Manpage of ICONV_OPEN
#include <iconv.h> iconv_t iconv_open (const char* tocode, const char* fromcode);
The values permitted for fromcode and tocode and the supported combinations are system dependent. For the libiconv library, the following encodings are supported, in all combinations.
ASCII, ISO-8859-{1,2,3,4,5,7,9,10,13,14,15,16}, KOI8-R, KOI8-U, KOI8-RU, CP{1250,1251,1252,1253,1254,1257}, CP{850,866}, Mac{Roman,CentralEurope,Iceland,Croatian,Romania}, Mac{Cyrillic,Ukraine,Greek,Turkish}, Macintosh
ISO-8859-{6,8}, CP{1255,1256}, CP862, Mac{Hebrew,Arabic}
EUC-JP, SHIFT_JIS, CP932, ISO-2022-JP, ISO-2022-JP-2, ISO-2022-JP-1
EUC-CN, HZ, GBK, GB18030, EUC-TW, BIG5, CP950, BIG5-HKSCS, ISO-2022-CN, ISO-2022-CN-EXT
EUC-KR, CP949, ISO-2022-KR, JOHAB
ARMSCII-8
Georgian-Academy, Georgian-PS
KOI8-T
TIS-620, CP874, MacThai
MuleLao-1, CP1133
VISCII, TCVN, CP1258
HP-ROMAN8, NEXTSTEP
UTF-8
UCS-2, UCS-2BE, UCS-2LE
UCS-4, UCS-4BE, UCS-4LE
UTF-16, UTF-16BE, UTF-16LE
UTF-32, UTF-32BE, UTF-32LE
UTF-7
C99, JAVA
UCS-2-INTERNAL, UCS-4-INTERNAL
char, wchar_t
When configured with the option --enable-extra-encodings, it also provides support for a few extra encodings:
CP{437,737,775,852,853,855,857,858,860,861,863,865,869,1125}
CP864
EUC-JISX0213, Shift_JISX0213, ISO-2022-JP-3
TDS565
RISCOS-LATIN1
The empty encoding name "" is equivalent to "char": it denotes the locale dependent character encoding.
When the string "//TRANSLIT" is appended to tocode, transliteration is activated. This means that when a character cannot be represented in the target character set, it can be approximated through one or several similarly looking characters.
When the string "//IGNORE" is appended to tocode, characters that cannot be represented in the target character set will be silently discarded.
The resulting conversion descriptor can be used with iconv any number of times. It remains valid until deallocated using iconv_close.
A conversion descriptor contains a conversion state. After creation using iconv_open, the state is in the initial state. Using iconv modifies the descriptor's conversion state. (This implies that a conversion descriptor can not be used in multiple threads simultaneously.) To bring the state back to the initial state, use iconv with NULL as inbuf argument.