Unicode::NormalizeSection: Perl Programmers Reference Guide (3)Updated: 2001-09-21 |
Unicode::NormalizeSection: Perl Programmers Reference Guide (3)Updated: 2001-09-21 |
use Unicode::Normalize;
$NFD_string = NFD($string); # Normalization Form D $NFC_string = NFC($string); # Normalization Form C $NFKD_string = NFKD($string); # Normalization Form KD $NFKC_string = NFKC($string); # Normalization Form KC
or
use Unicode::Normalize 'normalize';
$NFD_string = normalize('D', $string); # Normalization Form D
$NFC_string = normalize('C', $string); # Normalization Form C
$NFKD_string = normalize('KD', $string); # Normalization Form KD
$NFKC_string = normalize('KC', $string); # Normalization Form KC
$string is used as a string under character semantics (see perlunicode).
$codepoint should be an unsigned integer representing a Unicode code point.
Note: Between XS edition and pure Perl edition, interpretation of $codepoint as a decimal number has incompatibility. XS converts $codepoint to an unsigned integer, but pure Perl does not. Do not use a floating point nor a negative sign in $codepoint.
Note: FCD is not always unique, then plural forms may be equivalent each other. "FCD()" will return one of these equivalent forms.
Note: FCC is unique, as well as four normalization forms (NF*).
'C' or 'NFC' for Normalization Form C (UAX #15) 'D' or 'NFD' for Normalization Form D (UAX #15) 'KC' or 'NFKC' for Normalization Form KC (UAX #15) 'KD' or 'NFKD' for Normalization Form KD (UAX #15)
'FCD' for "Fast C or D" Form (UTN #5) 'FCC' for "Fast C Contiguous" (UTN #5)
If the second parameter (a boolean) is omitted or false, decomposes it using the Canonical Decomposition Mapping. If true, decomposes it using the Compatibility Decomposition Mapping.
The string returned is not always in NFD/NFKD. Reordering may be required.
$NFD_string = reorder(decompose($string)); # eq. to NFD()
$NFKD_string = reorder(decompose($string, TRUE)); # eq. to NFKD()
E.g., when you have a list of NFD/NFKD strings, you can get the concatenated NFD/NFKD string from them, saying
$concat_NFD = reorder(join '', @NFD_strings);
$concat_NFKD = reorder(join '', @NFKD_strings);
E.g., when you have a NFD/NFKD string, you can get its NFC/NFKC string, saying
$NFC_string = compose($NFD_string);
$NFKC_string = compose($NFKD_string);
The following functions check whether the string is in that normalization form.
The result returned will be:
YES The string is in that normalization form.
NO The string is not in that normalization form.
MAYBE Dubious. Maybe yes, maybe no.
If a string is not in FCD, it must not be in FCC. So "checkFCC($not_FCD_string)" should return "NO".
$form_name is alike to that for "normalize()".
Note
In the cases of NFD, NFKD, and FCD, the answer must be either "YES" or "NO". The answer "MAYBE" may be returned in the cases of NFC, NFKC, and FCC.
A "MAYBE" string should contain at least one combining character or the like. For example, "COMBINING ACUTE ACCENT" has the MAYBE_NFC/MAYBE_NFKC property.
Both "checkNFC("A\N{COMBINING ACUTE ACCENT}")" and "checkNFC("B\N{COMBINING ACUTE ACCENT}")" will return "MAYBE". "A\N{COMBINING ACUTE ACCENT}" is not in NFC (its NFC is "\N{LATIN CAPITAL LETTER A WITH ACUTE}"), while "B\N{COMBINING ACUTE ACCENT}" is in NFC.
If you want to check exactly, compare the string with its NFC/NFKC/FCC; i.e.,
$string eq NFC($string) # thorough than checkNFC($string)
$string eq NFKC($string) # thorough than checkNFKC($string)
$string eq FCC($string) # thorough than checkFCC($string)
If it is not decomposable, returns "undef".
If it is not decomposable, returns "undef".
If they are not composable, returns "undef".
"normalize" and other some functions: on request.
http://homepage1.nifty.com/nomenclator/perl/
Copyright(C) 2001-2003, SADAHIRO Tomoyuki. Japan. All rights reserved.
This module is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.