[whatwg] [encoding] utf-16
Anne van Kesteren
annevk at opera.com
Tue Dec 27 06:52:01 PST 2011
I ran some utf-16 tests using 007A as input data, optionally preceded by
FFFE or FEFF, and with utf-16, utf-16le, and utf-16be declared in the
Content-Type header. For WebKit I tested both Safari 5.1.2 and Chrome
17.0.963.12. Trident is Internet Explorer 9 on Windows 7. Presto is Opera
11.60. Gecko is Nightly 12.0a1 (2011-12-26).
HTTP BOM Trident WebKit Gecko Presto
utf-16 - 7A00 7A00 007A 007A
utf-16le - 7A00 7A00 7A00 7A00
utf-16be - 007A 007A 007A 007A
utf-16 FFFE 7A00 7A00 7A00 7A00
utf-16le FFFE 7A00 7A00 7A00 7A00
utf-16be FFFE 7A00 7A00 FFFD* FFFD*
utf-16 FEFF 007A 007A 007A 007A
utf-16le FEFF 007A 007A FFFD** FFFD**
utf-16be FEFF 007A 007A 007A 007A
* Gecko decodes FFFE 007A as FFFD followed by FE00 presumably dropping the
7A. Opera decodes it as FFFD 007A.
** Gecko decoes FEFF 007A as FFFD followed by 00FF presumably dropping the
7A. Opera decodes it as FFFD 7A00.
It seems in Trident/WebKit utf-16 and utf-16le are labels for the same
encoding and the BOM is more important than the encoding. Gecko and Presto
match existing specifications around utf-16 with different error handling
(afaict).
I think http://dvcs.w3.org/hg/encoding/raw-file/tip/Overview.html should
follow Trident/WebKit. Specifically: utf-16 defaults to utf-16le in
absence of a BOM. utf-16le becomes a label for utf-16. A BOM overrides the
direction (of utf-16 / utf-16be) and is removed from the output.
--
Anne van Kesteren
http://annevankesteren.nl/
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