\section{Standard Module \module{binhex}} \declaremodule{standard}{binhex} \modulesynopsis{Encode and decode files in binhex4 format.} This module encodes and decodes files in binhex4 format, a format allowing representation of Macintosh files in \ASCII{}. On the Macintosh, both forks of a file and the finder information are encoded (or decoded), on other platforms only the data fork is handled. The \module{binhex} module defines the following functions: \begin{funcdesc}{binhex}{input, output} Convert a binary file with filename \var{input} to binhex file \var{output}. The \var{output} parameter can either be a filename or a file-like object (any object supporting a \var{write} and \var{close} method). \end{funcdesc} \begin{funcdesc}{hexbin}{input\optional{, output}} Decode a binhex file \var{input}. \var{input} may be a filename or a file-like object supporting \var{read} and \var{close} methods. The resulting file is written to a file named \var{output}, unless the argument is empty in which case the output filename is read from the binhex file. \end{funcdesc} \subsection{Notes} There is an alternative, more powerful interface to the coder and decoder, see the source for details. If you code or decode textfiles on non-Macintosh platforms they will still use the Macintosh newline convention (carriage-return as end of line). As of this writing, \function{hexbin()} appears to not work in all cases.