Encodings

The Basics

A character encoding, often shortened to encoding, is a mapping between:

Some character sets contain only 1-byte characters; US-ASCII, for example, has 256 1-byte characters. This string, encoded in US-ASCII, has six characters that are stored as six bytes:

s = 'Hello!'.encode('US-ASCII')  # => "Hello!"
s.encoding                       # => #<Encoding:US-ASCII>
s.bytes                          # => [72, 101, 108, 108, 111, 33]

Other encodings may involve multi-byte characters. UTF-8, for example, encodes more than one million characters, encoding each in one to four bytes. The lowest-valued of these characters correspond to ASCII characters, and so are 1-byte characters:

s = 'Hello!' # => "Hello!"
s.bytes      # => [72, 101, 108, 108, 111, 33]

Other characters, such as the Euro symbol, are multi-byte:

s = "\u20ac" # => "€"
s.bytes      # => [226, 130, 172]

The Encoding Class

Encoding Objects

Ruby encodings are defined by constants in class Encoding. There can be only one instance of Encoding for each of these constants. Method Encoding.list returns an array of Encoding objects (one for each constant):

Encoding.list.size        # => 103
Encoding.list.first.class # => Encoding
Encoding.list.take(3)
# => [#<Encoding:ASCII-8BIT>, #<Encoding:UTF-8>, #<Encoding:US-ASCII>]

Names and Aliases

Method Encoding#name returns the name of an Encoding:

Encoding::ASCII_8BIT.name  # => "ASCII-8BIT"
Encoding::WINDOWS_31J.name # => "Windows-31J"

An Encoding object has zero or more aliases; method Encoding#names returns an array containing the name and all aliases:

Encoding::ASCII_8BIT.names
# => ["ASCII-8BIT", "BINARY"]
Encoding::WINDOWS_31J.names
#=> ["Windows-31J", "CP932", "csWindows31J", "SJIS", "PCK"]

Method Encoding.aliases returns a hash of all alias/name pairs:

Encoding.aliases.size # => 71
Encoding.aliases.take(3)
# => [["BINARY", "ASCII-8BIT"], ["CP437", "IBM437"], ["CP720", "IBM720"]]

Method Encoding.name_list returns an array of all the encoding names and aliases:

Encoding.name_list.size # => 175
Encoding.name_list.take(3)
# => ["ASCII-8BIT", "UTF-8", "US-ASCII"]

Method name_list returns more entries than method list because it includes both the names and their aliases.

Method Encoding.find returns the Encoding for a given name or alias, if it exists:

Encoding.find("US-ASCII")       # => #<Encoding:US-ASCII>
Encoding.find("US-ASCII").class # => Encoding

Default Encodings

Method Encoding.find, above, also returns a default Encoding for each of these special names:

Method Encoding.default_external returns the default external Encoding:

Encoding.default_external # => #<Encoding:UTF-8>

Method Encoding.default_external= sets that value:

Encoding.default_external = 'US-ASCII' # => "US-ASCII"
Encoding.default_external              # => #<Encoding:US-ASCII>

Method Encoding.default_internal returns the default internal Encoding:

Encoding.default_internal # => nil

Method Encoding.default_internal= sets the default internal Encoding:

Encoding.default_internal = 'US-ASCII' # => "US-ASCII"
Encoding.default_internal              # => #<Encoding:US-ASCII>

Compatible Encodings

Method Encoding.compatible? returns whether two given objects are encoding-compatible (that is, whether they can be concatenated); returns the Encoding of the concatenated string, or nil if incompatible:

rus = "\u{442 435 441 442}"
eng = 'text'
Encoding.compatible?(rus, eng) # => #<Encoding:UTF-8>

s0 = "\xa1\xa1".force_encoding('iso-8859-1') # => "\xA1\xA1"
s1 = "\xa1\xa1".force_encoding('euc-jp')     # => "\x{A1A1}"
Encoding.compatible?(s0, s1)                 # => nil

String Encoding

A Ruby String object has an encoding that is an instance of class Encoding. The encoding may be retrieved by method String#encoding.

The default encoding for a string literal is the script encoding (see Script encoding at Encoding):

's'.encoding # => #<Encoding:UTF-8>

The default encoding for a string created with method String.new is:

In either case, any encoding may be specified:

s = String.new(encoding: 'UTF-8')             # => ""
s.encoding                                    # => #<Encoding:UTF-8>
s = String.new('foo', encoding: 'ASCII-8BIT') # => "foo"
s.encoding                                    # => #<Encoding:ASCII-8BIT>

The encoding for a string may be changed:

s = "R\xC3\xA9sum\xC3\xA9"     # => "Résumé"
s.encoding                     # => #<Encoding:UTF-8>
s.force_encoding('ISO-8859-1') # => "R\xC3\xA9sum\xC3\xA9"
s.encoding                     # => #<Encoding:ISO-8859-1>

Changing the assigned encoding does not alter the content of the string; it changes only the way the content is to be interpreted:

s                         # => "R\xC3\xA9sum\xC3\xA9"
s.force_encoding('UTF-8') # => "Résumé"

The actual content of a string may also be altered; see Transcoding a String.

Here are a couple of useful query methods:

s = "abc".force_encoding("UTF-8")         # => "abc"
s.ascii_only?                             # => true
s = "abc\u{6666}".force_encoding("UTF-8") # => "abc晦"
s.ascii_only?                             # => false

s = "\xc2\xa1".force_encoding("UTF-8") # => "¡"
s.valid_encoding?                      # => true
s = "\xc2".force_encoding("UTF-8")     # => "\xC2"
s.valid_encoding?                      # => false

Symbol and Regexp Encodings

The string stored in a Symbol or Regexp object also has an encoding; the encoding may be retrieved by method Symbol#encoding or Regexp#encoding.

The default encoding for these, however, is:

Filesystem Encoding

The filesystem encoding is the default Encoding for a string from the filesystem:

Encoding.find("filesystem") # => #<Encoding:UTF-8>

Locale Encoding

The locale encoding is the default encoding for a string from the environment, other than from the filesystem:

Encoding.find('locale') # => #<Encoding:IBM437>

Stream Encodings

Certain stream objects can have two encodings; these objects include instances of:

The two encodings are:

External Encoding

The external encoding, which is an Encoding object, specifies how bytes read from the stream are to be interpreted as characters.

The default external encoding is:

The default external encoding is returned by method Encoding.default_external, and may be set by:

You can also set the default external encoding using method Encoding.default_external=, but doing so may cause problems; strings created before and after the change may have a different encodings.

For an IO or File object, the external encoding may be set by:

For an IO, File, ARGF, or StringIO object, the external encoding may be set by:

Internal Encoding

The internal encoding, which is an Encoding object or nil, specifies how characters read from the stream are to be converted to characters in the internal encoding; those characters become a string whose encoding is set to the internal encoding.

The default internal encoding is nil (no conversion). It is returned by method Encoding.default_internal, and may be set by:

You can also set the default internal encoding using method Encoding.default_internal=, but doing so may cause problems; strings created before and after the change may have a different encodings.

For an IO or File object, the internal encoding may be set by:

For an IO, File, ARGF, or StringIO object, the internal encoding may be set by:

Script Encoding

A Ruby script has a script encoding, which may be retrieved by:

__ENCODING__ # => #<Encoding:UTF-8>

The default script encoding is UTF-8; a Ruby source file may set its script encoding with a magic comment on the first line of the file (or second line, if there is a shebang on the first). The comment must contain the word coding or encoding, followed by a colon, space and the Encoding name or alias:

# encoding: ISO-8859-1
__ENCODING__ #=> #<Encoding:ISO-8859-1>

Transcoding

Transcoding is the process of changing a sequence of characters from one encoding to another.

As far as possible, the characters remain the same, but the bytes that represent them may change.

The handling for characters that cannot be represented in the destination encoding may be specified by @Encoding+Options.

Transcoding a String

Each of these methods transcodes a string:

Transcoding a Stream

Each of these methods may transcode a stream; whether it does so depends on the external and internal encodings:

This example writes a string to a file, encoding it as ISO-8859-1, then reads the file into a new string, encoding it as UTF-8:

s = "R\u00E9sum\u00E9"
path = 't.tmp'
ext_enc = 'ISO-8859-1'
int_enc = 'UTF-8'

File.write(path, s, external_encoding: ext_enc)
raw_text = File.binread(path)

transcoded_text = File.read(path, external_encoding: ext_enc, internal_encoding: int_enc)

p raw_text
p transcoded_text

Output:

"R\xE9sum\xE9"
"Résumé"

Encoding Options

A number of methods in the Ruby core accept keyword arguments as encoding options.

Some of the options specify or utilize a replacement string, to be used in certain transcoding operations. A replacement string may be in any encoding that can be converted to the encoding of the destination string.

These keyword-value pairs specify encoding options: