(Tcl) Decode Literal String
Decode a literal string. See Avoid Non-usascii Literal Strings in Source Code
load ./chilkat.dll
# It's best not to use non-usascii literal strings in source code.
# Instead, use a binary encoded representation of the string.
# This is the string "44ης Οδός, αρ.2" encoded as quoted-printable.
# Use Chilkat's online tool to prepare encoded strings: Online Binary Encoder
# Note: For strings that have very few us-ascii chars, it's better to use base64 encoding instead of quoted-printable.
set s "44=CE=B7=CF=82 =CE=9F=CE=B4=CF=8C=CF=82, =CE=B1=CF=81.2"
set sb [new_CkStringBuilder]
CkStringBuilder_AppendEncoded $sb $s "quoted-printable"
# For programming languages where strings are exposed bytes, you can tell Chilkat globally
# to give you the utf-8 byte representation.
# For programming languages where strings are opaque objects, such as C#, it doesn't matter.
set glob [new_CkGlobal]
CkGlobal_put_DefaultUtf8 $glob 1
set s [CkStringBuilder_getAsString $sb]
delete_CkStringBuilder $sb
delete_CkGlobal $glob
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