/* * Copyright (c) 2005, 2021, Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved. * DO NOT ALTER OR REMOVE COPYRIGHT NOTICES OR THIS FILE HEADER. * * This code is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it * under the terms of the GNU General Public License version 2 only, as * published by the Free Software Foundation. Oracle designates this * particular file as subject to the "Classpath" exception as provided * by Oracle in the LICENSE file that accompanied this code. * * This code is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT * ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or * FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License * version 2 for more details (a copy is included in the LICENSE file that * accompanied this code). * * You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License version * 2 along with this work; if not, write to the Free Software Foundation, * Inc., 51 Franklin St, Fifth Floor, Boston, MA 02110-1301 USA. * * Please contact Oracle, 500 Oracle Parkway, Redwood Shores, CA 94065 USA * or visit www.oracle.com if you need additional information or have any * questions. */ /* ******************************************************************************* * Copyright (C) 2000-2014, International Business Machines Corporation and * others. All Rights Reserved. ******************************************************************************* */ package jdk_internal.icu.text; import jdk_internal.bidi.CharacterIterator; import jdk_internal.bidi.Normalizer; import jdk_internal.icu.impl.Norm2AllModes; /** * Unicode Normalization * *
normalize
transforms Unicode text into an equivalent composed or
* decomposed form, allowing for easier sorting and searching of text.
* normalize
supports the standard normalization forms described in
* Unicode
* Standard Annex #15 — Unicode Normalization Forms.
*
* Characters with accents or other adornments can be encoded in several
* different ways in Unicode. For example, take the character A-acute. In
* Unicode, this can be encoded as a single character (the "composed" form):
*
* * 00C1 LATIN CAPITAL LETTER A WITH ACUTE ** * or as two separate characters (the "decomposed" form): * *
* 0041 LATIN CAPITAL LETTER A * 0301 COMBINING ACUTE ACCENT ** * To a user of your program, however, both of these sequences should be treated * as the same "user-level" character "A with acute accent". When you are * searching or comparing text, you must ensure that these two sequences are * treated equivalently. In addition, you must handle characters with more than * one accent. Sometimes the order of a character's combining accents is * significant, while in other cases accent sequences in different orders are * really equivalent. * * Similarly, the string "ffi" can be encoded as three separate letters: * *
* 0066 LATIN SMALL LETTER F * 0066 LATIN SMALL LETTER F * 0069 LATIN SMALL LETTER I ** * or as the single character * *
* FB03 LATIN SMALL LIGATURE FFI ** * The ffi ligature is not a distinct semantic character, and strictly speaking * it shouldn't be in Unicode at all, but it was included for compatibility with * existing character sets that already provided it. The Unicode standard * identifies such characters by giving them "compatibility" decompositions into * the corresponding semantic characters. When sorting and searching, you will * often want to use these mappings. * *
normalize
helps solve these problems by transforming text into
* the canonical composed and decomposed forms as shown in the first example
* above. In addition, you can have it perform compatibility decompositions so
* that you can treat compatibility characters the same as their equivalents.
* Finally, normalize
rearranges accents into the proper canonical
* order, so that you do not have to worry about accent rearrangement on your
* own.
*
* Form FCD, "Fast C or D", is also designed for collation. It allows to work on
* strings that are not necessarily normalized with an algorithm (like in
* collation) that works under "canonical closure", i.e., it treats precomposed
* characters and their decomposed equivalents the same.
*
* It is not a normalization form because it does not provide for uniqueness of
* representation. Multiple strings may be canonically equivalent (their NFDs
* are identical) and may all conform to FCD without being identical themselves.
*
* The form is defined such that the "raw decomposition", the recursive
* canonical decomposition of each character, results in a string that is
* canonically ordered. This means that precomposed characters are allowed for
* as long as their decompositions do not need canonical reordering.
*
* Its advantage for a process like collation is that all NFD and most NFC texts
* - and many unnormalized texts - already conform to FCD and do not need to be
* normalized (NFD) for such a process. The FCD quick check will return YES for
* most strings in practice.
*
* normalize(FCD) may be implemented with NFD.
*
* For more details on FCD see Unicode Technical Note #5 (Canonical Equivalence
* in Applications): http://www.unicode.org/notes/tn5/#FCD
*
* ICU collation performs either NFD or FCD normalization automatically if
* normalization is turned on for the collator object. Beyond collation and
* string search, normalized strings may be useful for string equivalence
* comparisons, transliteration/transcription, unique representations, etc.
*
* The W3C generally recommends to exchange texts in NFC. Note also that most
* legacy character encodings use only precomposed forms and often do not encode
* any combining marks by themselves. For conversion to such character encodings
* the Unicode text needs to be normalized to NFC. For more usage examples, see
* the Unicode Standard Annex.
*
* Note: The Normalizer class also provides API for iterative normalization.
* While the setIndex() and getIndex() refer to indices in the underlying
* Unicode input text, the next() and previous() methods iterate through
* characters in the normalized output. This means that there is not necessarily
* a one-to-one correspondence between characters returned by next() and
* previous() and the indices passed to and returned from setIndex() and
* getIndex(). It is for this reason that Normalizer does not implement the
* CharacterIterator interface.
*
* @stable ICU 2.8
*/
// Original filename in ICU4J: Normalizer.java
public final class NormalizerBase implements Cloneable {
// The input text and our position in it
private UCharacterIterator text;
private Normalizer2 norm2;
private Mode mode;
private int options;
// The normalization buffer is the result of normalization
// of the source in [currentIndex..nextIndex] .
private int currentIndex;
private int nextIndex;
// A buffer for holding intermediate results
private StringBuilder buffer;
private int bufferPos;
// Helper classes to defer loading of normalization data.
private static final class ModeImpl {
private ModeImpl(Normalizer2 n2) {
normalizer2 = n2;
}
private final Normalizer2 normalizer2;
}
private static final class NFDModeImpl {
private static final ModeImpl INSTANCE = new ModeImpl(Normalizer2.getNFDInstance());
}
private static final class NFKDModeImpl {
private static final ModeImpl INSTANCE = new ModeImpl(Normalizer2.getNFKDInstance());
}
private static final class NFCModeImpl {
private static final ModeImpl INSTANCE = new ModeImpl(Normalizer2.getNFCInstance());
}
private static final class NFKCModeImpl {
private static final ModeImpl INSTANCE = new ModeImpl(Normalizer2.getNFKCInstance());
}
private static final class Unicode32 {
private static final UnicodeSet INSTANCE = new UnicodeSet("[:age=3.2:]").freeze();
}
private static final class NFD32ModeImpl {
private static final ModeImpl INSTANCE = new ModeImpl(
new FilteredNormalizer2(Normalizer2.getNFDInstance(), Unicode32.INSTANCE));
}
private static final class NFKD32ModeImpl {
private static final ModeImpl INSTANCE = new ModeImpl(
new FilteredNormalizer2(Normalizer2.getNFKDInstance(), Unicode32.INSTANCE));
}
private static final class NFC32ModeImpl {
private static final ModeImpl INSTANCE = new ModeImpl(
new FilteredNormalizer2(Normalizer2.getNFCInstance(), Unicode32.INSTANCE));
}
private static final class NFKC32ModeImpl {
private static final ModeImpl INSTANCE = new ModeImpl(
new FilteredNormalizer2(Normalizer2.getNFKCInstance(), Unicode32.INSTANCE));
}
/**
* Options bit set value to select Unicode 3.2 normalization (except
* NormalizationCorrections). At most one Unicode version can be selected at a
* time.
*
* @stable ICU 2.6
*/
public static final int UNICODE_3_2 = 0x20;
public static final int UNICODE_3_2_0_ORIGINAL = UNICODE_3_2;
/*
* Default option for the latest Unicode normalization. This option is provided
* mainly for testing. The value zero means that normalization is done with the
* fixes for - Corrigendum 4 (Five CJK Canonical Mapping Errors) - Corrigendum 5
* (Normalization Idempotency)
*/
public static final int UNICODE_LATEST = 0x00;
/**
* Constant indicating that the end of the iteration has been reached. This is
* guaranteed to have the same value as {@link UCharacterIterator#DONE}.
*
* @stable ICU 2.8
*/
public static final int DONE = UCharacterIterator.DONE;
/**
* Constants for normalization modes.
* * The Mode class is not intended for public subclassing. Only the Mode * constants provided by the Normalizer class should be used, and any fields or * methods should not be called or overridden by users. * * @stable ICU 2.8 */ public abstract static class Mode { /** * Sole constructor * * @internal * @deprecated This API is ICU internal only. */ @Deprecated protected Mode() { } /** * @internal * @deprecated This API is ICU internal only. */ @Deprecated protected abstract Normalizer2 getNormalizer2(int options); } private static Mode toMode(Normalizer.Form form) { switch (form) { case NFC: return NFC; case NFD: return NFD; case NFKC: return NFKC; case NFKD: return NFKD; } throw new IllegalArgumentException("Unexpected normalization form: " + form); } private static final class NONEMode extends Mode { protected Normalizer2 getNormalizer2(int options) { return Norm2AllModes.NOOP_NORMALIZER2; } } private static final class NFDMode extends Mode { protected Normalizer2 getNormalizer2(int options) { return (options & UNICODE_3_2) != 0 ? NFD32ModeImpl.INSTANCE.normalizer2 : NFDModeImpl.INSTANCE.normalizer2; } } private static final class NFKDMode extends Mode { protected Normalizer2 getNormalizer2(int options) { return (options & UNICODE_3_2) != 0 ? NFKD32ModeImpl.INSTANCE.normalizer2 : NFKDModeImpl.INSTANCE.normalizer2; } } private static final class NFCMode extends Mode { protected Normalizer2 getNormalizer2(int options) { return (options & UNICODE_3_2) != 0 ? NFC32ModeImpl.INSTANCE.normalizer2 : NFCModeImpl.INSTANCE.normalizer2; } } private static final class NFKCMode extends Mode { protected Normalizer2 getNormalizer2(int options) { return (options & UNICODE_3_2) != 0 ? NFKC32ModeImpl.INSTANCE.normalizer2 : NFKCModeImpl.INSTANCE.normalizer2; } } /** * No decomposition/composition. * * @stable ICU 2.8 */ public static final Mode NONE = new NONEMode(); /** * Canonical decomposition. * * @stable ICU 2.8 */ public static final Mode NFD = new NFDMode(); /** * Compatibility decomposition. * * @stable ICU 2.8 */ public static final Mode NFKD = new NFKDMode(); /** * Canonical decomposition followed by canonical composition. * * @stable ICU 2.8 */ public static final Mode NFC = new NFCMode(); public static final Mode NFKC = new NFKCMode(); // ------------------------------------------------------------------------- // Iterator constructors // ------------------------------------------------------------------------- /** * Creates a new {@code NormalizerBase} object for iterating over the normalized * form of a given string. *
* The {@code options} parameter specifies which optional {@code NormalizerBase} * features are to be enabled for this object. *
* * @param str The string to be normalized. The normalization will start at the * beginning of the string. * * @param mode The normalization mode. * * @param opt Any optional features to be enabled. Currently the only available * option is {@link #UNICODE_3_2}. If you want the default behavior * corresponding to one of the standard Unicode Normalization Forms, * use 0 for this argument. * @stable ICU 2.6 */ public NormalizerBase(String str, Mode mode, int opt) { this.text = UCharacterIterator.getInstance(str); this.mode = mode; this.options = opt; norm2 = mode.getNormalizer2(opt); buffer = new StringBuilder(); } public NormalizerBase(String str, Mode mode) { this(str, mode, 0); } /** * Creates a new {@code NormalizerBase} object for iterating over the normalized * form of the given text. *
* * @param iter The input text to be normalized. The normalization will start at * the beginning of the string. * * @param mode The normalization mode. * * @param opt Any optional features to be enabled. Currently the only available * option is {@link #UNICODE_3_2}. If you want the default behavior * corresponding to one of the standard Unicode Normalization Forms, * use 0 for this argument. * @stable ICU 2.6 */ public NormalizerBase(CharacterIterator iter, Mode mode, int opt) { this.text = UCharacterIterator.getInstance((CharacterIterator) iter.clone()); this.mode = mode; this.options = opt; norm2 = mode.getNormalizer2(opt); buffer = new StringBuilder(); } public NormalizerBase(CharacterIterator iter, Mode mode) { this(iter, mode, 0); } /** * Clones this {@code NormalizerBase} object. All properties of this object are * duplicated in the new object, including the cloning of any * {@link CharacterIterator} that was passed in to the constructor or to * {@link #setText(CharacterIterator) setText}. However, the text storage * underlying the {@code CharacterIterator} is not duplicated unless the * iterator's {@code clone} method does so. * * @stable ICU 2.8 */ public Object clone() { try { NormalizerBase copy = (NormalizerBase) super.clone(); copy.text = (UCharacterIterator) text.clone(); copy.mode = mode; copy.options = options; copy.norm2 = norm2; copy.buffer = new StringBuilder(buffer); copy.bufferPos = bufferPos; copy.currentIndex = currentIndex; copy.nextIndex = nextIndex; return copy; } catch (CloneNotSupportedException e) { throw new InternalError(e.toString(), e); } } /** * Normalizes a {@code String} using the given normalization operation. *
* The {@code options} parameter specifies which optional {@code NormalizerBase} * features are to be enabled for this operation. Currently the only available * option is {@link #UNICODE_3_2}. If you want the default behavior * corresponding to one of the standard Unicode Normalization Forms, use 0 for * this argument. *
* * @param str the input string to be normalized. * @param mode the normalization mode * @param options the optional features to be enabled. * @return String the normalized string * @stable ICU 2.6 */ public static String normalize(String str, Mode mode, int options) { return mode.getNormalizer2(options).normalize(str); } public static String normalize(String str, Normalizer.Form form) { return NormalizerBase.normalize(str, toMode(form), UNICODE_LATEST); } public static String normalize(String str, Normalizer.Form form, int options) { return NormalizerBase.normalize(str, toMode(form), options); } /** * Test if a string is in a given normalization form. This is semantically * equivalent to source.equals(normalize(source, mode)). * * Unlike quickCheck(), this function returns a definitive result, never a * "maybe". For NFD, NFKD, and FCD, both functions work exactly the same. For * NFC and NFKC where quickCheck may return "maybe", this function will perform * further tests to arrive at a true/false result. * * @param str the input string to be checked to see if it is normalized * @param mode the normalization mode * @param options Options for use with exclusion set and tailored Normalization * The only option that is currently recognized is UNICODE_3_2 * @see #isNormalized * @stable ICU 2.6 */ public static boolean isNormalized(String str, Mode mode, int options) { return mode.getNormalizer2(options).isNormalized(str); } public static boolean isNormalized(String str, Normalizer.Form form) { return NormalizerBase.isNormalized(str, toMode(form), UNICODE_LATEST); } public static boolean isNormalized(String str, Normalizer.Form form, int options) { return NormalizerBase.isNormalized(str, toMode(form), options); } // ------------------------------------------------------------------------- // Iteration API // ------------------------------------------------------------------------- /** * Return the current character in the normalized text. * * @return The codepoint as an int * @stable ICU 2.8 */ public int current() { if (bufferPos < buffer.length() || nextNormalize()) { return buffer.codePointAt(bufferPos); } else { return DONE; } } /** * Return the next character in the normalized text and advance the iteration * position by one. If the end of the text has already been reached, * {@link #DONE} is returned. * * @return The codepoint as an int * @stable ICU 2.8 */ public int next() { if (bufferPos < buffer.length() || nextNormalize()) { int c = buffer.codePointAt(bufferPos); bufferPos += Character.charCount(c); return c; } else { return DONE; } } /** * Return the previous character in the normalized text and decrement the * iteration position by one. If the beginning of the text has already been * reached, {@link #DONE} is returned. * * @return The codepoint as an int * @stable ICU 2.8 */ public int previous() { if (bufferPos > 0 || previousNormalize()) { int c = buffer.codePointBefore(bufferPos); bufferPos -= Character.charCount(c); return c; } else { return DONE; } } /** * Reset the index to the beginning of the text. This is equivalent to * setIndexOnly(startIndex)). * * @stable ICU 2.8 */ public void reset() { text.setIndex(0); currentIndex = nextIndex = 0; clearBuffer(); } /** * Set the iteration position in the input text that is being normalized, * without any immediate normalization. After setIndexOnly(), getIndex() will * return the same index that is specified here. * * @param index the desired index in the input text. * @stable ICU 2.8 */ public void setIndexOnly(int index) { text.setIndex(index); // validates index currentIndex = nextIndex = index; clearBuffer(); } /** * Set the iteration position in the input text that is being normalized and * return the first normalized character at that position. *
* Note: This method sets the position in the input text, while * {@link #next} and {@link #previous} iterate through characters in the * normalized output. This means that there is not necessarily a * one-to-one correspondence between characters returned by {@code next} and * {@code previous} and the indices passed to and returned from {@code setIndex} * and {@link #getIndex}. *
* * @param index the desired index in the input text. * * @return the first normalized character that is the result of iterating * forward starting at the given index. * * @throws IllegalArgumentException if the given index is less than * {@link #getBeginIndex} or greater than * {@link #getEndIndex}. deprecated ICU 3.2 * @obsolete ICU 3.2 */ public int setIndex(int index) { setIndexOnly(index); return current(); } /** * Retrieve the index of the start of the input text. This is the begin index of * the {@code CharacterIterator} or the start (i.e. 0) of the {@code String} * over which this {@code NormalizerBase} is iterating * * @deprecated ICU 2.2. Use startIndex() instead. * @return The codepoint as an int * @see #startIndex */ @Deprecated public int getBeginIndex() { return 0; } /** * Retrieve the index of the end of the input text. This is the end index of the * {@code CharacterIterator} or the length of the {@code String} over which this * {@code NormalizerBase} is iterating * * @deprecated ICU 2.2. Use endIndex() instead. * @return The codepoint as an int * @see #endIndex */ @Deprecated public int getEndIndex() { return endIndex(); } /** * Retrieve the current iteration position in the input text that is being * normalized. This method is useful in applications such as searching, where * you need to be able to determine the position in the input text that * corresponds to a given normalized output character. *
* Note: This method sets the position in the input, while * {@link #next} and {@link #previous} iterate through characters in the * output. This means that there is not necessarily a one-to-one * correspondence between characters returned by {@code next} and * {@code previous} and the indices passed to and returned from {@code setIndex} * and {@link #getIndex}. * * @return The current iteration position * @stable ICU 2.8 */ public int getIndex() { if (bufferPos < buffer.length()) { return currentIndex; } else { return nextIndex; } } /** * Retrieve the index of the end of the input text. This is the end index of the * {@code CharacterIterator} or the length of the {@code String} over which this * {@code NormalizerBase} is iterating * * @return The current iteration position * @stable ICU 2.8 */ public int endIndex() { return text.getLength(); } // ------------------------------------------------------------------------- // Iterator attributes // ------------------------------------------------------------------------- /** * Set the normalization mode for this object. *
* Note:If the normalization mode is changed while iterating over a * string, calls to {@link #next} and {@link #previous} may return previously * buffers characters in the old normalization mode until the iteration is able * to re-sync at the next base character. It is safest to call {@link #setText * setText()}, {@link #first}, {@link #last}, etc. after calling * {@code setMode}. *
* * @param newMode the new mode for this {@code NormalizerBase}. The supported * modes are: *