3 # !!!!!!!!!!!!!! IF YOU MODIFY THIS FILE !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
4 # Any files created or read by this program should be listed in 'mktables.lst'
5 # Use -makelist to regenerate it.
7 # Needs 'no overloading' to run faster on miniperl. Code commented out at the
8 # subroutine objaddr can be used instead to work as far back (untested) as
9 # 5.8: needs pack "U". But almost all occurrences of objaddr have been
10 # removed in favor of using 'no overloading'. You also would have to go
11 # through and replace occurrences like:
12 # my $addr = do { no overloading; pack 'J', $self; }
14 # my $addr = main::objaddr $self;
15 # (or reverse commit 9b01bafde4b022706c3d6f947a0963f821b2e50b
16 # that instituted the change to main::objaddr, and subsequent commits that
17 # changed 0+$self to pack 'J', $self.)
28 sub DEBUG () { 0 } # Set to 0 for production; 1 for development
30 ##########################################################################
32 # mktables -- create the runtime Perl Unicode files (lib/unicore/.../*.pl),
33 # from the Unicode database files (lib/unicore/.../*.txt), It also generates
34 # a pod file and a .t file
36 # The structure of this file is:
37 # First these introductory comments; then
38 # code needed for everywhere, such as debugging stuff; then
39 # code to handle input parameters; then
40 # data structures likely to be of external interest (some of which depend on
41 # the input parameters, so follows them; then
42 # more data structures and subroutine and package (class) definitions; then
43 # the small actual loop to process the input files and finish up; then
44 # a __DATA__ section, for the .t tests
46 # This program works on all releases of Unicode through at least 5.2. The
47 # outputs have been scrutinized most intently for release 5.1. The others
48 # have been checked for somewhat more than just sanity. It can handle all
49 # existing Unicode character properties in those releases.
51 # This program is mostly about Unicode character (or code point) properties.
52 # A property describes some attribute or quality of a code point, like if it
53 # is lowercase or not, its name, what version of Unicode it was first defined
54 # in, or what its uppercase equivalent is. Unicode deals with these disparate
55 # possibilities by making all properties into mappings from each code point
56 # into some corresponding value. In the case of it being lowercase or not,
57 # the mapping is either to 'Y' or 'N' (or various synonyms thereof). Each
58 # property maps each Unicode code point to a single value, called a "property
59 # value". (Hence each Unicode property is a true mathematical function with
60 # exactly one value per code point.)
62 # When using a property in a regular expression, what is desired isn't the
63 # mapping of the code point to its property's value, but the reverse (or the
64 # mathematical "inverse relation"): starting with the property value, "Does a
65 # code point map to it?" These are written in a "compound" form:
66 # \p{property=value}, e.g., \p{category=punctuation}. This program generates
67 # files containing the lists of code points that map to each such regular
68 # expression property value, one file per list
70 # There is also a single form shortcut that Perl adds for many of the commonly
71 # used properties. This happens for all binary properties, plus script,
72 # general_category, and block properties.
74 # Thus the outputs of this program are files. There are map files, mostly in
75 # the 'To' directory; and there are list files for use in regular expression
76 # matching, all in subdirectories of the 'lib' directory, with each
77 # subdirectory being named for the property that the lists in it are for.
78 # Bookkeeping, test, and documentation files are also generated.
80 my $matches_directory = 'lib'; # Where match (\p{}) files go.
81 my $map_directory = 'To'; # Where map files go.
85 # The major data structures of this program are Property, of course, but also
86 # Table. There are two kinds of tables, very similar to each other.
87 # "Match_Table" is the data structure giving the list of code points that have
88 # a particular property value, mentioned above. There is also a "Map_Table"
89 # data structure which gives the property's mapping from code point to value.
90 # There are two structures because the match tables need to be combined in
91 # various ways, such as constructing unions, intersections, complements, etc.,
92 # and the map ones don't. And there would be problems, perhaps subtle, if
93 # a map table were inadvertently operated on in some of those ways.
94 # The use of separate classes with operations defined on one but not the other
95 # prevents accidentally confusing the two.
97 # At the heart of each table's data structure is a "Range_List", which is just
98 # an ordered list of "Ranges", plus ancillary information, and methods to
99 # operate on them. A Range is a compact way to store property information.
100 # Each range has a starting code point, an ending code point, and a value that
101 # is meant to apply to all the code points between the two end points,
102 # inclusive. For a map table, this value is the property value for those
103 # code points. Two such ranges could be written like this:
104 # 0x41 .. 0x5A, 'Upper',
105 # 0x61 .. 0x7A, 'Lower'
107 # Each range also has a type used as a convenience to classify the values.
108 # Most ranges in this program will be Type 0, or normal, but there are some
109 # ranges that have a non-zero type. These are used only in map tables, and
110 # are for mappings that don't fit into the normal scheme of things. Mappings
111 # that require a hash entry to communicate with utf8.c are one example;
112 # another example is mappings for charnames.pm to use which indicate a name
113 # that is algorithmically determinable from its code point (and vice-versa).
114 # These are used to significantly compact these tables, instead of listing
115 # each one of the tens of thousands individually.
117 # In a match table, the value of a range is irrelevant (and hence the type as
118 # well, which will always be 0), and arbitrarily set to the null string.
119 # Using the example above, there would be two match tables for those two
120 # entries, one named Upper would contain the 0x41..0x5A range, and the other
121 # named Lower would contain 0x61..0x7A.
123 # Actually, there are two types of range lists, "Range_Map" is the one
124 # associated with map tables, and "Range_List" with match tables.
125 # Again, this is so that methods can be defined on one and not the other so as
126 # to prevent operating on them in incorrect ways.
128 # Eventually, most tables are written out to files to be read by utf8_heavy.pl
129 # in the perl core. All tables could in theory be written, but some are
130 # suppressed because there is no current practical use for them. It is easy
131 # to change which get written by changing various lists that are near the top
132 # of the actual code in this file. The table data structures contain enough
133 # ancillary information to allow them to be treated as separate entities for
134 # writing, such as the path to each one's file. There is a heading in each
135 # map table that gives the format of its entries, and what the map is for all
136 # the code points missing from it. (This allows tables to be more compact.)
138 # The Property data structure contains one or more tables. All properties
139 # contain a map table (except the $perl property which is a
140 # pseudo-property containing only match tables), and any properties that
141 # are usable in regular expression matches also contain various matching
142 # tables, one for each value the property can have. A binary property can
143 # have two values, True and False (or Y and N, which are preferred by Unicode
144 # terminology). Thus each of these properties will have a map table that
145 # takes every code point and maps it to Y or N (but having ranges cuts the
146 # number of entries in that table way down), and two match tables, one
147 # which has a list of all the code points that map to Y, and one for all the
148 # code points that map to N. (For each of these, a third table is also
149 # generated for the pseudo Perl property. It contains the identical code
150 # points as the Y table, but can be written, not in the compound form, but in
151 # a "single" form like \p{IsUppercase}.) Many properties are binary, but some
152 # properties have several possible values, some have many, and properties like
153 # Name have a different value for every named code point. Those will not,
154 # unless the controlling lists are changed, have their match tables written
155 # out. But all the ones which can be used in regular expression \p{} and \P{}
156 # constructs will. Generally a property will have either its map table or its
157 # match tables written but not both. Again, what gets written is controlled
158 # by lists which can easily be changed.
160 # For information about the Unicode properties, see Unicode's UAX44 document:
162 my $unicode_reference_url = 'http://www.unicode.org/reports/tr44/';
164 # As stated earlier, this program will work on any release of Unicode so far.
165 # Most obvious problems in earlier data have NOT been corrected except when
166 # necessary to make Perl or this program work reasonably. For example, no
167 # folding information was given in early releases, so this program uses the
168 # substitute of lower case, just so that a regular expression with the /i
169 # option will do something that actually gives the right results in many
170 # cases. There are also a couple other corrections for version 1.1.5,
171 # commented at the point they are made. As an example of corrections that
172 # weren't made (but could be) is this statement from DerivedAge.txt: "The
173 # supplementary private use code points and the non-character code points were
174 # assigned in version 2.0, but not specifically listed in the UCD until
175 # versions 3.0 and 3.1 respectively." (To be precise it was 3.0.1 not 3.0.0)
176 # More information on Unicode version glitches is further down in these
177 # introductory comments.
179 # This program works on all properties as of 5.2, though the files for some
180 # are suppressed from apparent lack of demand for them. You can change which
181 # are output by changing lists in this program.
183 # The old version of mktables emphasized the term "Fuzzy" to mean Unocde's
184 # loose matchings rules (from Unicode TR18):
186 # The recommended names for UCD properties and property values are in
187 # PropertyAliases.txt [Prop] and PropertyValueAliases.txt
188 # [PropValue]. There are both abbreviated names and longer, more
189 # descriptive names. It is strongly recommended that both names be
190 # recognized, and that loose matching of property names be used,
191 # whereby the case distinctions, whitespace, hyphens, and underbar
193 # The program still allows Fuzzy to override its determination of if loose
194 # matching should be used, but it isn't currently used, as it is no longer
195 # needed; the calculations it makes are good enough.
197 # SUMMARY OF HOW IT WORKS:
201 # A list is constructed containing each input file that is to be processed
203 # Each file on the list is processed in a loop, using the associated handler
205 # The PropertyAliases.txt and PropValueAliases.txt files are processed
206 # first. These files name the properties and property values.
207 # Objects are created of all the property and property value names
208 # that the rest of the input should expect, including all synonyms.
209 # The other input files give mappings from properties to property
210 # values. That is, they list code points and say what the mapping
211 # is under the given property. Some files give the mappings for
212 # just one property; and some for many. This program goes through
213 # each file and populates the properties from them. Some properties
214 # are listed in more than one file, and Unicode has set up a
215 # precedence as to which has priority if there is a conflict. Thus
216 # the order of processing matters, and this program handles the
217 # conflict possibility by processing the overriding input files
218 # last, so that if necessary they replace earlier values.
219 # After this is all done, the program creates the property mappings not
220 # furnished by Unicode, but derivable from what it does give.
221 # The tables of code points that match each property value in each
222 # property that is accessible by regular expressions are created.
223 # The Perl-defined properties are created and populated. Many of these
224 # require data determined from the earlier steps
225 # Any Perl-defined synonyms are created, and name clashes between Perl
226 # and Unicode are reconciled and warned about.
227 # All the properties are written to files
228 # Any other files are written, and final warnings issued.
230 # For clarity, a number of operators have been overloaded to work on tables:
231 # ~ means invert (take all characters not in the set). The more
232 # conventional '!' is not used because of the possibility of confusing
233 # it with the actual boolean operation.
235 # - means subtraction
236 # & means intersection
237 # The precedence of these is the order listed. Parentheses should be
238 # copiously used. These are not a general scheme. The operations aren't
239 # defined for a number of things, deliberately, to avoid getting into trouble.
240 # Operations are done on references and affect the underlying structures, so
241 # that the copy constructors for them have been overloaded to not return a new
242 # clone, but the input object itself.
244 # The bool operator is deliberately not overloaded to avoid confusion with
245 # "should it mean if the object merely exists, or also is non-empty?".
247 # WHY CERTAIN DESIGN DECISIONS WERE MADE
249 # This program needs to be able to run under miniperl. Therefore, it uses a
250 # minimum of other modules, and hence implements some things itself that could
251 # be gotten from CPAN
253 # This program uses inputs published by the Unicode Consortium. These can
254 # change incompatibly between releases without the Perl maintainers realizing
255 # it. Therefore this program is now designed to try to flag these. It looks
256 # at the directories where the inputs are, and flags any unrecognized files.
257 # It keeps track of all the properties in the files it handles, and flags any
258 # that it doesn't know how to handle. It also flags any input lines that
259 # don't match the expected syntax, among other checks.
261 # It is also designed so if a new input file matches one of the known
262 # templates, one hopefully just needs to add it to a list to have it
265 # As mentioned earlier, some properties are given in more than one file. In
266 # particular, the files in the extracted directory are supposedly just
267 # reformattings of the others. But they contain information not easily
268 # derivable from the other files, including results for Unihan, which this
269 # program doesn't ordinarily look at, and for unassigned code points. They
270 # also have historically had errors or been incomplete. In an attempt to
271 # create the best possible data, this program thus processes them first to
272 # glean information missing from the other files; then processes those other
273 # files to override any errors in the extracted ones. Much of the design was
274 # driven by this need to store things and then possibly override them.
276 # It tries to keep fatal errors to a minimum, to generate something usable for
277 # testing purposes. It always looks for files that could be inputs, and will
278 # warn about any that it doesn't know how to handle (the -q option suppresses
281 # Why have files written out for binary 'N' matches?
282 # For binary properties, if you know the mapping for either Y or N; the
283 # other is trivial to construct, so could be done at Perl run-time by just
284 # complementing the result, instead of having a file for it. That is, if
285 # someone types in \p{foo: N}, Perl could translate that to \P{foo: Y} and
286 # not need a file. The problem is communicating to Perl that a given
287 # property is binary. Perl can't figure it out from looking at the N (or
288 # No), as some non-binary properties have these as property values. So
289 # rather than inventing a way to communicate this info back to the core,
290 # which would have required changes there as well, it was simpler just to
291 # add the extra tables.
293 # Why is there more than one type of range?
294 # This simplified things. There are some very specialized code points that
295 # have to be handled specially for output, such as Hangul syllable names.
296 # By creating a range type (done late in the development process), it
297 # allowed this to be stored with the range, and overridden by other input.
298 # Originally these were stored in another data structure, and it became a
299 # mess trying to decide if a second file that was for the same property was
300 # overriding the earlier one or not.
302 # Why are there two kinds of tables, match and map?
303 # (And there is a base class shared by the two as well.) As stated above,
304 # they actually are for different things. Development proceeded much more
305 # smoothly when I (khw) realized the distinction. Map tables are used to
306 # give the property value for every code point (actually every code point
307 # that doesn't map to a default value). Match tables are used for regular
308 # expression matches, and are essentially the inverse mapping. Separating
309 # the two allows more specialized methods, and error checks so that one
310 # can't just take the intersection of two map tables, for example, as that
313 # There are no match tables generated for matches of the null string. These
314 # would look like qr/\p{JSN=}/ currently without modifying the regex code.
315 # Perhaps something like them could be added if necessary. The JSN does have
316 # a real code point U+110B that maps to the null string, but it is a
317 # contributory property, and therefore not output by default. And it's easily
318 # handled so far by making the null string the default where it is a
323 # This program is written so it will run under miniperl. Occasionally changes
324 # will cause an error where the backtrace doesn't work well under miniperl.
325 # To diagnose the problem, you can instead run it under regular perl, if you
328 # There is a good trace facility. To enable it, first sub DEBUG must be set
329 # to return true. Then a line like
331 # local $to_trace = 1 if main::DEBUG;
333 # can be added to enable tracing in its lexical scope or until you insert
336 # local $to_trace = 0 if main::DEBUG;
338 # then use a line like "trace $a, @b, %c, ...;
340 # Some of the more complex subroutines already have trace statements in them.
341 # Permanent trace statements should be like:
343 # trace ... if main::DEBUG && $to_trace;
345 # If there is just one or a few files that you're debugging, you can easily
346 # cause most everything else to be skipped. Change the line
348 # my $debug_skip = 0;
350 # to 1, and every file whose object is in @input_file_objects and doesn't have
351 # a, 'non_skip => 1,' in its constructor will be skipped.
355 # The program would break if Unicode were to change its names so that
356 # interior white space, underscores, or dashes differences were significant
357 # within property and property value names.
359 # It might be easier to use the xml versions of the UCD if this program ever
360 # would need heavy revision, and the ability to handle old versions was not
363 # There is the potential for name collisions, in that Perl has chosen names
364 # that Unicode could decide it also likes. There have been such collisions in
365 # the past, with mostly Perl deciding to adopt the Unicode definition of the
366 # name. However in the 5.2 Unicode beta testing, there were a number of such
367 # collisions, which were withdrawn before the final release, because of Perl's
368 # and other's protests. These all involved new properties which began with
369 # 'Is'. Based on the protests, Unicode is unlikely to try that again. Also,
370 # many of the Perl-defined synonyms, like Any, Word, etc, are listed in a
371 # Unicode document, so they are unlikely to be used by Unicode for another
372 # purpose. However, they might try something beginning with 'In', or use any
373 # of the other Perl-defined properties. This program will warn you of name
374 # collisions, and refuse to generate tables with them, but manual intervention
375 # will be required in this event. One scheme that could be implemented, if
376 # necessary, would be to have this program generate another file, or add a
377 # field to mktables.lst that gives the date of first definition of a property.
378 # Each new release of Unicode would use that file as a basis for the next
379 # iteration. And the Perl synonym addition code could sort based on the age
380 # of the property, so older properties get priority, and newer ones that clash
381 # would be refused; hence existing code would not be impacted, and some other
382 # synonym would have to be used for the new property. This is ugly, and
383 # manual intervention would certainly be easier to do in the short run; lets
384 # hope it never comes to this.
388 # This program can generate tables from the Unihan database. But it doesn't
389 # by default, letting the CPAN module Unicode::Unihan handle them. Prior to
390 # version 5.2, this database was in a single file, Unihan.txt. In 5.2 the
391 # database was split into 8 different files, all beginning with the letters
392 # 'Unihan'. This program will read those file(s) if present, but it needs to
393 # know which of the many properties in the file(s) should have tables created
394 # for them. It will create tables for any properties listed in
395 # PropertyAliases.txt and PropValueAliases.txt, plus any listed in the
396 # @cjk_properties array and the @cjk_property_values array. Thus, if a
397 # property you want is not in those files of the release you are building
398 # against, you must add it to those two arrays. Starting in 4.0, the
399 # Unicode_Radical_Stroke was listed in those files, so if the Unihan database
400 # is present in the directory, a table will be generated for that property.
401 # In 5.2, several more properties were added. For your convenience, the two
402 # arrays are initialized with all the 5.2 listed properties that are also in
403 # earlier releases. But these are commented out. You can just uncomment the
404 # ones you want, or use them as a template for adding entries for other
407 # You may need to adjust the entries to suit your purposes. setup_unihan(),
408 # and filter_unihan_line() are the functions where this is done. This program
409 # already does some adjusting to make the lines look more like the rest of the
410 # Unicode DB; You can see what that is in filter_unihan_line()
412 # There is a bug in the 3.2 data file in which some values for the
413 # kPrimaryNumeric property have commas and an unexpected comment. A filter
414 # could be added for these; or for a particular installation, the Unihan.txt
415 # file could be edited to fix them.
417 # HOW TO ADD A FILE TO BE PROCESSED
419 # A new file from Unicode needs to have an object constructed for it in
420 # @input_file_objects, probably at the end or at the end of the extracted
421 # ones. The program should warn you if its name will clash with others on
422 # restrictive file systems, like DOS. If so, figure out a better name, and
423 # add lines to the README.perl file giving that. If the file is a character
424 # property, it should be in the format that Unicode has by default
425 # standardized for such files for the more recently introduced ones.
426 # If so, the Input_file constructor for @input_file_objects can just be the
427 # file name and release it first appeared in. If not, then it should be
428 # possible to construct an each_line_handler() to massage the line into the
431 # For non-character properties, more code will be needed. You can look at
432 # the existing entries for clues.
434 # UNICODE VERSIONS NOTES
436 # The Unicode UCD has had a number of errors in it over the versions. And
437 # these remain, by policy, in the standard for that version. Therefore it is
438 # risky to correct them, because code may be expecting the error. So this
439 # program doesn't generally make changes, unless the error breaks the Perl
440 # core. As an example, some versions of 2.1.x Jamo.txt have the wrong value
441 # for U+1105, which causes real problems for the algorithms for Jamo
442 # calculations, so it is changed here.
444 # But it isn't so clear cut as to what to do about concepts that are
445 # introduced in a later release; should they extend back to earlier releases
446 # where the concept just didn't exist? It was easier to do this than to not,
447 # so that's what was done. For example, the default value for code points not
448 # in the files for various properties was probably undefined until changed by
449 # some version. No_Block for blocks is such an example. This program will
450 # assign No_Block even in Unicode versions that didn't have it. This has the
451 # benefit that code being written doesn't have to special case earlier
452 # versions; and the detriment that it doesn't match the Standard precisely for
453 # the affected versions.
455 # Here are some observations about some of the issues in early versions:
457 # The number of code points in \p{alpha} halve in 2.1.9. It turns out that
458 # the reason is that the CJK block starting at 4E00 was removed from PropList,
459 # and was not put back in until 3.1.0
461 # Unicode introduced the synonym Space for White_Space in 4.1. Perl has
462 # always had a \p{Space}. In release 3.2 only, they are not synonymous. The
463 # reason is that 3.2 introduced U+205F=medium math space, which was not
464 # classed as white space, but Perl figured out that it should have been. 4.0
465 # reclassified it correctly.
467 # Another change between 3.2 and 4.0 is the CCC property value ATBL. In 3.2
468 # this was erroneously a synonym for 202. In 4.0, ATB became 202, and ATBL
469 # was left with no code points, as all the ones that mapped to 202 stayed
470 # mapped to 202. Thus if your program used the numeric name for the class,
471 # it would not have been affected, but if it used the mnemonic, it would have
474 # \p{Script=Hrkt} (Katakana_Or_Hiragana) came in 4.0.1. Before that code
475 # points which eventually came to have this script property value, instead
476 # mapped to "Unknown". But in the next release all these code points were
477 # moved to \p{sc=common} instead.
479 # The default for missing code points for BidiClass is complicated. Starting
480 # in 3.1.1, the derived file DBidiClass.txt handles this, but this program
481 # tries to do the best it can for earlier releases. It is done in
482 # process_PropertyAliases()
484 ##############################################################################
486 my $UNDEF = ':UNDEF:'; # String to print out for undefined values in tracing
488 my $MAX_LINE_WIDTH = 78;
490 # Debugging aid to skip most files so as to not be distracted by them when
491 # concentrating on the ones being debugged. Add
493 # to the constructor for those files you want processed when you set this.
494 # Files with a first version number of 0 are special: they are always
495 # processed regardless of the state of this flag.
498 # Set to 1 to enable tracing.
501 { # Closure for trace: debugging aid
502 my $print_caller = 1; # ? Include calling subroutine name
503 my $main_with_colon = 'main::';
504 my $main_colon_length = length($main_with_colon);
507 return unless $to_trace; # Do nothing if global flag not set
511 local $DB::trace = 0;
512 $DB::trace = 0; # Quiet 'used only once' message
516 # Loop looking up the stack to get the first non-trace caller
521 $line_number = $caller_line;
522 (my $pkg, my $file, $caller_line, my $caller) = caller $i++;
523 $caller = $main_with_colon unless defined $caller;
525 $caller_name = $caller;
528 $caller_name =~ s/.*:://;
529 if (substr($caller_name, 0, $main_colon_length)
532 $caller_name = substr($caller_name, $main_colon_length);
535 } until ($caller_name ne 'trace');
537 # If the stack was empty, we were called from the top level
538 $caller_name = 'main' if ($caller_name eq ""
539 || $caller_name eq 'trace');
542 foreach my $string (@input) {
543 #print STDERR __LINE__, ": ", join ", ", @input, "\n";
544 if (ref $string eq 'ARRAY' || ref $string eq 'HASH') {
545 $output .= simple_dumper($string);
548 $string = "$string" if ref $string;
549 $string = $UNDEF unless defined $string;
551 $string = '""' if $string eq "";
552 $output .= " " if $output ne ""
554 && substr($output, -1, 1) ne " "
555 && substr($string, 0, 1) ne " ";
560 print STDERR sprintf "%4d: ", $line_number if defined $line_number;
561 print STDERR "$caller_name: " if $print_caller;
562 print STDERR $output, "\n";
567 # This is for a rarely used development feature that allows you to compare two
568 # versions of the Unicode standard without having to deal with changes caused
569 # by the code points introduced in the later verson. Change the 0 to a SINGLE
570 # dotted Unicode release number (e.g. 2.1). Only code points introduced in
571 # that release and earlier will be used; later ones are thrown away. You use
572 # the version number of the earliest one you want to compare; then run this
573 # program on directory structures containing each release, and compare the
574 # outputs. These outputs will therefore include only the code points common
575 # to both releases, and you can see the changes caused just by the underlying
576 # release semantic changes. For versions earlier than 3.2, you must copy a
577 # version of DAge.txt into the directory.
578 my $string_compare_versions = DEBUG && 0; # e.g., v2.1;
579 my $compare_versions = DEBUG
580 && $string_compare_versions
581 && pack "C*", split /\./, $string_compare_versions;
584 # Returns non-duplicated input values. From "Perl Best Practices:
585 # Encapsulated Cleverness". p. 455 in first edition.
588 # Arguably this breaks encapsulation, if the goal is to permit multiple
589 # distinct objects to stringify to the same value, and be interchangeable.
590 # However, for this program, no two objects stringify identically, and all
591 # lists passed to this function are either objects or strings. So this
592 # doesn't affect correctness, but it does give a couple of percent speedup.
594 return grep { ! $seen{$_}++ } @_;
597 $0 = File::Spec->canonpath($0);
599 my $make_test_script = 0; # ? Should we output a test script
600 my $write_unchanged_files = 0; # ? Should we update the output files even if
601 # we don't think they have changed
602 my $use_directory = ""; # ? Should we chdir somewhere.
603 my $pod_directory; # input directory to store the pod file.
604 my $pod_file = 'perluniprops';
605 my $t_path; # Path to the .t test file
606 my $file_list = 'mktables.lst'; # File to store input and output file names.
607 # This is used to speed up the build, by not
608 # executing the main body of the program if
609 # nothing on the list has changed since the
611 my $make_list = 1; # ? Should we write $file_list. Set to always
612 # make a list so that when the pumpking is
613 # preparing a release, s/he won't have to do
615 my $glob_list = 0; # ? Should we try to include unknown .txt files
617 my $output_range_counts = 1; # ? Should we include the number of code points
618 # in ranges in the output
619 my $output_names = 0; # ? Should character names be in the output
620 my @viacode; # Contains the 1 million character names, if
621 # $output_names is true
623 # Verbosity levels; 0 is quiet
624 my $NORMAL_VERBOSITY = 1;
628 my $verbosity = $NORMAL_VERBOSITY;
632 my $arg = shift @ARGV;
634 $verbosity = $VERBOSE;
636 elsif ($arg eq '-p') {
637 $verbosity = $PROGRESS;
638 $| = 1; # Flush buffers as we go.
640 elsif ($arg eq '-q') {
643 elsif ($arg eq '-w') {
644 $write_unchanged_files = 1; # update the files even if havent changed
646 elsif ($arg eq '-check') {
647 my $this = shift @ARGV;
648 my $ok = shift @ARGV;
650 print "Skipping as check params are not the same.\n";
654 elsif ($arg eq '-P' && defined ($pod_directory = shift)) {
655 -d $pod_directory or croak "Directory '$pod_directory' doesn't exist";
657 elsif ($arg eq '-maketest' || ($arg eq '-T' && defined ($t_path = shift)))
659 $make_test_script = 1;
661 elsif ($arg eq '-makelist') {
664 elsif ($arg eq '-C' && defined ($use_directory = shift)) {
665 -d $use_directory or croak "Unknown directory '$use_directory'";
667 elsif ($arg eq '-L') {
669 # Existence not tested until have chdir'd
672 elsif ($arg eq '-globlist') {
675 elsif ($arg eq '-c') {
676 $output_range_counts = ! $output_range_counts
678 elsif ($arg eq '-output_names') {
683 $with_c .= 'out' if $output_range_counts; # Complements the state
685 usage: $0 [-c|-p|-q|-v|-w] [-C dir] [-L filelist] [ -P pod_dir ]
686 [ -T test_file_path ] [-globlist] [-makelist] [-maketest]
688 -c : Output comments $with_c number of code points in ranges
689 -q : Quiet Mode: Only output serious warnings.
690 -p : Set verbosity level to normal plus show progress.
691 -v : Set Verbosity level high: Show progress and non-serious
693 -w : Write files regardless
694 -C dir : Change to this directory before proceeding. All relative paths
695 except those specified by the -P and -T options will be done
696 with respect to this directory.
697 -P dir : Output $pod_file file to directory 'dir'.
698 -T path : Create a test script as 'path'; overrides -maketest
699 -L filelist : Use alternate 'filelist' instead of standard one
700 -globlist : Take as input all non-Test *.txt files in current and sub
702 -maketest : Make test script 'TestProp.pl' in current (or -C directory),
704 -makelist : Rewrite the file list $file_list based on current setup
705 -output_names : Output each character's name in the table files; useful for
706 doing what-ifs, looking at diffs; is slow, memory intensive,
707 resulting tables are usable but very large.
708 -check A B : Executes $0 only if A and B are the same
713 # Stores the most-recently changed file. If none have changed, can skip the
715 my $youngest = -M $0; # Do this before the chdir!
717 # Change directories now, because need to read 'version' early.
718 if ($use_directory) {
719 if ($pod_directory && ! File::Spec->file_name_is_absolute($pod_directory)) {
720 $pod_directory = File::Spec->rel2abs($pod_directory);
722 if ($t_path && ! File::Spec->file_name_is_absolute($t_path)) {
723 $t_path = File::Spec->rel2abs($t_path);
725 chdir $use_directory or croak "Failed to chdir to '$use_directory':$!";
726 if ($pod_directory && File::Spec->file_name_is_absolute($pod_directory)) {
727 $pod_directory = File::Spec->abs2rel($pod_directory);
729 if ($t_path && File::Spec->file_name_is_absolute($t_path)) {
730 $t_path = File::Spec->abs2rel($t_path);
734 # Get Unicode version into regular and v-string. This is done now because
735 # various tables below get populated based on it. These tables are populated
736 # here to be near the top of the file, and so easily seeable by those needing
738 open my $VERSION, "<", "version"
739 or croak "$0: can't open required file 'version': $!\n";
740 my $string_version = <$VERSION>;
742 chomp $string_version;
743 my $v_version = pack "C*", split /\./, $string_version; # v string
745 # The following are the complete names of properties with property values that
746 # are known to not match any code points in some versions of Unicode, but that
747 # may change in the future so they should be matchable, hence an empty file is
748 # generated for them.
749 my @tables_that_may_be_empty = (
750 'Joining_Type=Left_Joining',
752 push @tables_that_may_be_empty, 'Script=Common' if $v_version le v4.0.1;
753 push @tables_that_may_be_empty, 'Title' if $v_version lt v2.0.0;
754 push @tables_that_may_be_empty, 'Script=Katakana_Or_Hiragana'
755 if $v_version ge v4.1.0;
757 # The lists below are hashes, so the key is the item in the list, and the
758 # value is the reason why it is in the list. This makes generation of
759 # documentation easier.
761 my %why_suppressed; # No file generated for these.
763 # Files aren't generated for empty extraneous properties. This is arguable.
764 # Extraneous properties generally come about because a property is no longer
765 # used in a newer version of Unicode. If we generated a file without code
766 # points, programs that used to work on that property will still execute
767 # without errors. It just won't ever match (or will always match, with \P{}).
768 # This means that the logic is now likely wrong. I (khw) think its better to
769 # find this out by getting an error message. Just move them to the table
770 # above to change this behavior
771 my %why_suppress_if_empty_warn_if_not = (
773 # It is the only property that has ever officially been removed from the
774 # Standard. The database never contained any code points for it.
775 'Special_Case_Condition' => 'Obsolete',
777 # Apparently never official, but there were code points in some versions of
778 # old-style PropList.txt
779 'Non_Break' => 'Obsolete',
782 # These would normally go in the warn table just above, but they were changed
783 # a long time before this program was written, so warnings about them are
785 if ($v_version gt v3.2.0) {
786 push @tables_that_may_be_empty,
787 'Canonical_Combining_Class=Attached_Below_Left'
790 # These are listed in the Property aliases file in 5.2, but Unihan is ignored
791 # unless explicitly added.
792 if ($v_version ge v5.2.0) {
793 my $unihan = 'Unihan; remove from list if using Unihan';
794 foreach my $table (qw (
798 kCompatibilityVariant
812 $why_suppress_if_empty_warn_if_not{$table} = $unihan;
816 # Properties that this program ignores.
817 my @unimplemented_properties = (
818 'Unicode_Radical_Stroke' # Remove if changing to handle this one.
821 # There are several types of obsolete properties defined by Unicode. These
822 # must be hand-edited for every new Unicode release.
823 my %why_deprecated; # Generates a deprecated warning message if used.
824 my %why_stabilized; # Documentation only
825 my %why_obsolete; # Documentation only
828 my $simple = 'Perl uses the more complete version of this property';
829 my $unihan = 'Unihan properties are by default not enabled in the Perl core. Instead use CPAN: Unicode::Unihan';
831 my $other_properties = 'other properties';
832 my $contributory = "Used by Unicode internally for generating $other_properties and not intended to be used stand-alone";
833 my $why_no_expand = "Easily computed, and yet doesn't cover the common encoding forms (UTF-16/8)",
836 'Grapheme_Link' => 'Deprecated by Unicode. Use ccc=vr (Canonical_Combining_Class=Virama) instead',
837 'Jamo_Short_Name' => $contributory,
838 'Line_Break=Surrogate' => 'Deprecated by Unicode because surrogates should never appear in well-formed text, and therefore shouldn\'t be the basis for line breaking',
839 'Other_Alphabetic' => $contributory,
840 'Other_Default_Ignorable_Code_Point' => $contributory,
841 'Other_Grapheme_Extend' => $contributory,
842 'Other_ID_Continue' => $contributory,
843 'Other_ID_Start' => $contributory,
844 'Other_Lowercase' => $contributory,
845 'Other_Math' => $contributory,
846 'Other_Uppercase' => $contributory,
850 # There is a lib/unicore/Decomposition.pl (used by normalize.pm) which
851 # contains the same information, but without the algorithmically
852 # determinable Hangul syllables'. This file is not published, so it's
853 # existence is not noted in the comment.
854 'Decomposition_Mapping' => 'Accessible via Unicode::Normalize',
856 'ISO_Comment' => 'Apparently no demand for it, but can access it through Unicode::UCD::charinfo. Obsoleted, and code points for it removed in Unicode 5.2',
857 'Unicode_1_Name' => "$simple, and no apparent demand for it, but can access it through Unicode::UCD::charinfo. If there is no later name for a code point, then this one is used instead in charnames",
859 'Simple_Case_Folding' => "$simple. Can access this through Unicode::UCD::casefold",
860 'Simple_Lowercase_Mapping' => "$simple. Can access this through Unicode::UCD::charinfo",
861 'Simple_Titlecase_Mapping' => "$simple. Can access this through Unicode::UCD::charinfo",
862 'Simple_Uppercase_Mapping' => "$simple. Can access this through Unicode::UCD::charinfo",
864 'Name' => "Accessible via 'use charnames;'",
865 'Name_Alias' => "Accessible via 'use charnames;'",
867 # These are sort of jumping the gun; deprecation is proposed for
868 # Unicode version 6.0, but they have never been exposed by Perl, and
869 # likely are soon to be deprecated, so best not to expose them.
870 FC_NFKC_Closure => 'Use NFKC_Casefold instead',
871 Expands_On_NFC => $why_no_expand,
872 Expands_On_NFD => $why_no_expand,
873 Expands_On_NFKC => $why_no_expand,
874 Expands_On_NFKD => $why_no_expand,
877 # The following are suppressed because they were made contributory or
878 # deprecated by Unicode before Perl ever thought about supporting them.
879 foreach my $property ('Jamo_Short_Name', 'Grapheme_Link') {
880 $why_suppressed{$property} = $why_deprecated{$property};
883 # Customize the message for all the 'Other_' properties
884 foreach my $property (keys %why_deprecated) {
885 next if (my $main_property = $property) !~ s/^Other_//;
886 $why_deprecated{$property} =~ s/$other_properties/the $main_property property (which should be used instead)/;
890 if ($v_version ge 4.0.0) {
891 $why_stabilized{'Hyphen'} = 'Use the Line_Break property instead; see www.unicode.org/reports/tr14';
893 if ($v_version ge 5.2.0) {
894 $why_obsolete{'ISO_Comment'} = 'Code points for it have been removed';
897 # Probably obsolete forever
898 if ($v_version ge v4.1.0) {
899 $why_suppressed{'Script=Katakana_Or_Hiragana'} = 'Obsolete. All code points previously matched by this have been moved to "Script=Common"';
902 # This program can create files for enumerated-like properties, such as
903 # 'Numeric_Type'. This file would be the same format as for a string
904 # property, with a mapping from code point to its value, so you could look up,
905 # for example, the script a code point is in. But no one so far wants this
906 # mapping, or they have found another way to get it since this is a new
907 # feature. So no file is generated except if it is in this list.
908 my @output_mapped_properties = split "\n", <<END;
911 # If you are using the Unihan database, you need to add the properties that
912 # you want to extract from it to this table. For your convenience, the
913 # properties in the 5.2 PropertyAliases.txt file are listed, commented out
914 my @cjk_properties = split "\n", <<'END';
915 #cjkAccountingNumeric; kAccountingNumeric
916 #cjkOtherNumeric; kOtherNumeric
917 #cjkPrimaryNumeric; kPrimaryNumeric
918 #cjkCompatibilityVariant; kCompatibilityVariant
920 #cjkIRG_GSource; kIRG_GSource
921 #cjkIRG_HSource; kIRG_HSource
922 #cjkIRG_JSource; kIRG_JSource
923 #cjkIRG_KPSource; kIRG_KPSource
924 #cjkIRG_KSource; kIRG_KSource
925 #cjkIRG_TSource; kIRG_TSource
926 #cjkIRG_USource; kIRG_USource
927 #cjkIRG_VSource; kIRG_VSource
928 #cjkRSUnicode; kRSUnicode ; Unicode_Radical_Stroke; URS
931 # Similarly for the property values. For your convenience, the lines in the
932 # 5.2 PropertyAliases.txt file are listed. Just remove the first BUT NOT both
934 my @cjk_property_values = split "\n", <<'END';
935 ## @missing: 0000..10FFFF; cjkAccountingNumeric; NaN
936 ## @missing: 0000..10FFFF; cjkCompatibilityVariant; <code point>
937 ## @missing: 0000..10FFFF; cjkIICore; <none>
938 ## @missing: 0000..10FFFF; cjkIRG_GSource; <none>
939 ## @missing: 0000..10FFFF; cjkIRG_HSource; <none>
940 ## @missing: 0000..10FFFF; cjkIRG_JSource; <none>
941 ## @missing: 0000..10FFFF; cjkIRG_KPSource; <none>
942 ## @missing: 0000..10FFFF; cjkIRG_KSource; <none>
943 ## @missing: 0000..10FFFF; cjkIRG_TSource; <none>
944 ## @missing: 0000..10FFFF; cjkIRG_USource; <none>
945 ## @missing: 0000..10FFFF; cjkIRG_VSource; <none>
946 ## @missing: 0000..10FFFF; cjkOtherNumeric; NaN
947 ## @missing: 0000..10FFFF; cjkPrimaryNumeric; NaN
948 ## @missing: 0000..10FFFF; cjkRSUnicode; <none>
951 # The input files don't list every code point. Those not listed are to be
952 # defaulted to some value. Below are hard-coded what those values are for
953 # non-binary properties as of 5.1. Starting in 5.0, there are
954 # machine-parsable comment lines in the files the give the defaults; so this
955 # list shouldn't have to be extended. The claim is that all missing entries
956 # for binary properties will default to 'N'. Unicode tried to change that in
957 # 5.2, but the beta period produced enough protest that they backed off.
959 # The defaults for the fields that appear in UnicodeData.txt in this hash must
960 # be in the form that it expects. The others may be synonyms.
961 my $CODE_POINT = '<code point>';
962 my %default_mapping = (
964 # Bidi_Class => Complicated; set in code
965 Bidi_Mirroring_Glyph => "",
967 Canonical_Combining_Class => 0,
968 Case_Folding => $CODE_POINT,
969 Decomposition_Mapping => $CODE_POINT,
970 Decomposition_Type => 'None',
971 East_Asian_Width => "Neutral",
972 FC_NFKC_Closure => $CODE_POINT,
973 General_Category => 'Cn',
974 Grapheme_Cluster_Break => 'Other',
975 Hangul_Syllable_Type => 'NA',
977 Jamo_Short_Name => "",
978 Joining_Group => "No_Joining_Group",
979 # Joining_Type => Complicated; set in code
980 kIICore => 'N', # Is converted to binary
981 #Line_Break => Complicated; set in code
982 Lowercase_Mapping => $CODE_POINT,
989 Numeric_Type => 'None',
990 Numeric_Value => 'NaN',
991 Script => ($v_version le 4.1.0) ? 'Common' : 'Unknown',
992 Sentence_Break => 'Other',
993 Simple_Case_Folding => $CODE_POINT,
994 Simple_Lowercase_Mapping => $CODE_POINT,
995 Simple_Titlecase_Mapping => $CODE_POINT,
996 Simple_Uppercase_Mapping => $CODE_POINT,
997 Titlecase_Mapping => $CODE_POINT,
998 Unicode_1_Name => "",
999 Unicode_Radical_Stroke => "",
1000 Uppercase_Mapping => $CODE_POINT,
1001 Word_Break => 'Other',
1004 # Below are files that Unicode furnishes, but this program ignores, and why
1005 my %ignored_files = (
1006 'CJKRadicals.txt' => 'Unihan data',
1007 'Index.txt' => 'An index, not actual data',
1008 'NamedSqProv.txt' => 'Not officially part of the Unicode standard; Append it to NamedSequences.txt if you want to process the contents.',
1009 'NamesList.txt' => 'Just adds commentary',
1010 'NormalizationCorrections.txt' => 'Data is already in other files.',
1011 'Props.txt' => 'Adds nothing to PropList.txt; only in very early releases',
1012 'ReadMe.txt' => 'Just comments',
1013 'README.TXT' => 'Just comments',
1014 'StandardizedVariants.txt' => 'Only for glyph changes, not a Unicode character property. Does not fit into current scheme where one code point is mapped',
1017 ### End of externally interesting definitions, except for @input_file_objects
1020 # !!!!!!! DO NOT EDIT THIS FILE !!!!!!!
1021 # This file is machine-generated by $0 from the Unicode
1022 # database, Version $string_version. Any changes made here will be lost!
1025 my $INTERNAL_ONLY=<<"EOF";
1027 # !!!!!!! INTERNAL PERL USE ONLY !!!!!!!
1028 # This file is for internal use by the Perl program only. The format and even
1029 # the name or existence of this file are subject to change without notice.
1030 # Don't use it directly.
1033 my $DEVELOPMENT_ONLY=<<"EOF";
1034 # !!!!!!! DEVELOPMENT USE ONLY !!!!!!!
1035 # This file contains information artificially constrained to code points
1036 # present in Unicode release $string_compare_versions.
1037 # IT CANNOT BE RELIED ON. It is for use during development only and should
1038 # not be used for production.
1042 my $LAST_UNICODE_CODEPOINT_STRING = "10FFFF";
1043 my $LAST_UNICODE_CODEPOINT = hex $LAST_UNICODE_CODEPOINT_STRING;
1044 my $MAX_UNICODE_CODEPOINTS = $LAST_UNICODE_CODEPOINT + 1;
1046 # Matches legal code point. 4-6 hex numbers, If there are 6, the first
1047 # two must be 10; if there are 5, the first must not be a 0. Written this way
1048 # to decrease backtracking
1050 qr/ \b (?: 10[0-9A-F]{4} | [1-9A-F][0-9A-F]{4} | [0-9A-F]{4} ) \b/x;
1052 # This matches the beginning of the line in the Unicode db files that give the
1053 # defaults for code points not listed (i.e., missing) in the file. The code
1054 # depends on this ending with a semi-colon, so it can assume it is a valid
1055 # field when the line is split() by semi-colons
1056 my $missing_defaults_prefix =
1057 qr/^#\s+\@missing:\s+0000\.\.$LAST_UNICODE_CODEPOINT_STRING\s*;/;
1059 # Property types. Unicode has more types, but these are sufficient for our
1061 my $UNKNOWN = -1; # initialized to illegal value
1062 my $NON_STRING = 1; # Either binary or enum
1064 my $ENUM = 3; # Include catalog
1065 my $STRING = 4; # Anything else: string or misc
1067 # Some input files have lines that give default values for code points not
1068 # contained in the file. Sometimes these should be ignored.
1069 my $NO_DEFAULTS = 0; # Must evaluate to false
1070 my $NOT_IGNORED = 1;
1073 # Range types. Each range has a type. Most ranges are type 0, for normal,
1074 # and will appear in the main body of the tables in the output files, but
1075 # there are other types of ranges as well, listed below, that are specially
1076 # handled. There are pseudo-types as well that will never be stored as a
1077 # type, but will affect the calculation of the type.
1079 # 0 is for normal, non-specials
1080 my $MULTI_CP = 1; # Sequence of more than code point
1081 my $HANGUL_SYLLABLE = 2;
1082 my $CP_IN_NAME = 3; # The NAME contains the code point appended to it.
1083 my $NULL = 4; # The map is to the null string; utf8.c can't
1084 # handle these, nor is there an accepted syntax
1085 # for them in \p{} constructs
1086 my $COMPUTE_NO_MULTI_CP = 5; # Pseudo-type; means that ranges that would
1087 # otherwise be $MULTI_CP type are instead type 0
1089 # process_generic_property_file() can accept certain overrides in its input.
1090 # Each of these must begin AND end with $CMD_DELIM.
1091 my $CMD_DELIM = "\a";
1092 my $REPLACE_CMD = 'replace'; # Override the Replace
1093 my $MAP_TYPE_CMD = 'map_type'; # Override the Type
1098 # Values for the Replace argument to add_range.
1099 # $NO # Don't replace; add only the code points not
1101 my $IF_NOT_EQUIVALENT = 1; # Replace only under certain conditions; details in
1102 # the comments at the subroutine definition.
1103 my $UNCONDITIONALLY = 2; # Replace without conditions.
1104 my $MULTIPLE = 4; # Don't replace, but add a duplicate record if
1107 # Flags to give property statuses. The phrases are to remind maintainers that
1108 # if the flag is changed, the indefinite article referring to it in the
1109 # documentation may need to be as well.
1111 my $SUPPRESSED = 'z'; # The character should never actually be seen, since
1113 my $PLACEHOLDER = 'P'; # Implies no pod entry generated
1114 my $DEPRECATED = 'D';
1115 my $a_bold_deprecated = "a 'B<$DEPRECATED>'";
1116 my $A_bold_deprecated = "A 'B<$DEPRECATED>'";
1117 my $DISCOURAGED = 'X';
1118 my $a_bold_discouraged = "an 'B<$DISCOURAGED>'";
1119 my $A_bold_discouraged = "An 'B<$DISCOURAGED>'";
1121 my $a_bold_stricter = "a 'B<$STRICTER>'";
1122 my $A_bold_stricter = "A 'B<$STRICTER>'";
1123 my $STABILIZED = 'S';
1124 my $a_bold_stabilized = "an 'B<$STABILIZED>'";
1125 my $A_bold_stabilized = "An 'B<$STABILIZED>'";
1127 my $a_bold_obsolete = "an 'B<$OBSOLETE>'";
1128 my $A_bold_obsolete = "An 'B<$OBSOLETE>'";
1130 my %status_past_participles = (
1131 $DISCOURAGED => 'discouraged',
1132 $SUPPRESSED => 'should never be generated',
1133 $STABILIZED => 'stabilized',
1134 $OBSOLETE => 'obsolete',
1135 $DEPRECATED => 'deprecated',
1138 # The format of the values of the map tables:
1139 my $BINARY_FORMAT = 'b';
1140 my $DECIMAL_FORMAT = 'd';
1141 my $FLOAT_FORMAT = 'f';
1142 my $INTEGER_FORMAT = 'i';
1143 my $HEX_FORMAT = 'x';
1144 my $RATIONAL_FORMAT = 'r';
1145 my $STRING_FORMAT = 's';
1147 my %map_table_formats = (
1148 $BINARY_FORMAT => 'binary',
1149 $DECIMAL_FORMAT => 'single decimal digit',
1150 $FLOAT_FORMAT => 'floating point number',
1151 $INTEGER_FORMAT => 'integer',
1152 $HEX_FORMAT => 'positive hex whole number; a code point',
1153 $RATIONAL_FORMAT => 'rational: an integer or a fraction',
1154 $STRING_FORMAT => 'arbitrary string',
1157 # Unicode didn't put such derived files in a separate directory at first.
1158 my $EXTRACTED_DIR = (-d 'extracted') ? 'extracted' : "";
1159 my $EXTRACTED = ($EXTRACTED_DIR) ? "$EXTRACTED_DIR/" : "";
1160 my $AUXILIARY = 'auxiliary';
1162 # Hashes that will eventually go into Heavy.pl for the use of utf8_heavy.pl
1163 my %loose_to_file_of; # loosely maps table names to their respective
1165 my %stricter_to_file_of; # same; but for stricter mapping.
1166 my %nv_floating_to_rational; # maps numeric values floating point numbers to
1167 # their rational equivalent
1168 my %loose_property_name_of; # Loosely maps property names to standard form
1170 # These constants names and values were taken from the Unicode standard,
1171 # version 5.1, section 3.12. They are used in conjunction with Hangul
1172 # syllables. The '_string' versions are so generated tables can retain the
1173 # hex format, which is the more familiar value
1174 my $SBase_string = "0xAC00";
1175 my $SBase = CORE::hex $SBase_string;
1176 my $LBase_string = "0x1100";
1177 my $LBase = CORE::hex $LBase_string;
1178 my $VBase_string = "0x1161";
1179 my $VBase = CORE::hex $VBase_string;
1180 my $TBase_string = "0x11A7";
1181 my $TBase = CORE::hex $TBase_string;
1186 my $NCount = $VCount * $TCount;
1188 # For Hangul syllables; These store the numbers from Jamo.txt in conjunction
1189 # with the above published constants.
1191 my %Jamo_L; # Leading consonants
1192 my %Jamo_V; # Vowels
1193 my %Jamo_T; # Trailing consonants
1195 my @backslash_X_tests; # List of tests read in for testing \X
1196 my @unhandled_properties; # Will contain a list of properties found in
1197 # the input that we didn't process.
1198 my @match_properties; # Properties that have match tables, to be
1200 my @map_properties; # Properties that get map files written
1201 my @named_sequences; # NamedSequences.txt contents.
1202 my %potential_files; # Generated list of all .txt files in the directory
1203 # structure so we can warn if something is being
1205 my @files_actually_output; # List of files we generated.
1206 my @more_Names; # Some code point names are compound; this is used
1207 # to store the extra components of them.
1208 my $MIN_FRACTION_LENGTH = 3; # How many digits of a floating point number at
1209 # the minimum before we consider it equivalent to a
1210 # candidate rational
1211 my $MAX_FLOATING_SLOP = 10 ** - $MIN_FRACTION_LENGTH; # And in floating terms
1213 # These store references to certain commonly used property objects
1220 # Are there conflicting names because of beginning with 'In_', or 'Is_'
1221 my $has_In_conflicts = 0;
1222 my $has_Is_conflicts = 0;
1224 sub internal_file_to_platform ($) {
1225 # Convert our file paths which have '/' separators to those of the
1229 return undef unless defined $file;
1231 return File::Spec->join(split '/', $file);
1234 sub file_exists ($) { # platform independent '-e'. This program internally
1235 # uses slash as a path separator.
1237 return 0 if ! defined $file;
1238 return -e internal_file_to_platform($file);
1242 # Returns the address of the blessed input object.
1243 # It doesn't check for blessedness because that would do a string eval
1244 # every call, and the program is structured so that this is never called
1245 # for a non-blessed object.
1247 no overloading; # If overloaded, numifying below won't work.
1249 # Numifying a ref gives its address.
1250 return pack 'J', $_[0];
1253 # Commented code below should work on Perl 5.8.
1254 ## This 'require' doesn't necessarily work in miniperl, and even if it does,
1255 ## the native perl version of it (which is what would operate under miniperl)
1256 ## is extremely slow, as it does a string eval every call.
1257 #my $has_fast_scalar_util = $
\18 !~ /miniperl/
1258 # && defined eval "require Scalar::Util";
1261 # # Returns the address of the blessed input object. Uses the XS version if
1262 # # available. It doesn't check for blessedness because that would do a
1263 # # string eval every call, and the program is structured so that this is
1264 # # never called for a non-blessed object.
1266 # return Scalar::Util::refaddr($_[0]) if $has_fast_scalar_util;
1268 # # Check at least that is a ref.
1269 # my $pkg = ref($_[0]) or return undef;
1271 # # Change to a fake package to defeat any overloaded stringify
1272 # bless $_[0], 'main::Fake';
1274 # # Numifying a ref gives its address.
1275 # my $addr = pack 'J', $_[0];
1277 # # Return to original class
1278 # bless $_[0], $pkg;
1285 return $a if $a >= $b;
1292 return $a if $a <= $b;
1296 sub clarify_number ($) {
1297 # This returns the input number with underscores inserted every 3 digits
1298 # in large (5 digits or more) numbers. Input must be entirely digits, not
1302 my $pos = length($number) - 3;
1303 return $number if $pos <= 1;
1305 substr($number, $pos, 0) = '_';
1314 # These routines give a uniform treatment of messages in this program. They
1315 # are placed in the Carp package to cause the stack trace to not include them,
1316 # although an alternative would be to use another package and set @CARP_NOT
1319 our $Verbose = 1 if main::DEBUG; # Useful info when debugging
1321 # This is a work-around suggested by Nicholas Clark to fix a problem with Carp
1322 # and overload trying to load Scalar:Util under miniperl. See
1323 # http://www.xray.mpe.mpg.de/mailing-lists/perl5-porters/2009-11/msg01057.html
1324 undef $overload::VERSION;
1327 my $message = shift || "";
1328 my $nofold = shift || 0;
1331 $message = main::join_lines($message);
1332 $message =~ s/^$0: *//; # Remove initial program name
1333 $message =~ s/[.;,]+$//; # Remove certain ending punctuation
1334 $message = "\n$0: $message;";
1336 # Fold the message with program name, semi-colon end punctuation
1337 # (which looks good with the message that carp appends to it), and a
1338 # hanging indent for continuation lines.
1339 $message = main::simple_fold($message, "", 4) unless $nofold;
1340 $message =~ s/\n$//; # Remove the trailing nl so what carp
1341 # appends is to the same line
1344 return $message if defined wantarray; # If a caller just wants the msg
1351 # This is called when it is clear that the problem is caused by a bug in
1354 my $message = shift;
1355 $message =~ s/^$0: *//;
1356 $message = my_carp("Bug in $0. Please report it by running perlbug or if that is unavailable, by sending email to perbug\@perl.org:\n$message");
1361 sub carp_too_few_args {
1363 my_carp_bug("Wrong number of arguments: to 'carp_too_few_arguments'. No action taken.");
1367 my $args_ref = shift;
1370 my_carp_bug("Need at least $count arguments to "
1372 . ". Instead got: '"
1373 . join ', ', @$args_ref
1374 . "'. No action taken.");
1378 sub carp_extra_args {
1379 my $args_ref = shift;
1380 my_carp_bug("Too many arguments to 'carp_extra_args': (" . join(', ', @_) . "); Extras ignored.") if @_;
1382 unless (ref $args_ref) {
1383 my_carp_bug("Argument to 'carp_extra_args' ($args_ref) must be a ref. Not checking arguments.");
1386 my ($package, $file, $line) = caller;
1387 my $subroutine = (caller 1)[3];
1390 if (ref $args_ref eq 'HASH') {
1391 foreach my $key (keys %$args_ref) {
1392 $args_ref->{$key} = $UNDEF unless defined $args_ref->{$key};
1394 $list = join ', ', each %{$args_ref};
1396 elsif (ref $args_ref eq 'ARRAY') {
1397 foreach my $arg (@$args_ref) {
1398 $arg = $UNDEF unless defined $arg;
1400 $list = join ', ', @$args_ref;
1403 my_carp_bug("Can't cope with ref "
1405 . " . argument to 'carp_extra_args'. Not checking arguments.");
1409 my_carp_bug("Unrecognized parameters in options: '$list' to $subroutine. Skipped.");
1417 # This program uses the inside-out method for objects, as recommended in
1418 # "Perl Best Practices". This closure aids in generating those. There
1419 # are two routines. setup_package() is called once per package to set
1420 # things up, and then set_access() is called for each hash representing a
1421 # field in the object. These routines arrange for the object to be
1422 # properly destroyed when no longer used, and for standard accessor
1423 # functions to be generated. If you need more complex accessors, just
1424 # write your own and leave those accesses out of the call to set_access().
1425 # More details below.
1427 my %constructor_fields; # fields that are to be used in constructors; see
1430 # The values of this hash will be the package names as keys to other
1431 # hashes containing the name of each field in the package as keys, and
1432 # references to their respective hashes as values.
1436 # Sets up the package, creating standard DESTROY and dump methods
1437 # (unless already defined). The dump method is used in debugging by
1439 # The optional parameters are:
1440 # a) a reference to a hash, that gets populated by later
1441 # set_access() calls with one of the accesses being
1442 # 'constructor'. The caller can then refer to this, but it is
1443 # not otherwise used by these two routines.
1444 # b) a reference to a callback routine to call during destruction
1445 # of the object, before any fields are actually destroyed
1448 my $constructor_ref = delete $args{'Constructor_Fields'};
1449 my $destroy_callback = delete $args{'Destroy_Callback'};
1450 Carp::carp_extra_args(\@_) if main::DEBUG && %args;
1453 my $package = (caller)[0];
1455 $package_fields{$package} = \%fields;
1456 $constructor_fields{$package} = $constructor_ref;
1458 unless ($package->can('DESTROY')) {
1459 my $destroy_name = "${package}::DESTROY";
1462 # Use typeglob to give the anonymous subroutine the name we want
1463 *$destroy_name = sub {
1465 my $addr = do { no overloading; pack 'J', $self; };
1467 $self->$destroy_callback if $destroy_callback;
1468 foreach my $field (keys %{$package_fields{$package}}) {
1469 #print STDERR __LINE__, ": Destroying ", ref $self, " ", sprintf("%04X", $addr), ": ", $field, "\n";
1470 delete $package_fields{$package}{$field}{$addr};
1476 unless ($package->can('dump')) {
1477 my $dump_name = "${package}::dump";
1481 return dump_inside_out($self, $package_fields{$package}, @_);
1488 # Arrange for the input field to be garbage collected when no longer
1489 # needed. Also, creates standard accessor functions for the field
1490 # based on the optional parameters-- none if none of these parameters:
1491 # 'addable' creates an 'add_NAME()' accessor function.
1492 # 'readable' or 'readable_array' creates a 'NAME()' accessor
1494 # 'settable' creates a 'set_NAME()' accessor function.
1495 # 'constructor' doesn't create an accessor function, but adds the
1496 # field to the hash that was previously passed to
1498 # Any of the accesses can be abbreviated down, so that 'a', 'ad',
1499 # 'add' etc. all mean 'addable'.
1500 # The read accessor function will work on both array and scalar
1501 # values. If another accessor in the parameter list is 'a', the read
1502 # access assumes an array. You can also force it to be array access
1503 # by specifying 'readable_array' instead of 'readable'
1505 # A sort-of 'protected' access can be set-up by preceding the addable,
1506 # readable or settable with some initial portion of 'protected_' (but,
1507 # the underscore is required), like 'p_a', 'pro_set', etc. The
1508 # "protection" is only by convention. All that happens is that the
1509 # accessor functions' names begin with an underscore. So instead of
1510 # calling set_foo, the call is _set_foo. (Real protection could be
1511 # accomplished by having a new subroutine, end_package, called at the
1512 # end of each package, and then storing the __LINE__ ranges and
1513 # checking them on every accessor. But that is way overkill.)
1515 # We create anonymous subroutines as the accessors and then use
1516 # typeglobs to assign them to the proper package and name
1518 my $name = shift; # Name of the field
1519 my $field = shift; # Reference to the inside-out hash containing the
1522 my $package = (caller)[0];
1524 if (! exists $package_fields{$package}) {
1525 croak "$0: Must call 'setup_package' before 'set_access'";
1528 # Stash the field so DESTROY can get it.
1529 $package_fields{$package}{$name} = $field;
1531 # Remaining arguments are the accessors. For each...
1532 foreach my $access (@_) {
1533 my $access = lc $access;
1537 # Match the input as far as it goes.
1538 if ($access =~ /^(p[^_]*)_/) {
1540 if (substr('protected_', 0, length $protected)
1544 # Add 1 for the underscore not included in $protected
1545 $access = substr($access, length($protected) + 1);
1553 if (substr('addable', 0, length $access) eq $access) {
1554 my $subname = "${package}::${protected}add_$name";
1557 # add_ accessor. Don't add if already there, which we
1558 # determine using 'eq' for scalars and '==' otherwise.
1561 return Carp::carp_too_few_args(\@_, 2) if main::DEBUG && @_ < 2;
1564 my $addr = do { no overloading; pack 'J', $self; };
1565 Carp::carp_extra_args(\@_) if main::DEBUG && @_;
1567 return if grep { $value == $_ } @{$field->{$addr}};
1570 return if grep { $value eq $_ } @{$field->{$addr}};
1572 push @{$field->{$addr}}, $value;
1576 elsif (substr('constructor', 0, length $access) eq $access) {
1578 Carp::my_carp_bug("Can't set-up 'protected' constructors")
1581 $constructor_fields{$package}{$name} = $field;
1584 elsif (substr('readable_array', 0, length $access) eq $access) {
1586 # Here has read access. If one of the other parameters for
1587 # access is array, or this one specifies array (by being more
1588 # than just 'readable_'), then create a subroutine that
1589 # assumes the data is an array. Otherwise just a scalar
1590 my $subname = "${package}::${protected}$name";
1591 if (grep { /^a/i } @_
1592 or length($access) > length('readable_'))
1597 Carp::carp_extra_args(\@_) if main::DEBUG && @_ > 1;
1598 my $addr = do { no overloading; pack 'J', $_[0]; };
1599 if (ref $field->{$addr} ne 'ARRAY') {
1600 my $type = ref $field->{$addr};
1601 $type = 'scalar' unless $type;
1602 Carp::my_carp_bug("Trying to read $name as an array when it is a $type. Big problems.");
1605 return scalar @{$field->{$addr}} unless wantarray;
1607 # Make a copy; had problems with caller modifying the
1608 # original otherwise
1609 my @return = @{$field->{$addr}};
1615 # Here not an array value, a simpler function.
1619 Carp::carp_extra_args(\@_) if main::DEBUG && @_ > 1;
1621 return $field->{pack 'J', $_[0]};
1625 elsif (substr('settable', 0, length $access) eq $access) {
1626 my $subname = "${package}::${protected}set_$name";
1631 return Carp::carp_too_few_args(\@_, 2) if @_ < 2;
1632 Carp::carp_extra_args(\@_) if @_ > 2;
1634 # $self is $_[0]; $value is $_[1]
1636 $field->{pack 'J', $_[0]} = $_[1];
1641 Carp::my_carp_bug("Unknown accessor type $access. No accessor set.");
1650 # All input files use this object, which stores various attributes about them,
1651 # and provides for convenient, uniform handling. The run method wraps the
1652 # processing. It handles all the bookkeeping of opening, reading, and closing
1653 # the file, returning only significant input lines.
1655 # Each object gets a handler which processes the body of the file, and is
1656 # called by run(). Most should use the generic, default handler, which has
1657 # code scrubbed to handle things you might not expect. A handler should
1658 # basically be a while(next_line()) {...} loop.
1660 # You can also set up handlers to
1661 # 1) call before the first line is read for pre processing
1662 # 2) call to adjust each line of the input before the main handler gets them
1663 # 3) call upon EOF before the main handler exits its loop
1664 # 4) call at the end for post processing
1666 # $_ is used to store the input line, and is to be filtered by the
1667 # each_line_handler()s. So, if the format of the line is not in the desired
1668 # format for the main handler, these are used to do that adjusting. They can
1669 # be stacked (by enclosing them in an [ anonymous array ] in the constructor,
1670 # so the $_ output of one is used as the input to the next. None of the other
1671 # handlers are stackable, but could easily be changed to be so.
1673 # Most of the handlers can call insert_lines() or insert_adjusted_lines()
1674 # which insert the parameters as lines to be processed before the next input
1675 # file line is read. This allows the EOF handler to flush buffers, for
1676 # example. The difference between the two routines is that the lines inserted
1677 # by insert_lines() are subjected to the each_line_handler()s. (So if you
1678 # called it from such a handler, you would get infinite recursion.) Lines
1679 # inserted by insert_adjusted_lines() go directly to the main handler without
1680 # any adjustments. If the post-processing handler calls any of these, there
1681 # will be no effect. Some error checking for these conditions could be added,
1682 # but it hasn't been done.
1684 # carp_bad_line() should be called to warn of bad input lines, which clears $_
1685 # to prevent further processing of the line. This routine will output the
1686 # message as a warning once, and then keep a count of the lines that have the
1687 # same message, and output that count at the end of the file's processing.
1688 # This keeps the number of messages down to a manageable amount.
1690 # get_missings() should be called to retrieve any @missing input lines.
1691 # Messages will be raised if this isn't done if the options aren't to ignore
1694 sub trace { return main::trace(@_); }
1697 # Keep track of fields that are to be put into the constructor.
1698 my %constructor_fields;
1700 main::setup_package(Constructor_Fields => \%constructor_fields);
1702 my %file; # Input file name, required
1703 main::set_access('file', \%file, qw{ c r });
1705 my %first_released; # Unicode version file was first released in, required
1706 main::set_access('first_released', \%first_released, qw{ c r });
1708 my %handler; # Subroutine to process the input file, defaults to
1709 # 'process_generic_property_file'
1710 main::set_access('handler', \%handler, qw{ c });
1713 # name of property this file is for. defaults to none, meaning not
1714 # applicable, or is otherwise determinable, for example, from each line.
1715 main::set_access('property', \%property, qw{ c });
1718 # If this is true, the file is optional. If not present, no warning is
1719 # output. If it is present, the string given by this parameter is
1720 # evaluated, and if false the file is not processed.
1721 main::set_access('optional', \%optional, 'c', 'r');
1724 # This is used for debugging, to skip processing of all but a few input
1725 # files. Add 'non_skip => 1' to the constructor for those files you want
1726 # processed when you set the $debug_skip global.
1727 main::set_access('non_skip', \%non_skip, 'c');
1730 # This is used to skip processing of this input file semi-permanently.
1731 # It is used for files that we aren't planning to process anytime soon,
1732 # but want to allow to be in the directory and not raise a message that we
1733 # are not handling. Mostly for test files. This is in contrast to the
1734 # non_skip element, which is supposed to be used very temporarily for
1735 # debugging. Sets 'optional' to 1
1736 main::set_access('skip', \%skip, 'c');
1738 my %each_line_handler;
1739 # list of subroutines to look at and filter each non-comment line in the
1740 # file. defaults to none. The subroutines are called in order, each is
1741 # to adjust $_ for the next one, and the final one adjusts it for
1743 main::set_access('each_line_handler', \%each_line_handler, 'c');
1745 my %has_missings_defaults;
1746 # ? Are there lines in the file giving default values for code points
1747 # missing from it?. Defaults to NO_DEFAULTS. Otherwise NOT_IGNORED is
1748 # the norm, but IGNORED means it has such lines, but the handler doesn't
1749 # use them. Having these three states allows us to catch changes to the
1750 # UCD that this program should track
1751 main::set_access('has_missings_defaults',
1752 \%has_missings_defaults, qw{ c r });
1755 # Subroutine to call before doing anything else in the file. If undef, no
1756 # such handler is called.
1757 main::set_access('pre_handler', \%pre_handler, qw{ c });
1760 # Subroutine to call upon getting an EOF on the input file, but before
1761 # that is returned to the main handler. This is to allow buffers to be
1762 # flushed. The handler is expected to call insert_lines() or
1763 # insert_adjusted() with the buffered material
1764 main::set_access('eof_handler', \%eof_handler, qw{ c r });
1767 # Subroutine to call after all the lines of the file are read in and
1768 # processed. If undef, no such handler is called.
1769 main::set_access('post_handler', \%post_handler, qw{ c });
1771 my %progress_message;
1772 # Message to print to display progress in lieu of the standard one
1773 main::set_access('progress_message', \%progress_message, qw{ c });
1776 # cache open file handle, internal. Is undef if file hasn't been
1777 # processed at all, empty if has;
1778 main::set_access('handle', \%handle);
1781 # cache of lines added virtually to the file, internal
1782 main::set_access('added_lines', \%added_lines);
1785 # cache of errors found, internal
1786 main::set_access('errors', \%errors);
1789 # storage of '@missing' defaults lines
1790 main::set_access('missings', \%missings);
1795 my $self = bless \do{ my $anonymous_scalar }, $class;
1796 my $addr = do { no overloading; pack 'J', $self; };
1799 $handler{$addr} = \&main::process_generic_property_file;
1800 $non_skip{$addr} = 0;
1802 $has_missings_defaults{$addr} = $NO_DEFAULTS;
1803 $handle{$addr} = undef;
1804 $added_lines{$addr} = [ ];
1805 $each_line_handler{$addr} = [ ];
1806 $errors{$addr} = { };
1807 $missings{$addr} = [ ];
1809 # Two positional parameters.
1810 return Carp::carp_too_few_args(\@_, 2) if main::DEBUG && @_ < 2;
1811 $file{$addr} = main::internal_file_to_platform(shift);
1812 $first_released{$addr} = shift;
1814 # The rest of the arguments are key => value pairs
1815 # %constructor_fields has been set up earlier to list all possible
1816 # ones. Either set or push, depending on how the default has been set
1819 foreach my $key (keys %args) {
1820 my $argument = $args{$key};
1822 # Note that the fields are the lower case of the constructor keys
1823 my $hash = $constructor_fields{lc $key};
1824 if (! defined $hash) {
1825 Carp::my_carp_bug("Unrecognized parameters '$key => $argument' to new() for $self. Skipped");
1828 if (ref $hash->{$addr} eq 'ARRAY') {
1829 if (ref $argument eq 'ARRAY') {
1830 foreach my $argument (@{$argument}) {
1831 next if ! defined $argument;
1832 push @{$hash->{$addr}}, $argument;
1836 push @{$hash->{$addr}}, $argument if defined $argument;
1840 $hash->{$addr} = $argument;
1845 # If the file has a property for it, it means that the property is not
1846 # listed in the file's entries. So add a handler to the list of line
1847 # handlers to insert the property name into the lines, to provide a
1848 # uniform interface to the final processing subroutine.
1849 # the final code doesn't have to worry about that.
1850 if ($property{$addr}) {
1851 push @{$each_line_handler{$addr}}, \&_insert_property_into_line;
1854 if ($non_skip{$addr} && ! $debug_skip && $verbosity) {
1855 print "Warning: " . __PACKAGE__ . " constructor for $file{$addr} has useless 'non_skip' in it\n";
1858 $optional{$addr} = 1 if $skip{$addr};
1866 qw("") => "_operator_stringify",
1867 "." => \&main::_operator_dot,
1870 sub _operator_stringify {
1873 return __PACKAGE__ . " object for " . $self->file;
1876 # flag to make sure extracted files are processed early
1877 my $seen_non_extracted_non_age = 0;
1880 # Process the input object $self. This opens and closes the file and
1881 # calls all the handlers for it. Currently, this can only be called
1882 # once per file, as it destroy's the EOF handler
1885 Carp::carp_extra_args(\@_) if main::DEBUG && @_;
1887 my $addr = do { no overloading; pack 'J', $self; };
1889 my $file = $file{$addr};
1891 # Don't process if not expecting this file (because released later
1892 # than this Unicode version), and isn't there. This means if someone
1893 # copies it into an earlier version's directory, we will go ahead and
1895 return if $first_released{$addr} gt $v_version && ! -e $file;
1897 # If in debugging mode and this file doesn't have the non-skip
1898 # flag set, and isn't one of the critical files, skip it.
1900 && $first_released{$addr} ne v0
1901 && ! $non_skip{$addr})
1903 print "Skipping $file in debugging\n" if $verbosity;
1907 # File could be optional
1908 if ($optional{$addr}) {
1909 return unless -e $file;
1910 my $result = eval $optional{$addr};
1911 if (! defined $result) {
1912 Carp::my_carp_bug("Got '$@' when tried to eval $optional{$addr}. $file Skipped.");
1917 print STDERR "Skipping processing input file '$file' because '$optional{$addr}' is not true\n";
1923 if (! defined $file || ! -e $file) {
1925 # If the file doesn't exist, see if have internal data for it
1926 # (based on first_released being 0).
1927 if ($first_released{$addr} eq v0) {
1928 $handle{$addr} = 'pretend_is_open';
1931 if (! $optional{$addr} # File could be optional
1932 && $v_version ge $first_released{$addr})
1934 print STDERR "Skipping processing input file '$file' because not found\n" if $v_version ge $first_released{$addr};
1941 # Here, the file exists. Some platforms may change the case of
1943 if ($seen_non_extracted_non_age) {
1944 if ($file =~ /$EXTRACTED/i) {
1945 Carp::my_carp_bug(join_lines(<<END
1946 $file should be processed just after the 'Prop...Alias' files, and before
1947 anything not in the $EXTRACTED_DIR directory. Proceeding, but the results may
1948 have subtle problems
1953 elsif ($EXTRACTED_DIR
1954 && $first_released{$addr} ne v0
1955 && $file !~ /$EXTRACTED/i
1956 && lc($file) ne 'dage.txt')
1958 # We don't set this (by the 'if' above) if we have no
1959 # extracted directory, so if running on an early version,
1960 # this test won't work. Not worth worrying about.
1961 $seen_non_extracted_non_age = 1;
1964 # And mark the file as having being processed, and warn if it
1965 # isn't a file we are expecting. As we process the files,
1966 # they are deleted from the hash, so any that remain at the
1967 # end of the program are files that we didn't process.
1968 my $fkey = File::Spec->rel2abs($file);
1969 my $expecting = delete $potential_files{$fkey};
1970 $expecting = delete $potential_files{lc($fkey)} unless defined $expecting;
1971 Carp::my_carp("Was not expecting '$file'.") if
1973 && ! defined $handle{$addr};
1975 # Having deleted from expected files, we can quit if not to do
1976 # anything. Don't print progress unless really want verbosity
1978 print "Skipping $file.\n" if $verbosity >= $VERBOSE;
1982 # Open the file, converting the slashes used in this program
1983 # into the proper form for the OS
1985 if (not open $file_handle, "<", $file) {
1986 Carp::my_carp("Can't open $file. Skipping: $!");
1989 $handle{$addr} = $file_handle; # Cache the open file handle
1992 if ($verbosity >= $PROGRESS) {
1993 if ($progress_message{$addr}) {
1994 print "$progress_message{$addr}\n";
1997 # If using a virtual file, say so.
1998 print "Processing ", (-e $file)
2000 : "substitute $file",
2006 # Call any special handler for before the file.
2007 &{$pre_handler{$addr}}($self) if $pre_handler{$addr};
2009 # Then the main handler
2010 &{$handler{$addr}}($self);
2012 # Then any special post-file handler.
2013 &{$post_handler{$addr}}($self) if $post_handler{$addr};
2015 # If any errors have been accumulated, output the counts (as the first
2016 # error message in each class was output when it was encountered).
2017 if ($errors{$addr}) {
2020 foreach my $error (keys %{$errors{$addr}}) {
2021 $total += $errors{$addr}->{$error};
2022 delete $errors{$addr}->{$error};
2027 = "A total of $total lines had errors in $file. ";
2029 $message .= ($types == 1)
2030 ? '(Only the first one was displayed.)'
2031 : '(Only the first of each type was displayed.)';
2032 Carp::my_carp($message);
2036 if (@{$missings{$addr}}) {
2037 Carp::my_carp_bug("Handler for $file didn't look at all the \@missing lines. Generated tables likely are wrong");
2040 # If a real file handle, close it.
2041 close $handle{$addr} or Carp::my_carp("Can't close $file: $!") if
2043 $handle{$addr} = ""; # Uses empty to indicate that has already seen
2044 # the file, as opposed to undef
2049 # Sets $_ to be the next logical input line, if any. Returns non-zero
2050 # if such a line exists. 'logical' means that any lines that have
2051 # been added via insert_lines() will be returned in $_ before the file
2055 Carp::carp_extra_args(\@_) if main::DEBUG && @_;
2057 my $addr = do { no overloading; pack 'J', $self; };
2059 # Here the file is open (or if the handle is not a ref, is an open
2060 # 'virtual' file). Get the next line; any inserted lines get priority
2061 # over the file itself.
2065 while (1) { # Loop until find non-comment, non-empty line
2066 #local $to_trace = 1 if main::DEBUG;
2067 my $inserted_ref = shift @{$added_lines{$addr}};
2068 if (defined $inserted_ref) {
2069 ($adjusted, $_) = @{$inserted_ref};
2070 trace $adjusted, $_ if main::DEBUG && $to_trace;
2071 return 1 if $adjusted;
2074 last if ! ref $handle{$addr}; # Don't read unless is real file
2075 last if ! defined ($_ = readline $handle{$addr});
2078 trace $_ if main::DEBUG && $to_trace;
2080 # See if this line is the comment line that defines what property
2081 # value that code points that are not listed in the file should
2082 # have. The format or existence of these lines is not guaranteed
2083 # by Unicode since they are comments, but the documentation says
2084 # that this was added for machine-readability, so probably won't
2085 # change. This works starting in Unicode Version 5.0. They look
2088 # @missing: 0000..10FFFF; Not_Reordered
2089 # @missing: 0000..10FFFF; Decomposition_Mapping; <code point>
2090 # @missing: 0000..10FFFF; ; NaN
2092 # Save the line for a later get_missings() call.
2093 if (/$missing_defaults_prefix/) {
2094 if ($has_missings_defaults{$addr} == $NO_DEFAULTS) {
2095 $self->carp_bad_line("Unexpected \@missing line. Assuming no missing entries");
2097 elsif ($has_missings_defaults{$addr} == $NOT_IGNORED) {
2098 my @defaults = split /\s* ; \s*/x, $_;
2100 # The first field is the @missing, which ends in a
2101 # semi-colon, so can safely shift.
2104 # Some of these lines may have empty field placeholders
2105 # which get in the way. An example is:
2106 # @missing: 0000..10FFFF; ; NaN
2107 # Remove them. Process starting from the top so the
2108 # splice doesn't affect things still to be looked at.
2109 for (my $i = @defaults - 1; $i >= 0; $i--) {
2110 next if $defaults[$i] ne "";
2111 splice @defaults, $i, 1;
2114 # What's left should be just the property (maybe) and the
2115 # default. Having only one element means it doesn't have
2119 if (@defaults >= 1) {
2120 if (@defaults == 1) {
2121 $default = $defaults[0];
2124 $property = $defaults[0];
2125 $default = $defaults[1];
2131 || ($default =~ /^</
2132 && $default !~ /^<code *point>$/i
2133 && $default !~ /^<none>$/i))
2135 $self->carp_bad_line("Unrecognized \@missing line: $_. Assuming no missing entries");
2139 # If the property is missing from the line, it should
2140 # be the one for the whole file
2141 $property = $property{$addr} if ! defined $property;
2143 # Change <none> to the null string, which is what it
2144 # really means. If the default is the code point
2145 # itself, set it to <code point>, which is what
2146 # Unicode uses (but sometimes they've forgotten the
2148 if ($default =~ /^<none>$/i) {
2151 elsif ($default =~ /^<code *point>$/i) {
2152 $default = $CODE_POINT;
2155 # Store them as a sub-arrays with both components.
2156 push @{$missings{$addr}}, [ $default, $property ];
2160 # There is nothing for the caller to process on this comment
2165 # Remove comments and trailing space, and skip this line if the
2171 # Call any handlers for this line, and skip further processing of
2172 # the line if the handler sets the line to null.
2173 foreach my $sub_ref (@{$each_line_handler{$addr}}) {
2178 # Here the line is ok. return success.
2180 } # End of looping through lines.
2182 # If there is an EOF handler, call it (only once) and if it generates
2183 # more lines to process go back in the loop to handle them.
2184 if ($eof_handler{$addr}) {
2185 &{$eof_handler{$addr}}($self);
2186 $eof_handler{$addr} = ""; # Currently only get one shot at it.
2187 goto LINE if $added_lines{$addr};
2190 # Return failure -- no more lines.
2195 # Not currently used, not fully tested.
2197 # # Non-destructive look-ahead one non-adjusted, non-comment, non-blank
2198 # # record. Not callable from an each_line_handler(), nor does it call
2199 # # an each_line_handler() on the line.
2202 # my $addr = do { no overloading; pack 'J', $self; };
2204 # foreach my $inserted_ref (@{$added_lines{$addr}}) {
2205 # my ($adjusted, $line) = @{$inserted_ref};
2206 # next if $adjusted;
2208 # # Remove comments and trailing space, and return a non-empty
2211 # $line =~ s/\s+$//;
2212 # return $line if $line ne "";
2215 # return if ! ref $handle{$addr}; # Don't read unless is real file
2216 # while (1) { # Loop until find non-comment, non-empty line
2217 # local $to_trace = 1 if main::DEBUG;
2218 # trace $_ if main::DEBUG && $to_trace;
2219 # return if ! defined (my $line = readline $handle{$addr});
2221 # push @{$added_lines{$addr}}, [ 0, $line ];
2224 # $line =~ s/\s+$//;
2225 # return $line if $line ne "";
2233 # Lines can be inserted so that it looks like they were in the input
2234 # file at the place it was when this routine is called. See also
2235 # insert_adjusted_lines(). Lines inserted via this routine go through
2236 # any each_line_handler()
2240 # Each inserted line is an array, with the first element being 0 to
2241 # indicate that this line hasn't been adjusted, and needs to be
2244 push @{$added_lines{pack 'J', $self}}, map { [ 0, $_ ] } @_;
2248 sub insert_adjusted_lines {
2249 # Lines can be inserted so that it looks like they were in the input
2250 # file at the place it was when this routine is called. See also
2251 # insert_lines(). Lines inserted via this routine are already fully
2252 # adjusted, ready to be processed; each_line_handler()s handlers will
2253 # not be called. This means this is not a completely general
2254 # facility, as only the last each_line_handler on the stack should
2255 # call this. It could be made more general, by passing to each of the
2256 # line_handlers their position on the stack, which they would pass on
2257 # to this routine, and that would replace the boolean first element in
2258 # the anonymous array pushed here, so that the next_line routine could
2259 # use that to call only those handlers whose index is after it on the
2260 # stack. But this is overkill for what is needed now.
2263 trace $_[0] if main::DEBUG && $to_trace;
2265 # Each inserted line is an array, with the first element being 1 to
2266 # indicate that this line has been adjusted
2268 push @{$added_lines{pack 'J', $self}}, map { [ 1, $_ ] } @_;
2273 # Returns the stored up @missings lines' values, and clears the list.
2274 # The values are in an array, consisting of the default in the first
2275 # element, and the property in the 2nd. However, since these lines
2276 # can be stacked up, the return is an array of all these arrays.
2279 Carp::carp_extra_args(\@_) if main::DEBUG && @_;
2281 my $addr = do { no overloading; pack 'J', $self; };
2283 # If not accepting a list return, just return the first one.
2284 return shift @{$missings{$addr}} unless wantarray;
2286 my @return = @{$missings{$addr}};
2287 undef @{$missings{$addr}};
2291 sub _insert_property_into_line {
2292 # Add a property field to $_, if this file requires it.
2295 my $addr = do { no overloading; pack 'J', $self; };
2296 my $property = $property{$addr};
2297 Carp::carp_extra_args(\@_) if main::DEBUG && @_;
2299 $_ =~ s/(;|$)/; $property$1/;
2304 # Output consistent error messages, using either a generic one, or the
2305 # one given by the optional parameter. To avoid gazillions of the
2306 # same message in case the syntax of a file is way off, this routine
2307 # only outputs the first instance of each message, incrementing a
2308 # count so the totals can be output at the end of the file.
2311 my $message = shift;
2312 Carp::carp_extra_args(\@_) if main::DEBUG && @_;
2314 my $addr = do { no overloading; pack 'J', $self; };
2316 $message = 'Unexpected line' unless $message;
2318 # No trailing punctuation so as to fit with our addenda.
2319 $message =~ s/[.:;,]$//;
2321 # If haven't seen this exact message before, output it now. Otherwise
2322 # increment the count of how many times it has occurred
2323 unless ($errors{$addr}->{$message}) {
2324 Carp::my_carp("$message in '$_' in "
2326 . " at line $.. Skipping this line;");
2327 $errors{$addr}->{$message} = 1;
2330 $errors{$addr}->{$message}++;
2333 # Clear the line to prevent any further (meaningful) processing of it.
2340 package Multi_Default;
2342 # Certain properties in early versions of Unicode had more than one possible
2343 # default for code points missing from the files. In these cases, one
2344 # default applies to everything left over after all the others are applied,
2345 # and for each of the others, there is a description of which class of code
2346 # points applies to it. This object helps implement this by storing the
2347 # defaults, and for all but that final default, an eval string that generates
2348 # the class that it applies to.
2353 main::setup_package();
2356 # The defaults structure for the classes
2357 main::set_access('class_defaults', \%class_defaults);
2360 # The default that applies to everything left over.
2361 main::set_access('other_default', \%other_default, 'r');
2365 # The constructor is called with default => eval pairs, terminated by
2366 # the left-over default. e.g.
2367 # Multi_Default->new(
2368 # 'T' => '$gc->table("Mn") + $gc->table("Cf") - 0x200C
2370 # 'R' => 'some other expression that evaluates to code points',
2378 my $self = bless \do{my $anonymous_scalar}, $class;
2379 my $addr = do { no overloading; pack 'J', $self; };
2382 my $default = shift;
2384 $class_defaults{$addr}->{$default} = $eval;
2387 $other_default{$addr} = shift;
2392 sub get_next_defaults {
2393 # Iterates and returns the next class of defaults.
2395 Carp::carp_extra_args(\@_) if main::DEBUG && @_;
2397 my $addr = do { no overloading; pack 'J', $self; };
2399 return each %{$class_defaults{$addr}};
2405 # An alias is one of the names that a table goes by. This class defines them
2406 # including some attributes. Everything is currently setup in the
2412 main::setup_package();
2415 main::set_access('name', \%name, 'r');
2418 # Determined by the constructor code if this name should match loosely or
2419 # not. The constructor parameters can override this, but it isn't fully
2420 # implemented, as should have ability to override Unicode one's via
2421 # something like a set_loose_match()
2422 main::set_access('loose_match', \%loose_match, 'r');
2425 # Some aliases should not get their own entries because they are covered
2426 # by a wild-card, and some we want to discourage use of. Binary
2427 main::set_access('make_pod_entry', \%make_pod_entry, 'r');
2430 # Aliases have a status, like deprecated, or even suppressed (which means
2431 # they don't appear in documentation). Enum
2432 main::set_access('status', \%status, 'r');
2435 # Similarly, some aliases should not be considered as usable ones for
2436 # external use, such as file names, or we don't want documentation to
2437 # recommend them. Boolean
2438 main::set_access('externally_ok', \%externally_ok, 'r');
2443 my $self = bless \do { my $anonymous_scalar }, $class;
2444 my $addr = do { no overloading; pack 'J', $self; };
2446 $name{$addr} = shift;
2447 $loose_match{$addr} = shift;
2448 $make_pod_entry{$addr} = shift;
2449 $externally_ok{$addr} = shift;
2450 $status{$addr} = shift;
2452 Carp::carp_extra_args(\@_) if main::DEBUG && @_;
2454 # Null names are never ok externally
2455 $externally_ok{$addr} = 0 if $name{$addr} eq "";
2463 # A range is the basic unit for storing code points, and is described in the
2464 # comments at the beginning of the program. Each range has a starting code
2465 # point; an ending code point (not less than the starting one); a value
2466 # that applies to every code point in between the two end-points, inclusive;
2467 # and an enum type that applies to the value. The type is for the user's
2468 # convenience, and has no meaning here, except that a non-zero type is
2469 # considered to not obey the normal Unicode rules for having standard forms.
2471 # The same structure is used for both map and match tables, even though in the
2472 # latter, the value (and hence type) is irrelevant and could be used as a
2473 # comment. In map tables, the value is what all the code points in the range
2474 # map to. Type 0 values have the standardized version of the value stored as
2475 # well, so as to not have to recalculate it a lot.
2477 sub trace { return main::trace(@_); }
2481 main::setup_package();
2484 main::set_access('start', \%start, 'r', 's');
2487 main::set_access('end', \%end, 'r', 's');
2490 main::set_access('value', \%value, 'r');
2493 main::set_access('type', \%type, 'r');
2496 # The value in internal standard form. Defined only if the type is 0.
2497 main::set_access('standard_form', \%standard_form);
2499 # Note that if these fields change, the dump() method should as well
2502 return Carp::carp_too_few_args(\@_, 3) if main::DEBUG && @_ < 3;
2505 my $self = bless \do { my $anonymous_scalar }, $class;
2506 my $addr = do { no overloading; pack 'J', $self; };
2508 $start{$addr} = shift;
2509 $end{$addr} = shift;
2513 my $value = delete $args{'Value'}; # Can be 0
2514 $value = "" unless defined $value;
2515 $value{$addr} = $value;
2517 $type{$addr} = delete $args{'Type'} || 0;
2519 Carp::carp_extra_args(\%args) if main::DEBUG && %args;
2521 if (! $type{$addr}) {
2522 $standard_form{$addr} = main::standardize($value);
2530 qw("") => "_operator_stringify",
2531 "." => \&main::_operator_dot,
2534 sub _operator_stringify {
2536 my $addr = do { no overloading; pack 'J', $self; };
2538 # Output it like '0041..0065 (value)'
2539 my $return = sprintf("%04X", $start{$addr})
2541 . sprintf("%04X", $end{$addr});
2542 my $value = $value{$addr};
2543 my $type = $type{$addr};
2545 $return .= "$value";
2546 $return .= ", Type=$type" if $type != 0;
2553 # The standard form is the value itself if the standard form is
2554 # undefined (that is if the value is special)
2557 Carp::carp_extra_args(\@_) if main::DEBUG && @_;
2559 my $addr = do { no overloading; pack 'J', $self; };
2561 return $standard_form{$addr} if defined $standard_form{$addr};
2562 return $value{$addr};
2566 # Human, not machine readable. For machine readable, comment out this
2567 # entire routine and let the standard one take effect.
2570 Carp::carp_extra_args(\@_) if main::DEBUG && @_;
2572 my $addr = do { no overloading; pack 'J', $self; };
2574 my $return = $indent
2575 . sprintf("%04X", $start{$addr})
2577 . sprintf("%04X", $end{$addr})
2578 . " '$value{$addr}';";
2579 if (! defined $standard_form{$addr}) {
2580 $return .= "(type=$type{$addr})";
2582 elsif ($standard_form{$addr} ne $value{$addr}) {
2583 $return .= "(standard '$standard_form{$addr}')";
2589 package _Range_List_Base;
2591 # Base class for range lists. A range list is simply an ordered list of
2592 # ranges, so that the ranges with the lowest starting numbers are first in it.
2594 # When a new range is added that is adjacent to an existing range that has the
2595 # same value and type, it merges with it to form a larger range.
2597 # Ranges generally do not overlap, except that there can be multiple entries
2598 # of single code point ranges. This is because of NameAliases.txt.
2600 # In this program, there is a standard value such that if two different
2601 # values, have the same standard value, they are considered equivalent. This
2602 # value was chosen so that it gives correct results on Unicode data
2604 # There are a number of methods to manipulate range lists, and some operators
2605 # are overloaded to handle them.
2607 sub trace { return main::trace(@_); }
2613 main::setup_package();
2616 # The list of ranges
2617 main::set_access('ranges', \%ranges, 'readable_array');
2620 # The highest code point in the list. This was originally a method, but
2621 # actual measurements said it was used a lot.
2622 main::set_access('max', \%max, 'r');
2624 my %each_range_iterator;
2625 # Iterator position for each_range()
2626 main::set_access('each_range_iterator', \%each_range_iterator);
2629 # Name of parent this is attached to, if any. Solely for better error
2631 main::set_access('owner_name_of', \%owner_name_of, 'p_r');
2633 my %_search_ranges_cache;
2634 # A cache of the previous result from _search_ranges(), for better
2636 main::set_access('_search_ranges_cache', \%_search_ranges_cache);
2642 # Optional initialization data for the range list.
2643 my $initialize = delete $args{'Initialize'};
2647 # Use _union() to initialize. _union() returns an object of this
2648 # class, which means that it will call this constructor recursively.
2649 # But it won't have this $initialize parameter so that it won't
2650 # infinitely loop on this.
2651 return _union($class, $initialize, %args) if defined $initialize;
2653 $self = bless \do { my $anonymous_scalar }, $class;
2654 my $addr = do { no overloading; pack 'J', $self; };
2656 # Optional parent object, only for debug info.
2657 $owner_name_of{$addr} = delete $args{'Owner'};
2658 $owner_name_of{$addr} = "" if ! defined $owner_name_of{$addr};
2660 # Stringify, in case it is an object.
2661 $owner_name_of{$addr} = "$owner_name_of{$addr}";
2663 # This is used only for error messages, and so a colon is added
2664 $owner_name_of{$addr} .= ": " if $owner_name_of{$addr} ne "";
2666 Carp::carp_extra_args(\%args) if main::DEBUG && %args;
2668 # Max is initialized to a negative value that isn't adjacent to 0,
2672 $_search_ranges_cache{$addr} = 0;
2673 $ranges{$addr} = [];
2680 qw("") => "_operator_stringify",
2681 "." => \&main::_operator_dot,
2684 sub _operator_stringify {
2686 my $addr = do { no overloading; pack 'J', $self; };
2688 return "Range_List attached to '$owner_name_of{$addr}'"
2689 if $owner_name_of{$addr};
2690 return "anonymous Range_List " . \$self;
2694 # Returns the union of the input code points. It can be called as
2695 # either a constructor or a method. If called as a method, the result
2696 # will be a new() instance of the calling object, containing the union
2697 # of that object with the other parameter's code points; if called as
2698 # a constructor, the first parameter gives the class the new object
2699 # should be, and the second parameter gives the code points to go into
2701 # In either case, there are two parameters looked at by this routine;
2702 # any additional parameters are passed to the new() constructor.
2704 # The code points can come in the form of some object that contains
2705 # ranges, and has a conventionally named method to access them; or
2706 # they can be an array of individual code points (as integers); or
2707 # just a single code point.
2709 # If they are ranges, this routine doesn't make any effort to preserve
2710 # the range values of one input over the other. Therefore this base
2711 # class should not allow _union to be called from other than
2712 # initialization code, so as to prevent two tables from being added
2713 # together where the range values matter. The general form of this
2714 # routine therefore belongs in a derived class, but it was moved here
2715 # to avoid duplication of code. The failure to overload this in this
2716 # class keeps it safe.
2720 my @args; # Arguments to pass to the constructor
2724 # If a method call, will start the union with the object itself, and
2725 # the class of the new object will be the same as self.
2732 # Add the other required parameter.
2734 # Rest of parameters are passed on to the constructor
2736 # Accumulate all records from both lists.
2738 for my $arg (@args) {
2739 #local $to_trace = 0 if main::DEBUG;
2740 trace "argument = $arg" if main::DEBUG && $to_trace;
2741 if (! defined $arg) {
2743 if (defined $self) {
2745 $message .= $owner_name_of{pack 'J', $self};
2747 Carp::my_carp_bug($message .= "Undefined argument to _union. No union done.");
2750 $arg = [ $arg ] if ! ref $arg;
2751 my $type = ref $arg;
2752 if ($type eq 'ARRAY') {
2753 foreach my $element (@$arg) {
2754 push @records, Range->new($element, $element);
2757 elsif ($arg->isa('Range')) {
2758 push @records, $arg;
2760 elsif ($arg->can('ranges')) {
2761 push @records, $arg->ranges;
2765 if (defined $self) {
2767 $message .= $owner_name_of{pack 'J', $self};
2769 Carp::my_carp_bug($message . "Cannot take the union of a $type. No union done.");
2774 # Sort with the range containing the lowest ordinal first, but if
2775 # two ranges start at the same code point, sort with the bigger range
2776 # of the two first, because it takes fewer cycles.
2777 @records = sort { ($a->start <=> $b->start)
2779 # if b is shorter than a, b->end will be
2780 # less than a->end, and we want to select
2781 # a, so want to return -1
2782 ($b->end <=> $a->end)
2785 my $new = $class->new(@_);
2787 # Fold in records so long as they add new information.
2788 for my $set (@records) {
2789 my $start = $set->start;
2790 my $end = $set->end;
2791 my $value = $set->value;
2792 if ($start > $new->max) {
2793 $new->_add_delete('+', $start, $end, $value);
2795 elsif ($end > $new->max) {
2796 $new->_add_delete('+', $new->max +1, $end, $value);
2803 sub range_count { # Return the number of ranges in the range list
2805 Carp::carp_extra_args(\@_) if main::DEBUG && @_;
2808 return scalar @{$ranges{pack 'J', $self}};
2812 # Returns the minimum code point currently in the range list, or if
2813 # the range list is empty, 2 beyond the max possible. This is a
2814 # method because used so rarely, that not worth saving between calls,
2815 # and having to worry about changing it as ranges are added and
2819 Carp::carp_extra_args(\@_) if main::DEBUG && @_;
2821 my $addr = do { no overloading; pack 'J', $self; };
2823 # If the range list is empty, return a large value that isn't adjacent
2824 # to any that could be in the range list, for simpler tests
2825 return $LAST_UNICODE_CODEPOINT + 2 unless scalar @{$ranges{$addr}};
2826 return $ranges{$addr}->[0]->start;
2830 # Boolean: Is argument in the range list? If so returns $i such that:
2831 # range[$i]->end < $codepoint <= range[$i+1]->end
2832 # which is one beyond what you want; this is so that the 0th range
2833 # doesn't return false
2835 my $codepoint = shift;
2836 Carp::carp_extra_args(\@_) if main::DEBUG && @_;
2838 my $i = $self->_search_ranges($codepoint);
2839 return 0 unless defined $i;
2841 # The search returns $i, such that
2842 # range[$i-1]->end < $codepoint <= range[$i]->end
2843 # So is in the table if and only iff it is at least the start position
2846 return 0 if $ranges{pack 'J', $self}->[$i]->start > $codepoint;
2851 # Returns the value associated with the code point, undef if none
2854 my $codepoint = shift;
2855 Carp::carp_extra_args(\@_) if main::DEBUG && @_;
2857 my $i = $self->contains($codepoint);
2860 # contains() returns 1 beyond where we should look
2862 return $ranges{pack 'J', $self}->[$i-1]->value;
2865 sub _search_ranges {
2866 # Find the range in the list which contains a code point, or where it
2867 # should go if were to add it. That is, it returns $i, such that:
2868 # range[$i-1]->end < $codepoint <= range[$i]->end
2869 # Returns undef if no such $i is possible (e.g. at end of table), or
2870 # if there is an error.
2873 my $code_point = shift;
2874 Carp::carp_extra_args(\@_) if main::DEBUG && @_;
2876 my $addr = do { no overloading; pack 'J', $self; };
2878 return if $code_point > $max{$addr};
2879 my $r = $ranges{$addr}; # The current list of ranges
2880 my $range_list_size = scalar @$r;
2883 use integer; # want integer division
2885 # Use the cached result as the starting guess for this one, because,
2886 # an experiment on 5.1 showed that 90% of the time the cache was the
2887 # same as the result on the next call (and 7% it was one less).
2888 $i = $_search_ranges_cache{$addr};
2889 $i = 0 if $i >= $range_list_size; # Reset if no longer valid (prob.
2890 # from an intervening deletion
2891 #local $to_trace = 1 if main::DEBUG;
2892 trace "previous \$i is still valid: $i" if main::DEBUG && $to_trace && $code_point <= $r->[$i]->end && ($i == 0 || $r->[$i-1]->end < $code_point);
2893 return $i if $code_point <= $r->[$i]->end
2894 && ($i == 0 || $r->[$i-1]->end < $code_point);
2896 # Here the cache doesn't yield the correct $i. Try adding 1.
2897 if ($i < $range_list_size - 1
2898 && $r->[$i]->end < $code_point &&
2899 $code_point <= $r->[$i+1]->end)
2902 trace "next \$i is correct: $i" if main::DEBUG && $to_trace;
2903 $_search_ranges_cache{$addr} = $i;
2907 # Here, adding 1 also didn't work. We do a binary search to
2908 # find the correct position, starting with current $i
2910 my $upper = $range_list_size - 1;
2912 trace "top of loop i=$i:", sprintf("%04X", $r->[$lower]->start), "[$lower] .. ", sprintf("%04X", $r->[$i]->start), "[$i] .. ", sprintf("%04X", $r->[$upper]->start), "[$upper]" if main::DEBUG && $to_trace;
2914 if ($code_point <= $r->[$i]->end) {
2916 # Here we have met the upper constraint. We can quit if we
2917 # also meet the lower one.
2918 last if $i == 0 || $r->[$i-1]->end < $code_point;
2920 $upper = $i; # Still too high.
2925 # Here, $r[$i]->end < $code_point, so look higher up.
2929 # Split search domain in half to try again.
2930 my $temp = ($upper + $lower) / 2;
2932 # No point in continuing unless $i changes for next time
2936 # We can't reach the highest element because of the averaging.
2937 # So if one below the upper edge, force it there and try one
2939 if ($i == $range_list_size - 2) {
2941 trace "Forcing to upper edge" if main::DEBUG && $to_trace;
2942 $i = $range_list_size - 1;
2944 # Change $lower as well so if fails next time through,
2945 # taking the average will yield the same $i, and we will
2946 # quit with the error message just below.
2950 Carp::my_carp_bug("$owner_name_of{$addr}Can't find where the range ought to go. No action taken.");
2954 } # End of while loop
2956 if (main::DEBUG && $to_trace) {
2957 trace 'i-1=[', $i-1, ']', $r->[$i-1] if $i;
2958 trace "i= [ $i ]", $r->[$i];
2959 trace 'i+1=[', $i+1, ']', $r->[$i+1] if $i < $range_list_size - 1;
2962 # Here we have found the offset. Cache it as a starting point for the
2964 $_search_ranges_cache{$addr} = $i;
2969 # Add, replace or delete ranges to or from a list. The $type
2970 # parameter gives which:
2971 # '+' => insert or replace a range, returning a list of any changed
2973 # '-' => delete a range, returning a list of any deleted ranges.
2975 # The next three parameters give respectively the start, end, and
2976 # value associated with the range. 'value' should be null unless the
2979 # The range list is kept sorted so that the range with the lowest
2980 # starting position is first in the list, and generally, adjacent
2981 # ranges with the same values are merged into a single larger one (see
2982 # exceptions below).
2984 # There are more parameters; all are key => value pairs:
2985 # Type gives the type of the value. It is only valid for '+'.
2986 # All ranges have types; if this parameter is omitted, 0 is
2987 # assumed. Ranges with type 0 are assumed to obey the
2988 # Unicode rules for casing, etc; ranges with other types are
2989 # not. Otherwise, the type is arbitrary, for the caller's
2990 # convenience, and looked at only by this routine to keep
2991 # adjacent ranges of different types from being merged into
2992 # a single larger range, and when Replace =>
2993 # $IF_NOT_EQUIVALENT is specified (see just below).
2994 # Replace determines what to do if the range list already contains
2995 # ranges which coincide with all or portions of the input
2996 # range. It is only valid for '+':
2997 # => $NO means that the new value is not to replace
2998 # any existing ones, but any empty gaps of the
2999 # range list coinciding with the input range
3000 # will be filled in with the new value.
3001 # => $UNCONDITIONALLY means to replace the existing values with
3002 # this one unconditionally. However, if the
3003 # new and old values are identical, the
3004 # replacement is skipped to save cycles
3005 # => $IF_NOT_EQUIVALENT means to replace the existing values
3006 # with this one if they are not equivalent.
3007 # Ranges are equivalent if their types are the
3008 # same, and they are the same string; or if
3009 # both are type 0 ranges, if their Unicode
3010 # standard forms are identical. In this last
3011 # case, the routine chooses the more "modern"
3012 # one to use. This is because some of the
3013 # older files are formatted with values that
3014 # are, for example, ALL CAPs, whereas the
3015 # derived files have a more modern style,
3016 # which looks better. By looking for this
3017 # style when the pre-existing and replacement
3018 # standard forms are the same, we can move to
3020 # => $MULTIPLE means that if this range duplicates an
3021 # existing one, but has a different value,
3022 # don't replace the existing one, but insert
3023 # this, one so that the same range can occur
3025 # => anything else is the same as => $IF_NOT_EQUIVALENT
3027 # "same value" means identical for non-type-0 ranges, and it means
3028 # having the same standard forms for type-0 ranges.
3030 return Carp::carp_too_few_args(\@_, 5) if main::DEBUG && @_ < 5;
3033 my $operation = shift; # '+' for add/replace; '-' for delete;
3040 $value = "" if not defined $value; # warning: $value can be "0"
3042 my $replace = delete $args{'Replace'};
3043 $replace = $IF_NOT_EQUIVALENT unless defined $replace;
3045 my $type = delete $args{'Type'};
3046 $type = 0 unless defined $type;
3048 Carp::carp_extra_args(\%args) if main::DEBUG && %args;
3050 my $addr = do { no overloading; pack 'J', $self; };
3052 if ($operation ne '+' && $operation ne '-') {
3053 Carp::my_carp_bug("$owner_name_of{$addr}First parameter to _add_delete must be '+' or '-'. No action taken.");
3056 unless (defined $start && defined $end) {
3057 Carp::my_carp_bug("$owner_name_of{$addr}Undefined start and/or end to _add_delete. No action taken.");
3060 unless ($end >= $start) {
3061 Carp::my_carp_bug("$owner_name_of{$addr}End of range (" . sprintf("%04X", $end) . ") must not be before start (" . sprintf("%04X", $start) . "). No action taken.");
3064 #local $to_trace = 1 if main::DEBUG;
3066 if ($operation eq '-') {
3067 if ($replace != $IF_NOT_EQUIVALENT) {
3068 Carp::my_carp_bug("$owner_name_of{$addr}Replace => \$IF_NOT_EQUIVALENT is required when deleting a range from a range list. Assuming Replace => \$IF_NOT_EQUIVALENT.");
3069 $replace = $IF_NOT_EQUIVALENT;
3072 Carp::my_carp_bug("$owner_name_of{$addr}Type => 0 is required when deleting a range from a range list. Assuming Type => 0.");
3076 Carp::my_carp_bug("$owner_name_of{$addr}Value => \"\" is required when deleting a range from a range list. Assuming Value => \"\".");
3081 my $r = $ranges{$addr}; # The current list of ranges
3082 my $range_list_size = scalar @$r; # And its size
3083 my $max = $max{$addr}; # The current high code point in
3084 # the list of ranges
3086 # Do a special case requiring fewer machine cycles when the new range
3087 # starts after the current highest point. The Unicode input data is
3088 # structured so this is common.
3089 if ($start > $max) {
3091 trace "$owner_name_of{$addr} $operation", sprintf("%04X", $start) . '..' . sprintf("%04X", $end) . " ($value) type=$type" if main::DEBUG && $to_trace;
3092 return if $operation eq '-'; # Deleting a non-existing range is a
3095 # If the new range doesn't logically extend the current final one
3096 # in the range list, create a new range at the end of the range
3097 # list. (max cleverly is initialized to a negative number not
3098 # adjacent to 0 if the range list is empty, so even adding a range
3099 # to an empty range list starting at 0 will have this 'if'
3101 if ($start > $max + 1 # non-adjacent means can't extend.
3102 || @{$r}[-1]->value ne $value # values differ, can't extend.
3103 || @{$r}[-1]->type != $type # types differ, can't extend.
3105 push @$r, Range->new($start, $end,
3111 # Here, the new range starts just after the current highest in
3112 # the range list, and they have the same type and value.
3113 # Extend the current range to incorporate the new one.
3114 @{$r}[-1]->set_end($end);
3117 # This becomes the new maximum.
3122 #local $to_trace = 0 if main::DEBUG;
3124 trace "$owner_name_of{$addr} $operation", sprintf("%04X", $start) . '..' . sprintf("%04X", $end) . " ($value) replace=$replace" if main::DEBUG && $to_trace;
3126 # Here, the input range isn't after the whole rest of the range list.
3127 # Most likely 'splice' will be needed. The rest of the routine finds
3128 # the needed splice parameters, and if necessary, does the splice.
3129 # First, find the offset parameter needed by the splice function for
3130 # the input range. Note that the input range may span multiple
3131 # existing ones, but we'll worry about that later. For now, just find
3132 # the beginning. If the input range is to be inserted starting in a
3133 # position not currently in the range list, it must (obviously) come
3134 # just after the range below it, and just before the range above it.
3135 # Slightly less obviously, it will occupy the position currently
3136 # occupied by the range that is to come after it. More formally, we
3137 # are looking for the position, $i, in the array of ranges, such that:
3139 # r[$i-1]->start <= r[$i-1]->end < $start < r[$i]->start <= r[$i]->end
3141 # (The ordered relationships within existing ranges are also shown in
3142 # the equation above). However, if the start of the input range is
3143 # within an existing range, the splice offset should point to that
3144 # existing range's position in the list; that is $i satisfies a
3145 # somewhat different equation, namely:
3147 #r[$i-1]->start <= r[$i-1]->end < r[$i]->start <= $start <= r[$i]->end
3149 # More briefly, $start can come before or after r[$i]->start, and at
3150 # this point, we don't know which it will be. However, these
3151 # two equations share these constraints:
3153 # r[$i-1]->end < $start <= r[$i]->end
3155 # And that is good enough to find $i.
3157 my $i = $self->_search_ranges($start);
3159 Carp::my_carp_bug("Searching $self for range beginning with $start unexpectedly returned undefined. Operation '$operation' not performed");
3163 # The search function returns $i such that:
3165 # r[$i-1]->end < $start <= r[$i]->end
3167 # That means that $i points to the first range in the range list
3168 # that could possibly be affected by this operation. We still don't
3169 # know if the start of the input range is within r[$i], or if it
3170 # points to empty space between r[$i-1] and r[$i].
3171 trace "[$i] is the beginning splice point. Existing range there is ", $r->[$i] if main::DEBUG && $to_trace;
3173 # Special case the insertion of data that is not to replace any
3175 if ($replace == $NO) { # If $NO, has to be operation '+'
3176 #local $to_trace = 1 if main::DEBUG;
3177 trace "Doesn't replace" if main::DEBUG && $to_trace;
3179 # Here, the new range is to take effect only on those code points
3180 # that aren't already in an existing range. This can be done by
3181 # looking through the existing range list and finding the gaps in
3182 # the ranges that this new range affects, and then calling this
3183 # function recursively on each of those gaps, leaving untouched
3184 # anything already in the list. Gather up a list of the changed
3185 # gaps first so that changes to the internal state as new ranges
3186 # are added won't be a problem.
3189 # First, if the starting point of the input range is outside an
3190 # existing one, there is a gap from there to the beginning of the
3191 # existing range -- add a span to fill the part that this new
3193 if ($start < $r->[$i]->start) {
3194 push @gap_list, Range->new($start,
3196 $r->[$i]->start - 1),
3198 trace "gap before $r->[$i] [$i], will add", $gap_list[-1] if main::DEBUG && $to_trace;
3201 # Then look through the range list for other gaps until we reach
3202 # the highest range affected by the input one.
3204 for ($j = $i+1; $j < $range_list_size; $j++) {
3205 trace "j=[$j]", $r->[$j] if main::DEBUG && $to_trace;
3206 last if $end < $r->[$j]->start;
3208 # If there is a gap between when this range starts and the
3209 # previous one ends, add a span to fill it. Note that just
3210 # because there are two ranges doesn't mean there is a
3211 # non-zero gap between them. It could be that they have
3212 # different values or types
3213 if ($r->[$j-1]->end + 1 != $r->[$j]->start) {
3215 Range->new($r->[$j-1]->end + 1,
3216 $r->[$j]->start - 1,
3218 trace "gap between $r->[$j-1] and $r->[$j] [$j], will add: $gap_list[-1]" if main::DEBUG && $to_trace;
3222 # Here, we have either found an existing range in the range list,
3223 # beyond the area affected by the input one, or we fell off the
3224 # end of the loop because the input range affects the whole rest
3225 # of the range list. In either case, $j is 1 higher than the
3226 # highest affected range. If $j == $i, it means that there are no
3227 # affected ranges, that the entire insertion is in the gap between
3228 # r[$i-1], and r[$i], which we already have taken care of before
3230 # On the other hand, if there are affected ranges, it might be
3231 # that there is a gap that needs filling after the final such
3232 # range to the end of the input range
3233 if ($r->[$j-1]->end < $end) {
3234 push @gap_list, Range->new(main::max($start,
3235 $r->[$j-1]->end + 1),
3238 trace "gap after $r->[$j-1], will add $gap_list[-1]" if main::DEBUG && $to_trace;
3241 # Call recursively to fill in all the gaps.
3242 foreach my $gap (@gap_list) {
3243 $self->_add_delete($operation,
3253 # Here, we have taken care of the case where $replace is $NO, which
3254 # means that whatever action we now take is done unconditionally. It
3255 # still could be that this call will result in a no-op, if duplicates
3256 # aren't allowed, and we are inserting a range that merely duplicates
3257 # data already in the range list; or also if deleting a non-existent
3259 # $i still points to the first potential affected range. Now find the
3260 # highest range affected, which will determine the length parameter to
3261 # splice. (The input range can span multiple existing ones.) While
3262 # we are looking through the range list, see also if this is an
3263 # insertion that will change the values of at least one of the
3264 # affected ranges. We don't need to do this check unless this is an
3265 # insertion of non-multiples, and also since this is a boolean, we
3266 # don't need to do it if have already determined that it will make a
3267 # change; just unconditionally change them. $cdm is created to be 1
3268 # if either of these is true. (The 'c' in the name comes from below)
3269 my $cdm = ($operation eq '-' || $replace == $MULTIPLE);
3270 my $j; # This will point to the highest affected range
3272 # For non-zero types, the standard form is the value itself;
3273 my $standard_form = ($type) ? $value : main::standardize($value);
3275 for ($j = $i; $j < $range_list_size; $j++) {
3276 trace "Looking for highest affected range; the one at $j is ", $r->[$j] if main::DEBUG && $to_trace;
3278 # If find a range that it doesn't overlap into, we can stop
3280 last if $end < $r->[$j]->start;
3282 # Here, overlaps the range at $j. If the value's don't match,
3283 # and this is supposedly an insertion, it becomes a change
3284 # instead. This is what the 'c' stands for in $cdm.
3286 if ($r->[$j]->standard_form ne $standard_form) {
3291 # Here, the two values are essentially the same. If the
3292 # two are actually identical, replacing wouldn't change
3293 # anything so skip it.
3294 my $pre_existing = $r->[$j]->value;
3295 if ($pre_existing ne $value) {
3297 # Here the new and old standardized values are the
3298 # same, but the non-standardized values aren't. If
3299 # replacing unconditionally, then replace
3300 if( $replace == $UNCONDITIONALLY) {
3305 # Here, are replacing conditionally. Decide to
3306 # replace or not based on which appears to look
3307 # the "nicest". If one is mixed case and the
3308 # other isn't, choose the mixed case one.
3309 my $new_mixed = $value =~ /[A-Z]/
3310 && $value =~ /[a-z]/;
3311 my $old_mixed = $pre_existing =~ /[A-Z]/
3312 && $pre_existing =~ /[a-z]/;
3314 if ($old_mixed != $new_mixed) {
3315 $cdm = 1 if $new_mixed;
3316 if (main::DEBUG && $to_trace) {
3318 trace "Replacing $pre_existing with $value";
3321 trace "Retaining $pre_existing over $value";
3327 # Here casing wasn't different between the two.
3328 # If one has hyphens or underscores and the
3329 # other doesn't, choose the one with the
3331 my $new_punct = $value =~ /[-_]/;
3332 my $old_punct = $pre_existing =~ /[-_]/;
3334 if ($old_punct != $new_punct) {
3335 $cdm = 1 if $new_punct;
3336 if (main::DEBUG && $to_trace) {
3338 trace "Replacing $pre_existing with $value";
3341 trace "Retaining $pre_existing over $value";
3344 } # else existing one is just as "good";
3345 # retain it to save cycles.
3351 } # End of loop looking for highest affected range.
3353 # Here, $j points to one beyond the highest range that this insertion
3354 # affects (hence to beyond the range list if that range is the final
3355 # one in the range list).
3357 # The splice length is all the affected ranges. Get it before
3358 # subtracting, for efficiency, so we don't have to later add 1.
3359 my $length = $j - $i;
3361 $j--; # $j now points to the highest affected range.
3362 trace "Final affected range is $j: $r->[$j]" if main::DEBUG && $to_trace;
3364 # If inserting a multiple record, this is where it goes, after all the
3365 # existing ones for this range. This implies an insertion, and no
3366 # change to any existing ranges. Note that $j can be -1 if this new
3367 # range doesn't actually duplicate any existing, and comes at the
3368 # beginning of the list, in which case we can handle it like any other
3369 # insertion, and is easier to do so.
3370 if ($replace == $MULTIPLE && $j >= 0) {
3372 # This restriction could be remedied with a little extra work, but
3373 # it won't hopefully ever be necessary
3374 if ($r->[$j]->start != $r->[$j]->end) {
3375 Carp::my_carp_bug("$owner_name_of{$addr}Can't cope with adding a multiple when the other range ($r->[$j]) contains more than one code point. No action taken.");
3379 # Don't add an exact duplicate, as it isn't really a multiple
3380 return if $value eq $r->[$j]->value && $type eq $r->[$j]->type;
3382 trace "Adding multiple record at $j+1 with $start..$end, $value" if main::DEBUG && $to_trace;
3383 my @return = splice @$r,
3390 if (main::DEBUG && $to_trace) {
3391 trace "After splice:";
3392 trace 'j-2=[', $j-2, ']', $r->[$j-2] if $j >= 2;
3393 trace 'j-1=[', $j-1, ']', $r->[$j-1] if $j >= 1;
3394 trace "j =[", $j, "]", $r->[$j] if $j >= 0;
3395 trace 'j+1=[', $j+1, ']', $r->[$j+1] if $j < @$r - 1;
3396 trace 'j+2=[', $j+2, ']', $r->[$j+2] if $j < @$r - 2;
3397 trace 'j+3=[', $j+3, ']', $r->[$j+3] if $j < @$r - 3;
3402 # Here, have taken care of $NO and $MULTIPLE replaces.
3403 # $j points to the highest affected range. But it can be < $i or even
3404 # -1. These happen only if the insertion is entirely in the gap
3405 # between r[$i-1] and r[$i]. Here's why: j < i means that the j loop
3406 # above exited first time through with $end < $r->[$i]->start. (And
3407 # then we subtracted one from j) This implies also that $start <
3408 # $r->[$i]->start, but we know from above that $r->[$i-1]->end <
3409 # $start, so the entire input range is in the gap.
3412 # Here the entire input range is in the gap before $i.
3414 if (main::DEBUG && $to_trace) {
3416 trace "Entire range is between $r->[$i-1] and $r->[$i]";
3419 trace "Entire range is before $r->[$i]";
3422 return if $operation ne '+'; # Deletion of a non-existent range is
3427 # Here the entire input range is not in the gap before $i. There
3428 # is an affected one, and $j points to the highest such one.
3430 # At this point, here is the situation:
3431 # This is not an insertion of a multiple, nor of tentative ($NO)
3433 # $i points to the first element in the current range list that
3434 # may be affected by this operation. In fact, we know
3435 # that the range at $i is affected because we are in
3436 # the else branch of this 'if'
3437 # $j points to the highest affected range.
3439 # r[$i-1]->end < $start <= r[$i]->end
3441 # r[$i-1]->end < $start <= $end <= r[$j]->end
3444 # $cdm is a boolean which is set true if and only if this is a
3445 # change or deletion (multiple was handled above). In
3446 # other words, it could be renamed to be just $cd.
3448 # We now have enough information to decide if this call is a no-op
3449 # or not. It is a no-op if it is a deletion of a non-existent
3450 # range, or an insertion of already existing data.
3452 if (main::DEBUG && $to_trace && ! $cdm
3454 && $start >= $r->[$i]->start)
3458 return if ! $cdm # change or delete => not no-op
3459 && $i == $j # more than one affected range => not no-op
3461 # Here, r[$i-1]->end < $start <= $end <= r[$i]->end
3462 # Further, $start and/or $end is >= r[$i]->start
3463 # The test below hence guarantees that
3464 # r[$i]->start < $start <= $end <= r[$i]->end
3465 # This means the input range is contained entirely in
3466 # the one at $i, so is a no-op
3467 && $start >= $r->[$i]->start;
3470 # Here, we know that some action will have to be taken. We have
3471 # calculated the offset and length (though adjustments may be needed)
3472 # for the splice. Now start constructing the replacement list.
3474 my $splice_start = $i;
3479 # See if should extend any adjacent ranges.
3480 if ($operation eq '-') { # Don't extend deletions
3481 $extends_below = $extends_above = 0;
3483 else { # Here, should extend any adjacent ranges. See if there are
3485 $extends_below = ($i > 0
3486 # can't extend unless adjacent
3487 && $r->[$i-1]->end == $start -1
3488 # can't extend unless are same standard value
3489 && $r->[$i-1]->standard_form eq $standard_form
3490 # can't extend unless share type
3491 && $r->[$i-1]->type == $type);
3492 $extends_above = ($j+1 < $range_list_size
3493 && $r->[$j+1]->start == $end +1
3494 && $r->[$j+1]->standard_form eq $standard_form
3495 && $r->[$j-1]->type == $type);
3497 if ($extends_below && $extends_above) { # Adds to both
3498 $splice_start--; # start replace at element below
3499 $length += 2; # will replace on both sides
3500 trace "Extends both below and above ranges" if main::DEBUG && $to_trace;
3502 # The result will fill in any gap, replacing both sides, and
3503 # create one large range.
3504 @replacement = Range->new($r->[$i-1]->start,
3511 # Here we know that the result won't just be the conglomeration of
3512 # a new range with both its adjacent neighbors. But it could
3513 # extend one of them.
3515 if ($extends_below) {
3517 # Here the new element adds to the one below, but not to the
3518 # one above. If inserting, and only to that one range, can
3519 # just change its ending to include the new one.
3520 if ($length == 0 && ! $cdm) {
3521 $r->[$i-1]->set_end($end);
3522 trace "inserted range extends range to below so it is now $r->[$i-1]" if main::DEBUG && $to_trace;
3526 trace "Changing inserted range to start at ", sprintf("%04X", $r->[$i-1]->start), " instead of ", sprintf("%04X", $start) if main::DEBUG && $to_trace;
3527 $splice_start--; # start replace at element below
3528 $length++; # will replace the element below
3529 $start = $r->[$i-1]->start;
3532 elsif ($extends_above) {
3534 # Here the new element adds to the one above, but not below.
3535 # Mirror the code above
3536 if ($length == 0 && ! $cdm) {
3537 $r->[$j+1]->set_start($start);
3538 trace "inserted range extends range to above so it is now $r->[$j+1]" if main::DEBUG && $to_trace;
3542 trace "Changing inserted range to end at ", sprintf("%04X", $r->[$j+1]->end), " instead of ", sprintf("%04X", $end) if main::DEBUG && $to_trace;
3543 $length++; # will replace the element above
3544 $end = $r->[$j+1]->end;
3548 trace "Range at $i is $r->[$i]" if main::DEBUG && $to_trace;
3550 # Finally, here we know there will have to be a splice.
3551 # If the change or delete affects only the highest portion of the
3552 # first affected range, the range will have to be split. The
3553 # splice will remove the whole range, but will replace it by a new
3554 # range containing just the unaffected part. So, in this case,
3555 # add to the replacement list just this unaffected portion.
3556 if (! $extends_below
3557 && $start > $r->[$i]->start && $start <= $r->[$i]->end)
3560 Range->new($r->[$i]->start,
3562 Value => $r->[$i]->value,
3563 Type => $r->[$i]->type);
3566 # In the case of an insert or change, but not a delete, we have to
3567 # put in the new stuff; this comes next.
3568 if ($operation eq '+') {
3569 push @replacement, Range->new($start,
3575 trace "Range at $j is $r->[$j]" if main::DEBUG && $to_trace && $j != $i;
3576 #trace "$end >=", $r->[$j]->start, " && $end <", $r->[$j]->end if main::DEBUG && $to_trace;
3578 # And finally, if we're changing or deleting only a portion of the
3579 # highest affected range, it must be split, as the lowest one was.
3580 if (! $extends_above
3581 && $j >= 0 # Remember that j can be -1 if before first
3583 && $end >= $r->[$j]->start
3584 && $end < $r->[$j]->end)
3587 Range->new($end + 1,
3589 Value => $r->[$j]->value,
3590 Type => $r->[$j]->type);
3594 # And do the splice, as calculated above
3595 if (main::DEBUG && $to_trace) {
3596 trace "replacing $length element(s) at $i with ";
3597 foreach my $replacement (@replacement) {
3598 trace " $replacement";
3600 trace "Before splice:";
3601 trace 'i-2=[', $i-2, ']', $r->[$i-2] if $i >= 2;
3602 trace 'i-1=[', $i-1, ']', $r->[$i-1] if $i >= 1;
3603 trace "i =[", $i, "]", $r->[$i];
3604 trace 'i+1=[', $i+1, ']', $r->[$i+1] if $i < @$r - 1;
3605 trace 'i+2=[', $i+2, ']', $r->[$i+2] if $i < @$r - 2;
3608 my @return = splice @$r, $splice_start, $length, @replacement;
3610 if (main::DEBUG && $to_trace) {
3611 trace "After splice:";
3612 trace 'i-2=[', $i-2, ']', $r->[$i-2] if $i >= 2;
3613 trace 'i-1=[', $i-1, ']', $r->[$i-1] if $i >= 1;
3614 trace "i =[", $i, "]", $r->[$i];
3615 trace 'i+1=[', $i+1, ']', $r->[$i+1] if $i < @$r - 1;
3616 trace 'i+2=[', $i+2, ']', $r->[$i+2] if $i < @$r - 2;
3617 trace "removed @return";
3620 # An actual deletion could have changed the maximum in the list.
3621 # There was no deletion if the splice didn't return something, but
3622 # otherwise recalculate it. This is done too rarely to worry about
3624 if ($operation eq '-' && @return) {
3625 $max{$addr} = $r->[-1]->end;
3630 sub reset_each_range { # reset the iterator for each_range();
3632 Carp::carp_extra_args(\@_) if main::DEBUG && @_;
3635 undef $each_range_iterator{pack 'J', $self};
3640 # Iterate over each range in a range list. Results are undefined if
3641 # the range list is changed during the iteration.
3644 Carp::carp_extra_args(\@_) if main::DEBUG && @_;
3646 my $addr = do { no overloading; pack 'J', $self; };
3648 return if $self->is_empty;
3650 $each_range_iterator{$addr} = -1
3651 if ! defined $each_range_iterator{$addr};
3652 $each_range_iterator{$addr}++;
3653 return $ranges{$addr}->[$each_range_iterator{$addr}]
3654 if $each_range_iterator{$addr} < @{$ranges{$addr}};
3655 undef $each_range_iterator{$addr};
3659 sub count { # Returns count of code points in range list
3661 Carp::carp_extra_args(\@_) if main::DEBUG && @_;
3663 my $addr = do { no overloading; pack 'J', $self; };
3666 foreach my $range (@{$ranges{$addr}}) {
3667 $count += $range->end - $range->start + 1;
3672 sub delete_range { # Delete a range
3677 Carp::carp_extra_args(\@_) if main::DEBUG && @_;
3679 return $self->_add_delete('-', $start, $end, "");
3682 sub is_empty { # Returns boolean as to if a range list is empty
3684 Carp::carp_extra_args(\@_) if main::DEBUG && @_;
3687 return scalar @{$ranges{pack 'J', $self}} == 0;
3691 # Quickly returns a scalar suitable for separating tables into
3692 # buckets, i.e. it is a hash function of the contents of a table, so
3693 # there are relatively few conflicts.
3696 Carp::carp_extra_args(\@_) if main::DEBUG && @_;
3698 my $addr = do { no overloading; pack 'J', $self; };
3700 # These are quickly computable. Return looks like 'min..max;count'
3701 return $self->min . "..$max{$addr};" . scalar @{$ranges{$addr}};
3703 } # End closure for _Range_List_Base
3706 use base '_Range_List_Base';
3708 # A Range_List is a range list for match tables; i.e. the range values are
3709 # not significant. Thus a number of operations can be safely added to it,
3710 # such as inversion, intersection. Note that union is also an unsafe
3711 # operation when range values are cared about, and that method is in the base
3712 # class, not here. But things are set up so that that method is callable only
3713 # during initialization. Only in this derived class, is there an operation
3714 # that combines two tables. A Range_Map can thus be used to initialize a
3715 # Range_List, and its mappings will be in the list, but are not significant to
3718 sub trace { return main::trace(@_); }
3724 '+' => sub { my $self = shift;
3727 return $self->_union($other)
3729 '&' => sub { my $self = shift;
3732 return $self->_intersect($other, 0);
3739 # Returns a new Range_List that gives all code points not in $self.
3743 my $new = Range_List->new;
3745 # Go through each range in the table, finding the gaps between them
3746 my $max = -1; # Set so no gap before range beginning at 0
3747 for my $range ($self->ranges) {
3748 my $start = $range->start;
3749 my $end = $range->end;
3751 # If there is a gap before this range, the inverse will contain
3753 if ($start > $max + 1) {
3754 $new->add_range($max + 1, $start - 1);
3759 # And finally, add the gap from the end of the table to the max
3760 # possible code point
3761 if ($max < $LAST_UNICODE_CODEPOINT) {
3762 $new->add_range($max + 1, $LAST_UNICODE_CODEPOINT);
3768 # Returns a new Range_List with the argument deleted from it. The
3769 # argument can be a single code point, a range, or something that has
3770 # a range, with the _range_list() method on it returning them
3774 my $reversed = shift;
3775 Carp::carp_extra_args(\@_) if main::DEBUG && @_;
3778 Carp::my_carp_bug("Can't cope with a "
3780 . " being the second parameter in a '-'. Subtraction ignored.");
3784 my $new = Range_List->new(Initialize => $self);
3786 if (! ref $other) { # Single code point
3787 $new->delete_range($other, $other);
3789 elsif ($other->isa('Range')) {
3790 $new->delete_range($other->start, $other->end);
3792 elsif ($other->can('_range_list')) {
3793 foreach my $range ($other->_range_list->ranges) {
3794 $new->delete_range($range->start, $range->end);
3798 Carp::my_carp_bug("Can't cope with a "
3800 . " argument to '-'. Subtraction ignored."
3809 # Returns either a boolean giving whether the two inputs' range lists
3810 # intersect (overlap), or a new Range_List containing the intersection
3811 # of the two lists. The optional final parameter being true indicates
3812 # to do the check instead of the intersection.
3814 my $a_object = shift;
3815 my $b_object = shift;
3816 my $check_if_overlapping = shift;
3817 $check_if_overlapping = 0 unless defined $check_if_overlapping;
3818 Carp::carp_extra_args(\@_) if main::DEBUG && @_;
3820 if (! defined $b_object) {
3822 $message .= $a_object->_owner_name_of if defined $a_object;
3823 Carp::my_carp_bug($message .= "Called with undefined value. Intersection not done.");
3827 # a & b = !(!a | !b), or in our terminology = ~ ( ~a + -b )
3828 # Thus the intersection could be much more simply be written:
3829 # return ~(~$a_object + ~$b_object);
3830 # But, this is slower, and when taking the inverse of a large
3831 # range_size_1 table, back when such tables were always stored that
3832 # way, it became prohibitively slow, hence the code was changed to the
3835 if ($b_object->isa('Range')) {
3836 $b_object = Range_List->new(Initialize => $b_object,
3837 Owner => $a_object->_owner_name_of);
3839 $b_object = $b_object->_range_list if $b_object->can('_range_list');
3841 my @a_ranges = $a_object->ranges;
3842 my @b_ranges = $b_object->ranges;
3844 #local $to_trace = 1 if main::DEBUG;
3845 trace "intersecting $a_object with ", scalar @a_ranges, "ranges and $b_object with", scalar @b_ranges, " ranges" if main::DEBUG && $to_trace;
3847 # Start with the first range in each list
3849 my $range_a = $a_ranges[$a_i];
3851 my $range_b = $b_ranges[$b_i];
3853 my $new = __PACKAGE__->new(Owner => $a_object->_owner_name_of)
3854 if ! $check_if_overlapping;
3856 # If either list is empty, there is no intersection and no overlap
3857 if (! defined $range_a || ! defined $range_b) {
3858 return $check_if_overlapping ? 0 : $new;
3860 trace "range_a[$a_i]=$range_a; range_b[$b_i]=$range_b" if main::DEBUG && $to_trace;
3862 # Otherwise, must calculate the intersection/overlap. Start with the
3863 # very first code point in each list
3864 my $a = $range_a->start;
3865 my $b = $range_b->start;
3867 # Loop through all the ranges of each list; in each iteration, $a and
3868 # $b are the current code points in their respective lists
3871 # If $a and $b are the same code point, ...
3874 # it means the lists overlap. If just checking for overlap
3875 # know the answer now,
3876 return 1 if $check_if_overlapping;
3878 # The intersection includes this code point plus anything else
3879 # common to both current ranges.
3881 my $end = main::min($range_a->end, $range_b->end);
3882 if (! $check_if_overlapping) {
3883 trace "adding intersection range ", sprintf("%04X", $start) . ".." . sprintf("%04X", $end) if main::DEBUG && $to_trace;
3884 $new->add_range($start, $end);
3887 # Skip ahead to the end of the current intersect
3890 # If the current intersect ends at the end of either range (as
3891 # it must for at least one of them), the next possible one
3892 # will be the beginning code point in it's list's next range.
3893 if ($a == $range_a->end) {
3894 $range_a = $a_ranges[++$a_i];
3895 last unless defined $range_a;
3896 $a = $range_a->start;
3898 if ($b == $range_b->end) {
3899 $range_b = $b_ranges[++$b_i];
3900 last unless defined $range_b;
3901 $b = $range_b->start;
3904 trace "range_a[$a_i]=$range_a; range_b[$b_i]=$range_b" if main::DEBUG && $to_trace;
3908 # Not equal, but if the range containing $a encompasses $b,
3909 # change $a to be the middle of the range where it does equal
3910 # $b, so the next iteration will get the intersection
3911 if ($range_a->end >= $b) {
3916 # Here, the current range containing $a is entirely below
3917 # $b. Go try to find a range that could contain $b.
3918 $a_i = $a_object->_search_ranges($b);
3920 # If no range found, quit.
3921 last unless defined $a_i;
3923 # The search returns $a_i, such that
3924 # range_a[$a_i-1]->end < $b <= range_a[$a_i]->end
3925 # Set $a to the beginning of this new range, and repeat.
3926 $range_a = $a_ranges[$a_i];
3927 $a = $range_a->start;
3930 else { # Here, $b < $a.
3932 # Mirror image code to the leg just above
3933 if ($range_b->end >= $a) {
3937 $b_i = $b_object->_search_ranges($a);
3938 last unless defined $b_i;
3939 $range_b = $b_ranges[$b_i];
3940 $b = $range_b->start;
3943 } # End of looping through ranges.
3945 # Intersection fully computed, or now know that there is no overlap
3946 return $check_if_overlapping ? 0 : $new;
3950 # Returns boolean giving whether the two arguments overlap somewhere
3954 Carp::carp_extra_args(\@_) if main::DEBUG && @_;
3956 return $self->_intersect($other, 1);
3960 # Add a range to the list.
3965 Carp::carp_extra_args(\@_) if main::DEBUG && @_;
3967 return $self->_add_delete('+', $start, $end, "");
3970 sub is_code_point_usable {
3971 # This used only for making the test script. See if the input
3972 # proposed trial code point is one that Perl will handle. If second
3973 # parameter is 0, it won't select some code points for various
3974 # reasons, noted below.
3977 my $try_hard = shift;
3978 Carp::carp_extra_args(\@_) if main::DEBUG && @_;
3980 return 0 if $code < 0; # Never use a negative
3982 # shun null. I'm (khw) not sure why this was done, but NULL would be
3983 # the character very frequently used.
3984 return $try_hard if $code == 0x0000;
3986 return 0 if $try_hard; # XXX Temporary until fix utf8.c
3988 # shun non-character code points.
3989 return $try_hard if $code >= 0xFDD0 && $code <= 0xFDEF;
3990 return $try_hard if ($code & 0xFFFE) == 0xFFFE; # includes FFFF
3992 return $try_hard if $code > $LAST_UNICODE_CODEPOINT; # keep in range
3993 return $try_hard if $code >= 0xD800 && $code <= 0xDFFF; # no surrogate