How do I determine file encoding in OS X?
Using the -I
(that's a capital i) option on the file
command seems to show the file encoding.
file -I {filename}
In Mac OS X the command file -I
(capital i) will give you the proper character set so long as the file you are testing contains characters outside of the basic ASCII range.
For instance if you go into Terminal and use vi to create a file eg. vi test.txt
then insert some characters and include an accented character (try ALT-e followed by e)
then save the file.
They type file -I text.txt
and you should get a result like this:
test.txt: text/plain; charset=utf-8
The @
means that the file has extended file attributes associated with it. You can query them using the getxattr()
function.
There's no definite way to detect the encoding of a file. Read this answer, it explains why.
There's a command line tool, enca, that attempts to guess the encoding. You might want to check it out.
vim -c 'execute "silent !echo " . &fileencoding | q' {filename}
aliased somewhere in my bash configuration as
alias vic="vim -c 'execute \"silent \!echo \" . &fileencoding | q'"
so I just type
vic {filename}
On my vanilla OSX Yosemite, it yields more precise results than "file -I":
$ file -I pdfs/udocument0.pdf
pdfs/udocument0.pdf: application/pdf; charset=binary
$ vic pdfs/udocument0.pdf
latin1
$
$ file -I pdfs/t0.pdf
pdfs/t0.pdf: application/pdf; charset=us-ascii
$ vic pdfs/t0.pdf
utf-8
You can also convert from one file type to another using the following command :
iconv -f original_charset -t new_charset originalfile > newfile
e.g.
iconv -f utf-16le -t utf-8 file1.txt > file2.txt