ImageGear for C and C++ on Linux - Updated
IG_PDF_get_host_encoding
API Reference Guide > PDF Component API Reference > PDF Component Functions Reference > IG_PDF_get_host_encoding

Indicates what kind of host encoding a system uses: Roman or non-Roman.

Declaration:

 
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AT_ERRCOUNT ACCUAPI IG_PDF_get_host_encoding(
        LPVOID* lpHostEncoding
);

Arguments:

Name Type Description
lpHostEncoding LPVOID* Returns 0 for a Roman system; nonzero for a non-Roman system (a structure that depends on the host encoding). Users should simply test whether this value is 0 or not.

Return Value:

Error count

Supported Raster Image Formats:

This function does not process image pixels.

Remarks:

Non-Roman is also known as CJK-capable, that is, capable of handling multi-byte character sets, such as Chinese, Japanese, or Korean.

Host encoding is a platform-dependent encoding for the host machine. For non-UNIX Roman systems, it is MacRomanEncoding in Mac OS and WinAnsiEncoding in Windows. In UNIX (except HP-UX) Roman systems, it is ISO8859-1 (ISO Latin-1); for HP-UX, it is HP-ROMAN8. See Appendix D in the PDF Reference for descriptions of MacRomanEncoding, WinAnsiEncoding, and PDFDocEncoding.

For non-Roman systems, the host encoding may be a variety of encodings, which are defined by a CMap (character map). See Section 5.6.4 in the PDF Reference for a list of predefined CMaps.