to consider using “UTF-8”. If you have to communicate with things that are too liberal, you may have to use “utf8”. The full explanation is in Encode. “UTF-8” is internally known as “utf-8-strict”. The tutorial uses UTF-8 consistently, even where utf8 is actually used internally, because the distinction can be hard to make, and is mostly irrelevant. For example, utf8 can be used for code points that don’t exist in Unicode, like 9999999, but if you encode that to UTF-8, you get a substitution character (by default; see “Handling Malformed Data” in Encode for more ways of dealing with this.) Okay, if you insist: the “internal format” is utf8, not UTF-8. (When it’s not some other encoding.)

    The open pragma (ie., use open) only sets the default PerlIO layers for input and output; :std does the following,

    The “:std” subpragma on its own has no effect, but if combined with the “:utf8” or “:encoding” subpragmas, it converts the standard filehandles (STDIN, STDOUT, STDERR) to comply with encoding selected for input/output handles. For example, if both input and out are chosen to be “:encoding(utf8)”, a “:std” will mean that STDIN, STDOUT, and STDERR are also in “:encoding(utf8)”. On the other hand, if only output is chosen to be in “:encoding(koi8r)”, a “:std” will cause only the STDOUT and STDERR to be in “koi8r”. The “:locale” subpragma implicitly turns on “:std”.

    So :std is a subpragma (open.pm specific) that sets the Standard Streams to receive Unicode Input perl :utf8 as above.

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