Ruby
Ruby
Demonstrate the Global.AutoQBDecode property
The Global.AutoQBDecode property can be set to _TRUE_ to cause Q/B encoded string arguments passed to any Chilkat method to be automatically decoded before being used.Note: This example requires Chilkat v10.0.0 or later.
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require 'chilkat'
# Turn on auto Q/B decoding for all strings passed to any Chilkat method in any Chilkat class.
glob = Chilkat::CkGlobal.new()
glob.put_AutoQBDecode(true)
# ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
# "Q" Encoding
# Quoted-Printable encoding is primarily used for text that is mostly ASCII with some non-ASCII characters.
# It encodes these characters in a way that remains mostly readable and compatible with ASCII-only systems.
# How It Works with UTF-8:
# - ASCII characters (except special characters like `=`) are encoded as themselves.
# - Non-ASCII characters are represented by their UTF-8 byte values, each byte encoded as `=` followed by two hexadecimal digits.
# For example, the UTF-8 character "é" (U+00E9) is encoded as `=C3=A9`.
# For example, consider the text "Café" encoded in UTF-8. The UTF-8 bytes for "é" are `C3 A9`, so in Quoted-Printable, it looks like this: Caf=C3=A9
# The "Q" encoding has this syntax: "=?charset?q?encoded_text?="
# For example: "=?UTF-8?Q?Caf=C3=A9_announcement?="
# ------
# "B" Encoding
# Base64 encoding is used to encode non-ASCII text, making it more suitable for text with a high density of non-ASCII characters, such as those found in non-Western European languages.
# For example, consider the text "こんにちは" ("Hello" in Japanese).
# The "B" encoded string would be "=?UTF-8?B?44GT44KT44Gr44Gh44Gv?="
# ------
# Q encoding is suitable for text that is mostly ASCII.
# B Encoding is best for text that is densely packed with non-us-ascii chars, such as non-Latin (Asian) languages.
# ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
# You can use Chilkat's online tool at Online Binary Encoder to pre-encode your literal strings before
# inserting them into your source code.
# When using the online tool, choose either "MIME header Q Encoding" or "MIME Header B Encoding".
# For example:
s_cafe = "=?utf-8?Q?Caf=C3=A9?="
s1 = Chilkat::CkStringBuilder.new()
s1.Append(s_cafe)
print s1.getAsString() + "\n";
# Output is Café
s_hello = "=?UTF-8?B?44GT44KT44Gr44Gh44Gv?="
s2 = Chilkat::CkStringBuilder.new()
s2.Append(s_hello)
print s2.getAsString() + "\n";
# Output is こんにちは