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.)
20 BEGIN { # Get the time the script started running; do it at compilation to
21 # get it as close as possible
36 sub DEBUG () { 0 } # Set to 0 for production; 1 for development
37 my $debugging_build = $Config{"ccflags"} =~ /-DDEBUGGING/;
39 ##########################################################################
41 # mktables -- create the runtime Perl Unicode files (lib/unicore/.../*.pl),
42 # from the Unicode database files (lib/unicore/.../*.txt), It also generates
43 # a pod file and a .t file
45 # The structure of this file is:
46 # First these introductory comments; then
47 # code needed for everywhere, such as debugging stuff; then
48 # code to handle input parameters; then
49 # data structures likely to be of external interest (some of which depend on
50 # the input parameters, so follows them; then
51 # more data structures and subroutine and package (class) definitions; then
52 # the small actual loop to process the input files and finish up; then
53 # a __DATA__ section, for the .t tests
55 # This program works on all releases of Unicode through at least 6.0. The
56 # outputs have been scrutinized most intently for release 5.1. The others
57 # have been checked for somewhat more than just sanity. It can handle all
58 # existing Unicode character properties in those releases.
60 # This program is mostly about Unicode character (or code point) properties.
61 # A property describes some attribute or quality of a code point, like if it
62 # is lowercase or not, its name, what version of Unicode it was first defined
63 # in, or what its uppercase equivalent is. Unicode deals with these disparate
64 # possibilities by making all properties into mappings from each code point
65 # into some corresponding value. In the case of it being lowercase or not,
66 # the mapping is either to 'Y' or 'N' (or various synonyms thereof). Each
67 # property maps each Unicode code point to a single value, called a "property
68 # value". (Hence each Unicode property is a true mathematical function with
69 # exactly one value per code point.)
71 # When using a property in a regular expression, what is desired isn't the
72 # mapping of the code point to its property's value, but the reverse (or the
73 # mathematical "inverse relation"): starting with the property value, "Does a
74 # code point map to it?" These are written in a "compound" form:
75 # \p{property=value}, e.g., \p{category=punctuation}. This program generates
76 # files containing the lists of code points that map to each such regular
77 # expression property value, one file per list
79 # There is also a single form shortcut that Perl adds for many of the commonly
80 # used properties. This happens for all binary properties, plus script,
81 # general_category, and block properties.
83 # Thus the outputs of this program are files. There are map files, mostly in
84 # the 'To' directory; and there are list files for use in regular expression
85 # matching, all in subdirectories of the 'lib' directory, with each
86 # subdirectory being named for the property that the lists in it are for.
87 # Bookkeeping, test, and documentation files are also generated.
89 my $matches_directory = 'lib'; # Where match (\p{}) files go.
90 my $map_directory = 'To'; # Where map files go.
94 # The major data structures of this program are Property, of course, but also
95 # Table. There are two kinds of tables, very similar to each other.
96 # "Match_Table" is the data structure giving the list of code points that have
97 # a particular property value, mentioned above. There is also a "Map_Table"
98 # data structure which gives the property's mapping from code point to value.
99 # There are two structures because the match tables need to be combined in
100 # various ways, such as constructing unions, intersections, complements, etc.,
101 # and the map ones don't. And there would be problems, perhaps subtle, if
102 # a map table were inadvertently operated on in some of those ways.
103 # The use of separate classes with operations defined on one but not the other
104 # prevents accidentally confusing the two.
106 # At the heart of each table's data structure is a "Range_List", which is just
107 # an ordered list of "Ranges", plus ancillary information, and methods to
108 # operate on them. A Range is a compact way to store property information.
109 # Each range has a starting code point, an ending code point, and a value that
110 # is meant to apply to all the code points between the two end points,
111 # inclusive. For a map table, this value is the property value for those
112 # code points. Two such ranges could be written like this:
113 # 0x41 .. 0x5A, 'Upper',
114 # 0x61 .. 0x7A, 'Lower'
116 # Each range also has a type used as a convenience to classify the values.
117 # Most ranges in this program will be Type 0, or normal, but there are some
118 # ranges that have a non-zero type. These are used only in map tables, and
119 # are for mappings that don't fit into the normal scheme of things. Mappings
120 # that require a hash entry to communicate with utf8.c are one example;
121 # another example is mappings for charnames.pm to use which indicate a name
122 # that is algorithmically determinable from its code point (and vice-versa).
123 # These are used to significantly compact these tables, instead of listing
124 # each one of the tens of thousands individually.
126 # In a match table, the value of a range is irrelevant (and hence the type as
127 # well, which will always be 0), and arbitrarily set to the null string.
128 # Using the example above, there would be two match tables for those two
129 # entries, one named Upper would contain the 0x41..0x5A range, and the other
130 # named Lower would contain 0x61..0x7A.
132 # Actually, there are two types of range lists, "Range_Map" is the one
133 # associated with map tables, and "Range_List" with match tables.
134 # Again, this is so that methods can be defined on one and not the other so as
135 # to prevent operating on them in incorrect ways.
137 # Eventually, most tables are written out to files to be read by utf8_heavy.pl
138 # in the perl core. All tables could in theory be written, but some are
139 # suppressed because there is no current practical use for them. It is easy
140 # to change which get written by changing various lists that are near the top
141 # of the actual code in this file. The table data structures contain enough
142 # ancillary information to allow them to be treated as separate entities for
143 # writing, such as the path to each one's file. There is a heading in each
144 # map table that gives the format of its entries, and what the map is for all
145 # the code points missing from it. (This allows tables to be more compact.)
147 # The Property data structure contains one or more tables. All properties
148 # contain a map table (except the $perl property which is a
149 # pseudo-property containing only match tables), and any properties that
150 # are usable in regular expression matches also contain various matching
151 # tables, one for each value the property can have. A binary property can
152 # have two values, True and False (or Y and N, which are preferred by Unicode
153 # terminology). Thus each of these properties will have a map table that
154 # takes every code point and maps it to Y or N (but having ranges cuts the
155 # number of entries in that table way down), and two match tables, one
156 # which has a list of all the code points that map to Y, and one for all the
157 # code points that map to N. (For each of these, a third table is also
158 # generated for the pseudo Perl property. It contains the identical code
159 # points as the Y table, but can be written, not in the compound form, but in
160 # a "single" form like \p{IsUppercase}.) Many properties are binary, but some
161 # properties have several possible values, some have many, and properties like
162 # Name have a different value for every named code point. Those will not,
163 # unless the controlling lists are changed, have their match tables written
164 # out. But all the ones which can be used in regular expression \p{} and \P{}
165 # constructs will. Prior to 5.14, generally a property would have either its
166 # map table or its match tables written but not both. Again, what gets
167 # written is controlled by lists which can easily be changed. Starting in
168 # 5.14, advantage was taken of this, and all the map tables needed to
169 # reconstruct the Unicode db are now written out, while suppressing the
170 # Unicode .txt files that contain the data. Our tables are much more compact
171 # than the .txt files, so a significant space savings was achieved.
173 # Properties have a 'Type', like binary, or string, or enum depending on how
174 # many match tables there are and the content of the maps. This 'Type' is
175 # different than a range 'Type', so don't get confused by the two concepts
176 # having the same name.
178 # For information about the Unicode properties, see Unicode's UAX44 document:
180 my $unicode_reference_url = 'http://www.unicode.org/reports/tr44/';
182 # As stated earlier, this program will work on any release of Unicode so far.
183 # Most obvious problems in earlier data have NOT been corrected except when
184 # necessary to make Perl or this program work reasonably. For example, no
185 # folding information was given in early releases, so this program substitutes
186 # lower case instead, just so that a regular expression with the /i option
187 # will do something that actually gives the right results in many cases.
188 # There are also a couple other corrections for version 1.1.5, commented at
189 # the point they are made. As an example of corrections that weren't made
190 # (but could be) is this statement from DerivedAge.txt: "The supplementary
191 # private use code points and the non-character code points were assigned in
192 # version 2.0, but not specifically listed in the UCD until versions 3.0 and
193 # 3.1 respectively." (To be precise it was 3.0.1 not 3.0.0) More information
194 # on Unicode version glitches is further down in these introductory comments.
196 # This program works on all non-provisional properties as of 6.0, though the
197 # files for some are suppressed from apparent lack of demand for them. You
198 # can change which are output by changing lists in this program.
200 # The old version of mktables emphasized the term "Fuzzy" to mean Unicode's
201 # loose matchings rules (from Unicode TR18):
203 # The recommended names for UCD properties and property values are in
204 # PropertyAliases.txt [Prop] and PropertyValueAliases.txt
205 # [PropValue]. There are both abbreviated names and longer, more
206 # descriptive names. It is strongly recommended that both names be
207 # recognized, and that loose matching of property names be used,
208 # whereby the case distinctions, whitespace, hyphens, and underbar
210 # The program still allows Fuzzy to override its determination of if loose
211 # matching should be used, but it isn't currently used, as it is no longer
212 # needed; the calculations it makes are good enough.
214 # SUMMARY OF HOW IT WORKS:
218 # A list is constructed containing each input file that is to be processed
220 # Each file on the list is processed in a loop, using the associated handler
222 # The PropertyAliases.txt and PropValueAliases.txt files are processed
223 # first. These files name the properties and property values.
224 # Objects are created of all the property and property value names
225 # that the rest of the input should expect, including all synonyms.
226 # The other input files give mappings from properties to property
227 # values. That is, they list code points and say what the mapping
228 # is under the given property. Some files give the mappings for
229 # just one property; and some for many. This program goes through
230 # each file and populates the properties from them. Some properties
231 # are listed in more than one file, and Unicode has set up a
232 # precedence as to which has priority if there is a conflict. Thus
233 # the order of processing matters, and this program handles the
234 # conflict possibility by processing the overriding input files
235 # last, so that if necessary they replace earlier values.
236 # After this is all done, the program creates the property mappings not
237 # furnished by Unicode, but derivable from what it does give.
238 # The tables of code points that match each property value in each
239 # property that is accessible by regular expressions are created.
240 # The Perl-defined properties are created and populated. Many of these
241 # require data determined from the earlier steps
242 # Any Perl-defined synonyms are created, and name clashes between Perl
243 # and Unicode are reconciled and warned about.
244 # All the properties are written to files
245 # Any other files are written, and final warnings issued.
247 # For clarity, a number of operators have been overloaded to work on tables:
248 # ~ means invert (take all characters not in the set). The more
249 # conventional '!' is not used because of the possibility of confusing
250 # it with the actual boolean operation.
252 # - means subtraction
253 # & means intersection
254 # The precedence of these is the order listed. Parentheses should be
255 # copiously used. These are not a general scheme. The operations aren't
256 # defined for a number of things, deliberately, to avoid getting into trouble.
257 # Operations are done on references and affect the underlying structures, so
258 # that the copy constructors for them have been overloaded to not return a new
259 # clone, but the input object itself.
261 # The bool operator is deliberately not overloaded to avoid confusion with
262 # "should it mean if the object merely exists, or also is non-empty?".
264 # WHY CERTAIN DESIGN DECISIONS WERE MADE
266 # This program needs to be able to run under miniperl. Therefore, it uses a
267 # minimum of other modules, and hence implements some things itself that could
268 # be gotten from CPAN
270 # This program uses inputs published by the Unicode Consortium. These can
271 # change incompatibly between releases without the Perl maintainers realizing
272 # it. Therefore this program is now designed to try to flag these. It looks
273 # at the directories where the inputs are, and flags any unrecognized files.
274 # It keeps track of all the properties in the files it handles, and flags any
275 # that it doesn't know how to handle. It also flags any input lines that
276 # don't match the expected syntax, among other checks.
278 # It is also designed so if a new input file matches one of the known
279 # templates, one hopefully just needs to add it to a list to have it
282 # As mentioned earlier, some properties are given in more than one file. In
283 # particular, the files in the extracted directory are supposedly just
284 # reformattings of the others. But they contain information not easily
285 # derivable from the other files, including results for Unihan, which this
286 # program doesn't ordinarily look at, and for unassigned code points. They
287 # also have historically had errors or been incomplete. In an attempt to
288 # create the best possible data, this program thus processes them first to
289 # glean information missing from the other files; then processes those other
290 # files to override any errors in the extracted ones. Much of the design was
291 # driven by this need to store things and then possibly override them.
293 # It tries to keep fatal errors to a minimum, to generate something usable for
294 # testing purposes. It always looks for files that could be inputs, and will
295 # warn about any that it doesn't know how to handle (the -q option suppresses
298 # Why is there more than one type of range?
299 # This simplified things. There are some very specialized code points that
300 # have to be handled specially for output, such as Hangul syllable names.
301 # By creating a range type (done late in the development process), it
302 # allowed this to be stored with the range, and overridden by other input.
303 # Originally these were stored in another data structure, and it became a
304 # mess trying to decide if a second file that was for the same property was
305 # overriding the earlier one or not.
307 # Why are there two kinds of tables, match and map?
308 # (And there is a base class shared by the two as well.) As stated above,
309 # they actually are for different things. Development proceeded much more
310 # smoothly when I (khw) realized the distinction. Map tables are used to
311 # give the property value for every code point (actually every code point
312 # that doesn't map to a default value). Match tables are used for regular
313 # expression matches, and are essentially the inverse mapping. Separating
314 # the two allows more specialized methods, and error checks so that one
315 # can't just take the intersection of two map tables, for example, as that
320 # This program is written so it will run under miniperl. Occasionally changes
321 # will cause an error where the backtrace doesn't work well under miniperl.
322 # To diagnose the problem, you can instead run it under regular perl, if you
325 # There is a good trace facility. To enable it, first sub DEBUG must be set
326 # to return true. Then a line like
328 # local $to_trace = 1 if main::DEBUG;
330 # can be added to enable tracing in its lexical scope or until you insert
333 # local $to_trace = 0 if main::DEBUG;
335 # then use a line like "trace $a, @b, %c, ...;
337 # Some of the more complex subroutines already have trace statements in them.
338 # Permanent trace statements should be like:
340 # trace ... if main::DEBUG && $to_trace;
342 # If there is just one or a few files that you're debugging, you can easily
343 # cause most everything else to be skipped. Change the line
345 # my $debug_skip = 0;
347 # to 1, and every file whose object is in @input_file_objects and doesn't have
348 # a, 'non_skip => 1,' in its constructor will be skipped.
350 # To compare the output tables, it may be useful to specify the -annotate
351 # flag. This causes the tables to expand so there is one entry for each
352 # non-algorithmically named code point giving, currently its name, and its
353 # graphic representation if printable (and you have a font that knows about
354 # it). This makes it easier to see what the particular code points are in
355 # each output table. The tables are usable, but because they don't have
356 # ranges (for the most part), a Perl using them will run slower. Non-named
357 # code points are annotated with a description of their status, and contiguous
358 # ones with the same description will be output as a range rather than
359 # individually. Algorithmically named characters are also output as ranges,
360 # except when there are just a few contiguous ones.
364 # The program would break if Unicode were to change its names so that
365 # interior white space, underscores, or dashes differences were significant
366 # within property and property value names.
368 # It might be easier to use the xml versions of the UCD if this program ever
369 # would need heavy revision, and the ability to handle old versions was not
372 # There is the potential for name collisions, in that Perl has chosen names
373 # that Unicode could decide it also likes. There have been such collisions in
374 # the past, with mostly Perl deciding to adopt the Unicode definition of the
375 # name. However in the 5.2 Unicode beta testing, there were a number of such
376 # collisions, which were withdrawn before the final release, because of Perl's
377 # and other's protests. These all involved new properties which began with
378 # 'Is'. Based on the protests, Unicode is unlikely to try that again. Also,
379 # many of the Perl-defined synonyms, like Any, Word, etc, are listed in a
380 # Unicode document, so they are unlikely to be used by Unicode for another
381 # purpose. However, they might try something beginning with 'In', or use any
382 # of the other Perl-defined properties. This program will warn you of name
383 # collisions, and refuse to generate tables with them, but manual intervention
384 # will be required in this event. One scheme that could be implemented, if
385 # necessary, would be to have this program generate another file, or add a
386 # field to mktables.lst that gives the date of first definition of a property.
387 # Each new release of Unicode would use that file as a basis for the next
388 # iteration. And the Perl synonym addition code could sort based on the age
389 # of the property, so older properties get priority, and newer ones that clash
390 # would be refused; hence existing code would not be impacted, and some other
391 # synonym would have to be used for the new property. This is ugly, and
392 # manual intervention would certainly be easier to do in the short run; lets
393 # hope it never comes to this.
397 # This program can generate tables from the Unihan database. But it doesn't
398 # by default, letting the CPAN module Unicode::Unihan handle them. Prior to
399 # version 5.2, this database was in a single file, Unihan.txt. In 5.2 the
400 # database was split into 8 different files, all beginning with the letters
401 # 'Unihan'. This program will read those file(s) if present, but it needs to
402 # know which of the many properties in the file(s) should have tables created
403 # for them. It will create tables for any properties listed in
404 # PropertyAliases.txt and PropValueAliases.txt, plus any listed in the
405 # @cjk_properties array and the @cjk_property_values array. Thus, if a
406 # property you want is not in those files of the release you are building
407 # against, you must add it to those two arrays. Starting in 4.0, the
408 # Unicode_Radical_Stroke was listed in those files, so if the Unihan database
409 # is present in the directory, a table will be generated for that property.
410 # In 5.2, several more properties were added. For your convenience, the two
411 # arrays are initialized with all the 6.0 listed properties that are also in
412 # earlier releases. But these are commented out. You can just uncomment the
413 # ones you want, or use them as a template for adding entries for other
416 # You may need to adjust the entries to suit your purposes. setup_unihan(),
417 # and filter_unihan_line() are the functions where this is done. This program
418 # already does some adjusting to make the lines look more like the rest of the
419 # Unicode DB; You can see what that is in filter_unihan_line()
421 # There is a bug in the 3.2 data file in which some values for the
422 # kPrimaryNumeric property have commas and an unexpected comment. A filter
423 # could be added for these; or for a particular installation, the Unihan.txt
424 # file could be edited to fix them.
426 # HOW TO ADD A FILE TO BE PROCESSED
428 # A new file from Unicode needs to have an object constructed for it in
429 # @input_file_objects, probably at the end or at the end of the extracted
430 # ones. The program should warn you if its name will clash with others on
431 # restrictive file systems, like DOS. If so, figure out a better name, and
432 # add lines to the README.perl file giving that. If the file is a character
433 # property, it should be in the format that Unicode has by default
434 # standardized for such files for the more recently introduced ones.
435 # If so, the Input_file constructor for @input_file_objects can just be the
436 # file name and release it first appeared in. If not, then it should be
437 # possible to construct an each_line_handler() to massage the line into the
440 # For non-character properties, more code will be needed. You can look at
441 # the existing entries for clues.
443 # UNICODE VERSIONS NOTES
445 # The Unicode UCD has had a number of errors in it over the versions. And
446 # these remain, by policy, in the standard for that version. Therefore it is
447 # risky to correct them, because code may be expecting the error. So this
448 # program doesn't generally make changes, unless the error breaks the Perl
449 # core. As an example, some versions of 2.1.x Jamo.txt have the wrong value
450 # for U+1105, which causes real problems for the algorithms for Jamo
451 # calculations, so it is changed here.
453 # But it isn't so clear cut as to what to do about concepts that are
454 # introduced in a later release; should they extend back to earlier releases
455 # where the concept just didn't exist? It was easier to do this than to not,
456 # so that's what was done. For example, the default value for code points not
457 # in the files for various properties was probably undefined until changed by
458 # some version. No_Block for blocks is such an example. This program will
459 # assign No_Block even in Unicode versions that didn't have it. This has the
460 # benefit that code being written doesn't have to special case earlier
461 # versions; and the detriment that it doesn't match the Standard precisely for
462 # the affected versions.
464 # Here are some observations about some of the issues in early versions:
466 # The number of code points in \p{alpha} halved in 2.1.9. It turns out that
467 # the reason is that the CJK block starting at 4E00 was removed from PropList,
468 # and was not put back in until 3.1.0
470 # Unicode introduced the synonym Space for White_Space in 4.1. Perl has
471 # always had a \p{Space}. In release 3.2 only, they are not synonymous. The
472 # reason is that 3.2 introduced U+205F=medium math space, which was not
473 # classed as white space, but Perl figured out that it should have been. 4.0
474 # reclassified it correctly.
476 # Another change between 3.2 and 4.0 is the CCC property value ATBL. In 3.2
477 # this was erroneously a synonym for 202. In 4.0, ATB became 202, and ATBL
478 # was left with no code points, as all the ones that mapped to 202 stayed
479 # mapped to 202. Thus if your program used the numeric name for the class,
480 # it would not have been affected, but if it used the mnemonic, it would have
483 # \p{Script=Hrkt} (Katakana_Or_Hiragana) came in 4.0.1. Before that code
484 # points which eventually came to have this script property value, instead
485 # mapped to "Unknown". But in the next release all these code points were
486 # moved to \p{sc=common} instead.
488 # The default for missing code points for BidiClass is complicated. Starting
489 # in 3.1.1, the derived file DBidiClass.txt handles this, but this program
490 # tries to do the best it can for earlier releases. It is done in
491 # process_PropertyAliases()
493 ##############################################################################
495 my $UNDEF = ':UNDEF:'; # String to print out for undefined values in tracing
497 my $MAX_LINE_WIDTH = 78;
499 # Debugging aid to skip most files so as to not be distracted by them when
500 # concentrating on the ones being debugged. Add
502 # to the constructor for those files you want processed when you set this.
503 # Files with a first version number of 0 are special: they are always
504 # processed regardless of the state of this flag. Generally, Jamo.txt and
505 # UnicodeData.txt must not be skipped if you want this program to not die
506 # before normal completion.
509 # Set to 1 to enable tracing.
512 { # Closure for trace: debugging aid
513 my $print_caller = 1; # ? Include calling subroutine name
514 my $main_with_colon = 'main::';
515 my $main_colon_length = length($main_with_colon);
518 return unless $to_trace; # Do nothing if global flag not set
522 local $DB::trace = 0;
523 $DB::trace = 0; # Quiet 'used only once' message
527 # Loop looking up the stack to get the first non-trace caller
532 $line_number = $caller_line;
533 (my $pkg, my $file, $caller_line, my $caller) = caller $i++;
534 $caller = $main_with_colon unless defined $caller;
536 $caller_name = $caller;
539 $caller_name =~ s/.*:://;
540 if (substr($caller_name, 0, $main_colon_length)
543 $caller_name = substr($caller_name, $main_colon_length);
546 } until ($caller_name ne 'trace');
548 # If the stack was empty, we were called from the top level
549 $caller_name = 'main' if ($caller_name eq ""
550 || $caller_name eq 'trace');
553 foreach my $string (@input) {
554 #print STDERR __LINE__, ": ", join ", ", @input, "\n";
555 if (ref $string eq 'ARRAY' || ref $string eq 'HASH') {
556 $output .= simple_dumper($string);
559 $string = "$string" if ref $string;
560 $string = $UNDEF unless defined $string;
562 $string = '""' if $string eq "";
563 $output .= " " if $output ne ""
565 && substr($output, -1, 1) ne " "
566 && substr($string, 0, 1) ne " ";
571 print STDERR sprintf "%4d: ", $line_number if defined $line_number;
572 print STDERR "$caller_name: " if $print_caller;
573 print STDERR $output, "\n";
578 # This is for a rarely used development feature that allows you to compare two
579 # versions of the Unicode standard without having to deal with changes caused
580 # by the code points introduced in the later version. Change the 0 to a
581 # string containing a SINGLE dotted Unicode release number (e.g. "2.1"). Only
582 # code points introduced in that release and earlier will be used; later ones
583 # are thrown away. You use the version number of the earliest one you want to
584 # compare; then run this program on directory structures containing each
585 # release, and compare the outputs. These outputs will therefore include only
586 # the code points common to both releases, and you can see the changes caused
587 # just by the underlying release semantic changes. For versions earlier than
588 # 3.2, you must copy a version of DAge.txt into the directory.
589 my $string_compare_versions = DEBUG && 0; # e.g., "2.1";
590 my $compare_versions = DEBUG
591 && $string_compare_versions
592 && pack "C*", split /\./, $string_compare_versions;
595 # Returns non-duplicated input values. From "Perl Best Practices:
596 # Encapsulated Cleverness". p. 455 in first edition.
599 # Arguably this breaks encapsulation, if the goal is to permit multiple
600 # distinct objects to stringify to the same value, and be interchangeable.
601 # However, for this program, no two objects stringify identically, and all
602 # lists passed to this function are either objects or strings. So this
603 # doesn't affect correctness, but it does give a couple of percent speedup.
605 return grep { ! $seen{$_}++ } @_;
608 $0 = File::Spec->canonpath($0);
610 my $make_test_script = 0; # ? Should we output a test script
611 my $write_unchanged_files = 0; # ? Should we update the output files even if
612 # we don't think they have changed
613 my $use_directory = ""; # ? Should we chdir somewhere.
614 my $pod_directory; # input directory to store the pod file.
615 my $pod_file = 'perluniprops';
616 my $t_path; # Path to the .t test file
617 my $file_list = 'mktables.lst'; # File to store input and output file names.
618 # This is used to speed up the build, by not
619 # executing the main body of the program if
620 # nothing on the list has changed since the
622 my $make_list = 1; # ? Should we write $file_list. Set to always
623 # make a list so that when the pumpking is
624 # preparing a release, s/he won't have to do
626 my $glob_list = 0; # ? Should we try to include unknown .txt files
628 my $output_range_counts = $debugging_build; # ? Should we include the number
629 # of code points in ranges in
631 my $annotate = 0; # ? Should character names be in the output
633 # Verbosity levels; 0 is quiet
634 my $NORMAL_VERBOSITY = 1;
638 my $verbosity = $NORMAL_VERBOSITY;
642 my $arg = shift @ARGV;
644 $verbosity = $VERBOSE;
646 elsif ($arg eq '-p') {
647 $verbosity = $PROGRESS;
648 $| = 1; # Flush buffers as we go.
650 elsif ($arg eq '-q') {
653 elsif ($arg eq '-w') {
654 $write_unchanged_files = 1; # update the files even if havent changed
656 elsif ($arg eq '-check') {
657 my $this = shift @ARGV;
658 my $ok = shift @ARGV;
660 print "Skipping as check params are not the same.\n";
664 elsif ($arg eq '-P' && defined ($pod_directory = shift)) {
665 -d $pod_directory or croak "Directory '$pod_directory' doesn't exist";
667 elsif ($arg eq '-maketest' || ($arg eq '-T' && defined ($t_path = shift)))
669 $make_test_script = 1;
671 elsif ($arg eq '-makelist') {
674 elsif ($arg eq '-C' && defined ($use_directory = shift)) {
675 -d $use_directory or croak "Unknown directory '$use_directory'";
677 elsif ($arg eq '-L') {
679 # Existence not tested until have chdir'd
682 elsif ($arg eq '-globlist') {
685 elsif ($arg eq '-c') {
686 $output_range_counts = ! $output_range_counts
688 elsif ($arg eq '-annotate') {
690 $debugging_build = 1;
691 $output_range_counts = 1;
695 $with_c .= 'out' if $output_range_counts; # Complements the state
697 usage: $0 [-c|-p|-q|-v|-w] [-C dir] [-L filelist] [ -P pod_dir ]
698 [ -T test_file_path ] [-globlist] [-makelist] [-maketest]
700 -c : Output comments $with_c number of code points in ranges
701 -q : Quiet Mode: Only output serious warnings.
702 -p : Set verbosity level to normal plus show progress.
703 -v : Set Verbosity level high: Show progress and non-serious
705 -w : Write files regardless
706 -C dir : Change to this directory before proceeding. All relative paths
707 except those specified by the -P and -T options will be done
708 with respect to this directory.
709 -P dir : Output $pod_file file to directory 'dir'.
710 -T path : Create a test script as 'path'; overrides -maketest
711 -L filelist : Use alternate 'filelist' instead of standard one
712 -globlist : Take as input all non-Test *.txt files in current and sub
714 -maketest : Make test script 'TestProp.pl' in current (or -C directory),
716 -makelist : Rewrite the file list $file_list based on current setup
717 -annotate : Output an annotation for each character in the table files;
718 useful for debugging mktables, looking at diffs; but is slow,
719 memory intensive; resulting tables are usable but slow and
721 -check A B : Executes $0 only if A and B are the same
726 # Stores the most-recently changed file. If none have changed, can skip the
728 my $most_recent = (stat $0)[9]; # Do this before the chdir!
730 # Change directories now, because need to read 'version' early.
731 if ($use_directory) {
732 if ($pod_directory && ! File::Spec->file_name_is_absolute($pod_directory)) {
733 $pod_directory = File::Spec->rel2abs($pod_directory);
735 if ($t_path && ! File::Spec->file_name_is_absolute($t_path)) {
736 $t_path = File::Spec->rel2abs($t_path);
738 chdir $use_directory or croak "Failed to chdir to '$use_directory':$!";
739 if ($pod_directory && File::Spec->file_name_is_absolute($pod_directory)) {
740 $pod_directory = File::Spec->abs2rel($pod_directory);
742 if ($t_path && File::Spec->file_name_is_absolute($t_path)) {
743 $t_path = File::Spec->abs2rel($t_path);
747 # Get Unicode version into regular and v-string. This is done now because
748 # various tables below get populated based on it. These tables are populated
749 # here to be near the top of the file, and so easily seeable by those needing
751 open my $VERSION, "<", "version"
752 or croak "$0: can't open required file 'version': $!\n";
753 my $string_version = <$VERSION>;
755 chomp $string_version;
756 my $v_version = pack "C*", split /\./, $string_version; # v string
758 # The following are the complete names of properties with property values that
759 # are known to not match any code points in some versions of Unicode, but that
760 # may change in the future so they should be matchable, hence an empty file is
761 # generated for them.
762 my @tables_that_may_be_empty = (
763 'Joining_Type=Left_Joining',
765 push @tables_that_may_be_empty, 'Script=Common' if $v_version le v4.0.1;
766 push @tables_that_may_be_empty, 'Title' if $v_version lt v2.0.0;
767 push @tables_that_may_be_empty, 'Script=Katakana_Or_Hiragana'
768 if $v_version ge v4.1.0;
769 push @tables_that_may_be_empty, 'Script_Extensions=Katakana_Or_Hiragana'
770 if $v_version ge v6.0.0;
772 # The lists below are hashes, so the key is the item in the list, and the
773 # value is the reason why it is in the list. This makes generation of
774 # documentation easier.
776 my %why_suppressed; # No file generated for these.
778 # Files aren't generated for empty extraneous properties. This is arguable.
779 # Extraneous properties generally come about because a property is no longer
780 # used in a newer version of Unicode. If we generated a file without code
781 # points, programs that used to work on that property will still execute
782 # without errors. It just won't ever match (or will always match, with \P{}).
783 # This means that the logic is now likely wrong. I (khw) think its better to
784 # find this out by getting an error message. Just move them to the table
785 # above to change this behavior
786 my %why_suppress_if_empty_warn_if_not = (
788 # It is the only property that has ever officially been removed from the
789 # Standard. The database never contained any code points for it.
790 'Special_Case_Condition' => 'Obsolete',
792 # Apparently never official, but there were code points in some versions of
793 # old-style PropList.txt
794 'Non_Break' => 'Obsolete',
797 # These would normally go in the warn table just above, but they were changed
798 # a long time before this program was written, so warnings about them are
800 if ($v_version gt v3.2.0) {
801 push @tables_that_may_be_empty,
802 'Canonical_Combining_Class=Attached_Below_Left'
805 # These are listed in the Property aliases file in 6.0, but Unihan is ignored
806 # unless explicitly added.
807 if ($v_version ge v5.2.0) {
808 my $unihan = 'Unihan; remove from list if using Unihan';
809 foreach my $table (qw (
813 kCompatibilityVariant
827 $why_suppress_if_empty_warn_if_not{$table} = $unihan;
831 # Enum values for to_output_map() method in the Map_Table package.
832 my $EXTERNAL_MAP = 1;
833 my $INTERNAL_MAP = 2;
835 # To override computed values for writing the map tables for these properties.
836 # The default for enum map tables is to write them out, so that the Unicode
837 # .txt files can be removed, but all the data to compute any property value
838 # for any code point is available in a more compact form.
839 my %global_to_output_map = (
840 # Needed by UCD.pm, but don't want to publicize that it exists, so won't
841 # get stuck supporting it if things change. Since it is a STRING
842 # property, it normally would be listed in the pod, but INTERNAL_MAP
844 Unicode_1_Name => $INTERNAL_MAP,
846 Present_In => 0, # Suppress, as easily computed from Age
847 Block => 0, # Suppress, as Blocks.txt is retained.
849 # Suppress, as mapping can be found instead from the
850 # Perl_Decomposition_Mapping file
851 Decomposition_Type => 0,
854 # Properties that this program ignores.
855 my @unimplemented_properties;
857 # With this release, it is automatically handled if the Unihan db is
859 push @unimplemented_properties, 'Unicode_Radical_Stroke' if $v_version le v5.2.0;
861 # There are several types of obsolete properties defined by Unicode. These
862 # must be hand-edited for every new Unicode release.
863 my %why_deprecated; # Generates a deprecated warning message if used.
864 my %why_stabilized; # Documentation only
865 my %why_obsolete; # Documentation only
868 my $simple = 'Perl uses the more complete version of this property';
869 my $unihan = 'Unihan properties are by default not enabled in the Perl core. Instead use CPAN: Unicode::Unihan';
871 my $other_properties = 'other properties';
872 my $contributory = "Used by Unicode internally for generating $other_properties and not intended to be used stand-alone";
873 my $why_no_expand = "Deprecated by Unicode. These are characters that expand to more than one character in the specified normalization form, but whether they actually take up more bytes or not depends on the encoding being used. For example, a UTF-8 encoded character may expand to a different number of bytes than a UTF-32 encoded character.";
876 'Grapheme_Link' => 'Deprecated by Unicode: Duplicates ccc=vr (Canonical_Combining_Class=Virama)',
877 'Jamo_Short_Name' => $contributory,
878 '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',
879 'Other_Alphabetic' => $contributory,
880 'Other_Default_Ignorable_Code_Point' => $contributory,
881 'Other_Grapheme_Extend' => $contributory,
882 'Other_ID_Continue' => $contributory,
883 'Other_ID_Start' => $contributory,
884 'Other_Lowercase' => $contributory,
885 'Other_Math' => $contributory,
886 'Other_Uppercase' => $contributory,
887 'Expands_On_NFC' => $why_no_expand,
888 'Expands_On_NFD' => $why_no_expand,
889 'Expands_On_NFKC' => $why_no_expand,
890 'Expands_On_NFKD' => $why_no_expand,
894 # There is a lib/unicore/Decomposition.pl (used by Normalize.pm) which
895 # contains the same information, but without the algorithmically
896 # determinable Hangul syllables'. This file is not published, so it's
897 # existence is not noted in the comment.
898 'Decomposition_Mapping' => 'Accessible via Unicode::Normalize or Unicode::UCD::prop_invmap()',
900 # Don't suppress ISO_Comment, as otherwise special handling is needed
901 # to differentiate between it and gc=c, which can be written as 'isc',
902 # which is the same characters as ISO_Comment's short name.
904 'Name' => "Accessible via \\N{...} or 'use charnames;' or Unicode::UCD::prop_invmap()",
906 'Simple_Case_Folding' => "$simple. Can access this through Unicode::UCD::casefold or Unicode::UCD::prop_invmap()",
907 'Simple_Lowercase_Mapping' => "$simple. Can access this through Unicode::UCD::charinfo or Unicode::UCD::prop_invmap()",
908 'Simple_Titlecase_Mapping' => "$simple. Can access this through Unicode::UCD::charinfo or Unicode::UCD::prop_invmap()",
909 'Simple_Uppercase_Mapping' => "$simple. Can access this through Unicode::UCD::charinfo or Unicode::UCD::prop_invmap()",
911 FC_NFKC_Closure => 'Supplanted in usage by NFKC_Casefold; otherwise not useful',
914 foreach my $property (
916 # The following are suppressed because they were made contributory
917 # or deprecated by Unicode before Perl ever thought about
926 # The following are suppressed because they have been marked
927 # as deprecated for a sufficient amount of time
929 'Other_Default_Ignorable_Code_Point',
930 'Other_Grapheme_Extend',
937 $why_suppressed{$property} = $why_deprecated{$property};
940 # Customize the message for all the 'Other_' properties
941 foreach my $property (keys %why_deprecated) {
942 next if (my $main_property = $property) !~ s/^Other_//;
943 $why_deprecated{$property} =~ s/$other_properties/the $main_property property (which should be used instead)/;
947 if ($v_version ge 4.0.0) {
948 $why_stabilized{'Hyphen'} = 'Use the Line_Break property instead; see www.unicode.org/reports/tr14';
949 if ($v_version ge 6.0.0) {
950 $why_deprecated{'Hyphen'} = 'Supplanted by Line_Break property values; see www.unicode.org/reports/tr14';
953 if ($v_version ge 5.2.0 && $v_version lt 6.0.0) {
954 $why_obsolete{'ISO_Comment'} = 'Code points for it have been removed';
955 if ($v_version ge 6.0.0) {
956 $why_deprecated{'ISO_Comment'} = 'No longer needed for Unicode\'s internal chart generation; otherwise not useful, and code points for it have been removed';
960 # Probably obsolete forever
961 if ($v_version ge v4.1.0) {
962 $why_suppressed{'Script=Katakana_Or_Hiragana'} = 'Obsolete. All code points previously matched by this have been moved to "Script=Common".';
964 if ($v_version ge v6.0.0) {
965 $why_suppressed{'Script=Katakana_Or_Hiragana'} .= ' Consider instead using "Script_Extensions=Katakana" or "Script_Extensions=Hiragana (or both)"';
966 $why_suppressed{'Script_Extensions=Katakana_Or_Hiragana'} = 'All code points that would be matched by this are matched by either "Script_Extensions=Katakana" or "Script_Extensions=Hiragana"';
969 # This program can create files for enumerated-like properties, such as
970 # 'Numeric_Type'. This file would be the same format as for a string
971 # property, with a mapping from code point to its value, so you could look up,
972 # for example, the script a code point is in. But no one so far wants this
973 # mapping, or they have found another way to get it since this is a new
974 # feature. So no file is generated except if it is in this list.
975 my @output_mapped_properties = split "\n", <<END;
978 # If you are using the Unihan database in a Unicode version before 5.2, you
979 # need to add the properties that you want to extract from it to this table.
980 # For your convenience, the properties in the 6.0 PropertyAliases.txt file are
981 # listed, commented out
982 my @cjk_properties = split "\n", <<'END';
983 #cjkAccountingNumeric; kAccountingNumeric
984 #cjkOtherNumeric; kOtherNumeric
985 #cjkPrimaryNumeric; kPrimaryNumeric
986 #cjkCompatibilityVariant; kCompatibilityVariant
988 #cjkIRG_GSource; kIRG_GSource
989 #cjkIRG_HSource; kIRG_HSource
990 #cjkIRG_JSource; kIRG_JSource
991 #cjkIRG_KPSource; kIRG_KPSource
992 #cjkIRG_KSource; kIRG_KSource
993 #cjkIRG_TSource; kIRG_TSource
994 #cjkIRG_USource; kIRG_USource
995 #cjkIRG_VSource; kIRG_VSource
996 #cjkRSUnicode; kRSUnicode ; Unicode_Radical_Stroke; URS
999 # Similarly for the property values. For your convenience, the lines in the
1000 # 6.0 PropertyAliases.txt file are listed. Just remove the first BUT NOT both
1001 # '#' marks (for Unicode versions before 5.2)
1002 my @cjk_property_values = split "\n", <<'END';
1003 ## @missing: 0000..10FFFF; cjkAccountingNumeric; NaN
1004 ## @missing: 0000..10FFFF; cjkCompatibilityVariant; <code point>
1005 ## @missing: 0000..10FFFF; cjkIICore; <none>
1006 ## @missing: 0000..10FFFF; cjkIRG_GSource; <none>
1007 ## @missing: 0000..10FFFF; cjkIRG_HSource; <none>
1008 ## @missing: 0000..10FFFF; cjkIRG_JSource; <none>
1009 ## @missing: 0000..10FFFF; cjkIRG_KPSource; <none>
1010 ## @missing: 0000..10FFFF; cjkIRG_KSource; <none>
1011 ## @missing: 0000..10FFFF; cjkIRG_TSource; <none>
1012 ## @missing: 0000..10FFFF; cjkIRG_USource; <none>
1013 ## @missing: 0000..10FFFF; cjkIRG_VSource; <none>
1014 ## @missing: 0000..10FFFF; cjkOtherNumeric; NaN
1015 ## @missing: 0000..10FFFF; cjkPrimaryNumeric; NaN
1016 ## @missing: 0000..10FFFF; cjkRSUnicode; <none>
1019 # The input files don't list every code point. Those not listed are to be
1020 # defaulted to some value. Below are hard-coded what those values are for
1021 # non-binary properties as of 5.1. Starting in 5.0, there are
1022 # machine-parsable comment lines in the files the give the defaults; so this
1023 # list shouldn't have to be extended. The claim is that all missing entries
1024 # for binary properties will default to 'N'. Unicode tried to change that in
1025 # 5.2, but the beta period produced enough protest that they backed off.
1027 # The defaults for the fields that appear in UnicodeData.txt in this hash must
1028 # be in the form that it expects. The others may be synonyms.
1029 my $CODE_POINT = '<code point>';
1030 my %default_mapping = (
1031 Age => "Unassigned",
1032 # Bidi_Class => Complicated; set in code
1033 Bidi_Mirroring_Glyph => "",
1034 Block => 'No_Block',
1035 Canonical_Combining_Class => 0,
1036 Case_Folding => $CODE_POINT,
1037 Decomposition_Mapping => $CODE_POINT,
1038 Decomposition_Type => 'None',
1039 East_Asian_Width => "Neutral",
1040 FC_NFKC_Closure => $CODE_POINT,
1041 General_Category => 'Cn',
1042 Grapheme_Cluster_Break => 'Other',
1043 Hangul_Syllable_Type => 'NA',
1045 Jamo_Short_Name => "",
1046 Joining_Group => "No_Joining_Group",
1047 # Joining_Type => Complicated; set in code
1048 kIICore => 'N', # Is converted to binary
1049 #Line_Break => Complicated; set in code
1050 Lowercase_Mapping => $CODE_POINT,
1057 Numeric_Type => 'None',
1058 Numeric_Value => 'NaN',
1059 Script => ($v_version le 4.1.0) ? 'Common' : 'Unknown',
1060 Sentence_Break => 'Other',
1061 Simple_Case_Folding => $CODE_POINT,
1062 Simple_Lowercase_Mapping => $CODE_POINT,
1063 Simple_Titlecase_Mapping => $CODE_POINT,
1064 Simple_Uppercase_Mapping => $CODE_POINT,
1065 Titlecase_Mapping => $CODE_POINT,
1066 Unicode_1_Name => "",
1067 Unicode_Radical_Stroke => "",
1068 Uppercase_Mapping => $CODE_POINT,
1069 Word_Break => 'Other',
1072 # Below are files that Unicode furnishes, but this program ignores, and why
1073 my %ignored_files = (
1074 'CJKRadicals.txt' => 'Maps the kRSUnicode property values to corresponding code points',
1075 'Index.txt' => 'Alphabetical index of Unicode characters',
1076 'NamedSqProv.txt' => 'Named sequences proposed for inclusion in a later version of the Unicode Standard; if you need them now, you can append this file to F<NamedSequences.txt> and recompile perl',
1077 'NamesList.txt' => 'Annotated list of characters',
1078 'NormalizationCorrections.txt' => 'Documentation of corrections already incorporated into the Unicode data base',
1079 'Props.txt' => 'Only in very early releases; is a subset of F<PropList.txt> (which is used instead)',
1080 'ReadMe.txt' => 'Documentation',
1081 'StandardizedVariants.txt' => 'Certain glyph variations for character display are standardized. This lists the non-Unihan ones; the Unihan ones are also not used by Perl, and are in a separate Unicode data base L<http://www.unicode.org/ivd>',
1082 'EmojiSources.txt' => 'Maps certain Unicode code points to their legacy Japanese cell-phone values',
1083 'IndicMatraCategory.txt' => 'Provisional; for the analysis and processing of Indic scripts',
1084 'IndicSyllabicCategory.txt' => 'Provisional; for the analysis and processing of Indic scripts',
1085 'auxiliary/WordBreakTest.html' => 'Documentation of validation tests',
1086 'auxiliary/SentenceBreakTest.html' => 'Documentation of validation tests',
1087 'auxiliary/GraphemeBreakTest.html' => 'Documentation of validation tests',
1088 'auxiliary/LineBreakTest.html' => 'Documentation of validation tests',
1091 ### End of externally interesting definitions, except for @input_file_objects
1094 # !!!!!!! DO NOT EDIT THIS FILE !!!!!!!
1095 # This file is machine-generated by $0 from the Unicode
1096 # database, Version $string_version. Any changes made here will be lost!
1099 my $INTERNAL_ONLY_HEADER = <<"EOF";
1101 # !!!!!!! INTERNAL PERL USE ONLY !!!!!!!
1102 # This file is for internal use by core Perl only. The format and even the
1103 # name or existence of this file are subject to change without notice. Don't
1107 my $DEVELOPMENT_ONLY=<<"EOF";
1108 # !!!!!!! DEVELOPMENT USE ONLY !!!!!!!
1109 # This file contains information artificially constrained to code points
1110 # present in Unicode release $string_compare_versions.
1111 # IT CANNOT BE RELIED ON. It is for use during development only and should
1112 # not be used for production.
1116 my $MAX_UNICODE_CODEPOINT_STRING = "10FFFF";
1117 my $MAX_UNICODE_CODEPOINT = hex $MAX_UNICODE_CODEPOINT_STRING;
1118 my $MAX_UNICODE_CODEPOINTS = $MAX_UNICODE_CODEPOINT + 1;
1120 # Matches legal code point. 4-6 hex numbers, If there are 6, the first
1121 # two must be 10; if there are 5, the first must not be a 0. Written this way
1122 # to decrease backtracking. The first regex allows the code point to be at
1123 # the end of a word, but to work properly, the word shouldn't end with a valid
1124 # hex character. The second one won't match a code point at the end of a
1125 # word, and doesn't have the run-on issue
1126 my $run_on_code_point_re =
1127 qr/ (?: 10[0-9A-F]{4} | [1-9A-F][0-9A-F]{4} | [0-9A-F]{4} ) \b/x;
1128 my $code_point_re = qr/\b$run_on_code_point_re/;
1130 # This matches the beginning of the line in the Unicode db files that give the
1131 # defaults for code points not listed (i.e., missing) in the file. The code
1132 # depends on this ending with a semi-colon, so it can assume it is a valid
1133 # field when the line is split() by semi-colons
1134 my $missing_defaults_prefix =
1135 qr/^#\s+\@missing:\s+0000\.\.$MAX_UNICODE_CODEPOINT_STRING\s*;/;
1137 # Property types. Unicode has more types, but these are sufficient for our
1139 my $UNKNOWN = -1; # initialized to illegal value
1140 my $NON_STRING = 1; # Either binary or enum
1142 my $FORCED_BINARY = 3; # Not a binary property, but, besides its normal
1143 # tables, additional true and false tables are
1144 # generated so that false is anything matching the
1145 # default value, and true is everything else.
1146 my $ENUM = 4; # Include catalog
1147 my $STRING = 5; # Anything else: string or misc
1149 # Some input files have lines that give default values for code points not
1150 # contained in the file. Sometimes these should be ignored.
1151 my $NO_DEFAULTS = 0; # Must evaluate to false
1152 my $NOT_IGNORED = 1;
1155 # Range types. Each range has a type. Most ranges are type 0, for normal,
1156 # and will appear in the main body of the tables in the output files, but
1157 # there are other types of ranges as well, listed below, that are specially
1158 # handled. There are pseudo-types as well that will never be stored as a
1159 # type, but will affect the calculation of the type.
1161 # 0 is for normal, non-specials
1162 my $MULTI_CP = 1; # Sequence of more than code point
1163 my $HANGUL_SYLLABLE = 2;
1164 my $CP_IN_NAME = 3; # The NAME contains the code point appended to it.
1165 my $NULL = 4; # The map is to the null string; utf8.c can't
1166 # handle these, nor is there an accepted syntax
1167 # for them in \p{} constructs
1168 my $COMPUTE_NO_MULTI_CP = 5; # Pseudo-type; means that ranges that would
1169 # otherwise be $MULTI_CP type are instead type 0
1171 # process_generic_property_file() can accept certain overrides in its input.
1172 # Each of these must begin AND end with $CMD_DELIM.
1173 my $CMD_DELIM = "\a";
1174 my $REPLACE_CMD = 'replace'; # Override the Replace
1175 my $MAP_TYPE_CMD = 'map_type'; # Override the Type
1180 # Values for the Replace argument to add_range.
1181 # $NO # Don't replace; add only the code points not
1183 my $IF_NOT_EQUIVALENT = 1; # Replace only under certain conditions; details in
1184 # the comments at the subroutine definition.
1185 my $UNCONDITIONALLY = 2; # Replace without conditions.
1186 my $MULTIPLE = 4; # Don't replace, but add a duplicate record if
1188 my $CROAK = 5; # Die with an error if is already there
1190 # Flags to give property statuses. The phrases are to remind maintainers that
1191 # if the flag is changed, the indefinite article referring to it in the
1192 # documentation may need to be as well.
1194 my $DEPRECATED = 'D';
1195 my $a_bold_deprecated = "a 'B<$DEPRECATED>'";
1196 my $A_bold_deprecated = "A 'B<$DEPRECATED>'";
1197 my $DISCOURAGED = 'X';
1198 my $a_bold_discouraged = "an 'B<$DISCOURAGED>'";
1199 my $A_bold_discouraged = "An 'B<$DISCOURAGED>'";
1201 my $a_bold_stricter = "a 'B<$STRICTER>'";
1202 my $A_bold_stricter = "A 'B<$STRICTER>'";
1203 my $STABILIZED = 'S';
1204 my $a_bold_stabilized = "an 'B<$STABILIZED>'";
1205 my $A_bold_stabilized = "An 'B<$STABILIZED>'";
1207 my $a_bold_obsolete = "an 'B<$OBSOLETE>'";
1208 my $A_bold_obsolete = "An 'B<$OBSOLETE>'";
1210 my %status_past_participles = (
1211 $DISCOURAGED => 'discouraged',
1212 $STABILIZED => 'stabilized',
1213 $OBSOLETE => 'obsolete',
1214 $DEPRECATED => 'deprecated',
1217 # Table fates. These are somewhat ordered, so that fates < $MAP_PROXIED should be
1218 # externally documented.
1219 my $ORDINARY = 0; # The normal fate.
1220 my $MAP_PROXIED = 1; # The map table for the property isn't written out,
1221 # but there is a file written that can be used to
1222 # reconstruct this table
1223 my $SUPPRESSED = 3; # The file for this table is not written out.
1224 my $INTERNAL_ONLY = 4; # The file for this table is written out, but it is
1225 # for Perl's internal use only
1226 my $PLACEHOLDER = 5; # A property that is defined as a placeholder in a
1227 # Unicode version that doesn't have it, but we need it
1228 # to be defined, if empty, to have things work.
1229 # Implies no pod entry generated
1231 # The format of the values of the tables:
1232 my $EMPTY_FORMAT = "";
1233 my $BINARY_FORMAT = 'b';
1234 my $DECIMAL_FORMAT = 'd';
1235 my $FLOAT_FORMAT = 'f';
1236 my $INTEGER_FORMAT = 'i';
1237 my $HEX_FORMAT = 'x';
1238 my $RATIONAL_FORMAT = 'r';
1239 my $STRING_FORMAT = 's';
1240 my $DECOMP_STRING_FORMAT = 'c';
1241 my $STRING_WHITE_SPACE_LIST = 'sw';
1243 my %map_table_formats = (
1244 $BINARY_FORMAT => 'binary',
1245 $DECIMAL_FORMAT => 'single decimal digit',
1246 $FLOAT_FORMAT => 'floating point number',
1247 $INTEGER_FORMAT => 'integer',
1248 $HEX_FORMAT => 'non-negative hex whole number; a code point',
1249 $RATIONAL_FORMAT => 'rational: an integer or a fraction',
1250 $STRING_FORMAT => 'string',
1251 $DECOMP_STRING_FORMAT => 'Perl\'s internal (Normalize.pm) decomposition mapping',
1252 $STRING_WHITE_SPACE_LIST => 'string, but some elements are interpreted as a list; white space occurs only as list item separators'
1255 # Unicode didn't put such derived files in a separate directory at first.
1256 my $EXTRACTED_DIR = (-d 'extracted') ? 'extracted' : "";
1257 my $EXTRACTED = ($EXTRACTED_DIR) ? "$EXTRACTED_DIR/" : "";
1258 my $AUXILIARY = 'auxiliary';
1260 # Hashes that will eventually go into Heavy.pl for the use of utf8_heavy.pl
1261 # and into UCD.pl for the use of UCD.pm
1262 my %loose_to_file_of; # loosely maps table names to their respective
1264 my %stricter_to_file_of; # same; but for stricter mapping.
1265 my %loose_property_to_file_of; # Maps a loose property name to its map file
1266 my %file_to_swash_name; # Maps the file name to its corresponding key name
1267 # in the hash %utf8::SwashInfo
1268 my %nv_floating_to_rational; # maps numeric values floating point numbers to
1269 # their rational equivalent
1270 my %loose_property_name_of; # Loosely maps (non_string) property names to
1272 my %string_property_loose_to_name; # Same, for string properties.
1273 my %loose_defaults; # keys are of form "prop=value", where 'prop' is
1274 # the property name in standard loose form, and
1275 # 'value' is the default value for that property,
1276 # also in standard loose form.
1277 my %loose_to_standard_value; # loosely maps table names to the canonical
1279 my %ambiguous_names; # keys are alias names (in standard form) that
1280 # have more than one possible meaning.
1281 my %prop_aliases; # Keys are standard property name; values are each
1283 my %prop_value_aliases; # Keys of top level are standard property name;
1284 # values are keys to another hash, Each one is
1285 # one of the property's values, in standard form.
1286 # The values are that prop-val's aliases.
1287 my %ucd_pod; # Holds entries that will go into the UCD section of the pod
1289 # Most properties are immune to caseless matching, otherwise you would get
1290 # nonsensical results, as properties are a function of a code point, not
1291 # everything that is caselessly equivalent to that code point. For example,
1292 # Changes_When_Case_Folded('s') should be false, whereas caselessly it would
1293 # be true because 's' and 'S' are equivalent caselessly. However,
1294 # traditionally, [:upper:] and [:lower:] are equivalent caselessly, so we
1295 # extend that concept to those very few properties that are like this. Each
1296 # such property will match the full range caselessly. They are hard-coded in
1297 # the program; it's not worth trying to make it general as it's extremely
1298 # unlikely that they will ever change.
1299 my %caseless_equivalent_to;
1301 # These constants names and values were taken from the Unicode standard,
1302 # version 5.1, section 3.12. They are used in conjunction with Hangul
1303 # syllables. The '_string' versions are so generated tables can retain the
1304 # hex format, which is the more familiar value
1305 my $SBase_string = "0xAC00";
1306 my $SBase = CORE::hex $SBase_string;
1307 my $LBase_string = "0x1100";
1308 my $LBase = CORE::hex $LBase_string;
1309 my $VBase_string = "0x1161";
1310 my $VBase = CORE::hex $VBase_string;
1311 my $TBase_string = "0x11A7";
1312 my $TBase = CORE::hex $TBase_string;
1317 my $NCount = $VCount * $TCount;
1319 # For Hangul syllables; These store the numbers from Jamo.txt in conjunction
1320 # with the above published constants.
1322 my %Jamo_L; # Leading consonants
1323 my %Jamo_V; # Vowels
1324 my %Jamo_T; # Trailing consonants
1326 # For code points whose name contains its ordinal as a '-ABCD' suffix.
1327 # The key is the base name of the code point, and the value is an
1328 # array giving all the ranges that use this base name. Each range
1329 # is actually a hash giving the 'low' and 'high' values of it.
1330 my %names_ending_in_code_point;
1331 my %loose_names_ending_in_code_point; # Same as above, but has blanks, dashes
1332 # removed from the names
1333 # Inverse mapping. The list of ranges that have these kinds of
1334 # names. Each element contains the low, high, and base names in an
1336 my @code_points_ending_in_code_point;
1338 # Boolean: does this Unicode version have the hangul syllables, and are we
1339 # writing out a table for them?
1340 my $has_hangul_syllables = 0;
1342 # Does this Unicode version have code points whose names end in their
1343 # respective code points, and are we writing out a table for them? 0 for no;
1344 # otherwise points to first property that a table is needed for them, so that
1345 # if multiple tables are needed, we don't create duplicates
1346 my $needing_code_points_ending_in_code_point = 0;
1348 my @backslash_X_tests; # List of tests read in for testing \X
1349 my @unhandled_properties; # Will contain a list of properties found in
1350 # the input that we didn't process.
1351 my @match_properties; # Properties that have match tables, to be
1353 my @map_properties; # Properties that get map files written
1354 my @named_sequences; # NamedSequences.txt contents.
1355 my %potential_files; # Generated list of all .txt files in the directory
1356 # structure so we can warn if something is being
1358 my @files_actually_output; # List of files we generated.
1359 my @more_Names; # Some code point names are compound; this is used
1360 # to store the extra components of them.
1361 my $MIN_FRACTION_LENGTH = 3; # How many digits of a floating point number at
1362 # the minimum before we consider it equivalent to a
1363 # candidate rational
1364 my $MAX_FLOATING_SLOP = 10 ** - $MIN_FRACTION_LENGTH; # And in floating terms
1366 # These store references to certain commonly used property objects
1375 # Are there conflicting names because of beginning with 'In_', or 'Is_'
1376 my $has_In_conflicts = 0;
1377 my $has_Is_conflicts = 0;
1379 sub internal_file_to_platform ($) {
1380 # Convert our file paths which have '/' separators to those of the
1384 return undef unless defined $file;
1386 return File::Spec->join(split '/', $file);
1389 sub file_exists ($) { # platform independent '-e'. This program internally
1390 # uses slash as a path separator.
1392 return 0 if ! defined $file;
1393 return -e internal_file_to_platform($file);
1397 # Returns the address of the blessed input object.
1398 # It doesn't check for blessedness because that would do a string eval
1399 # every call, and the program is structured so that this is never called
1400 # for a non-blessed object.
1402 no overloading; # If overloaded, numifying below won't work.
1404 # Numifying a ref gives its address.
1405 return pack 'J', $_[0];
1408 # These are used only if $annotate is true.
1409 # The entire range of Unicode characters is examined to populate these
1410 # after all the input has been processed. But most can be skipped, as they
1411 # have the same descriptive phrases, such as being unassigned
1412 my @viacode; # Contains the 1 million character names
1413 my @printable; # boolean: And are those characters printable?
1414 my @annotate_char_type; # Contains a type of those characters, specifically
1415 # for the purposes of annotation.
1416 my $annotate_ranges; # A map of ranges of code points that have the same
1417 # name for the purposes of annotation. They map to the
1418 # upper edge of the range, so that the end point can
1419 # be immediately found. This is used to skip ahead to
1420 # the end of a range, and avoid processing each
1421 # individual code point in it.
1422 my $unassigned_sans_noncharacters; # A Range_List of the unassigned
1423 # characters, but excluding those which are
1424 # also noncharacter code points
1426 # The annotation types are an extension of the regular range types, though
1427 # some of the latter are folded into one. Make the new types negative to
1428 # avoid conflicting with the regular types
1429 my $SURROGATE_TYPE = -1;
1430 my $UNASSIGNED_TYPE = -2;
1431 my $PRIVATE_USE_TYPE = -3;
1432 my $NONCHARACTER_TYPE = -4;
1433 my $CONTROL_TYPE = -5;
1434 my $UNKNOWN_TYPE = -6; # Used only if there is a bug in this program
1436 sub populate_char_info ($) {
1437 # Used only with the $annotate option. Populates the arrays with the
1438 # input code point's info that are needed for outputting more detailed
1439 # comments. If calling context wants a return, it is the end point of
1440 # any contiguous range of characters that share essentially the same info
1443 Carp::carp_extra_args(\@_) if main::DEBUG && @_;
1445 $viacode[$i] = $perl_charname->value_of($i) || "";
1447 # A character is generally printable if Unicode says it is,
1448 # but below we make sure that most Unicode general category 'C' types
1450 $printable[$i] = $print->contains($i);
1452 $annotate_char_type[$i] = $perl_charname->type_of($i) || 0;
1454 # Only these two regular types are treated specially for annotations
1456 $annotate_char_type[$i] = 0 if $annotate_char_type[$i] != $CP_IN_NAME
1457 && $annotate_char_type[$i] != $HANGUL_SYLLABLE;
1459 # Give a generic name to all code points that don't have a real name.
1460 # We output ranges, if applicable, for these. Also calculate the end
1461 # point of the range.
1463 if (! $viacode[$i]) {
1464 if ($gc-> table('Surrogate')->contains($i)) {
1465 $viacode[$i] = 'Surrogate';
1466 $annotate_char_type[$i] = $SURROGATE_TYPE;
1468 $end = $gc->table('Surrogate')->containing_range($i)->end;
1470 elsif ($gc-> table('Private_use')->contains($i)) {
1471 $viacode[$i] = 'Private Use';
1472 $annotate_char_type[$i] = $PRIVATE_USE_TYPE;
1474 $end = $gc->table('Private_Use')->containing_range($i)->end;
1476 elsif (Property::property_ref('Noncharacter_Code_Point')-> table('Y')->
1479 $viacode[$i] = 'Noncharacter';
1480 $annotate_char_type[$i] = $NONCHARACTER_TYPE;
1482 $end = property_ref('Noncharacter_Code_Point')->table('Y')->
1483 containing_range($i)->end;
1485 elsif ($gc-> table('Control')->contains($i)) {
1486 $viacode[$i] = 'Control';
1487 $annotate_char_type[$i] = $CONTROL_TYPE;
1489 $end = 0x81 if $i == 0x80; # Hard-code this one known case
1491 elsif ($gc-> table('Unassigned')->contains($i)) {
1492 $viacode[$i] = 'Unassigned, block=' . $block-> value_of($i);
1493 $annotate_char_type[$i] = $UNASSIGNED_TYPE;
1496 # Because we name the unassigned by the blocks they are in, it
1497 # can't go past the end of that block, and it also can't go past
1498 # the unassigned range it is in. The special table makes sure
1499 # that the non-characters, which are unassigned, are separated
1501 $end = min($block->containing_range($i)->end,
1502 $unassigned_sans_noncharacters-> containing_range($i)->
1506 Carp::my_carp_bug("Can't figure out how to annotate "
1507 . sprintf("U+%04X", $i)
1508 . ". Proceeding anyway.");
1509 $viacode[$i] = 'UNKNOWN';
1510 $annotate_char_type[$i] = $UNKNOWN_TYPE;
1515 # Here, has a name, but if it's one in which the code point number is
1516 # appended to the name, do that.
1517 elsif ($annotate_char_type[$i] == $CP_IN_NAME) {
1518 $viacode[$i] .= sprintf("-%04X", $i);
1519 $end = $perl_charname->containing_range($i)->end;
1522 # And here, has a name, but if it's a hangul syllable one, replace it with
1523 # the correct name from the Unicode algorithm
1524 elsif ($annotate_char_type[$i] == $HANGUL_SYLLABLE) {
1526 my $SIndex = $i - $SBase;
1527 my $L = $LBase + $SIndex / $NCount;
1528 my $V = $VBase + ($SIndex % $NCount) / $TCount;
1529 my $T = $TBase + $SIndex % $TCount;
1530 $viacode[$i] = "HANGUL SYLLABLE $Jamo{$L}$Jamo{$V}";
1531 $viacode[$i] .= $Jamo{$T} if $T != $TBase;
1532 $end = $perl_charname->containing_range($i)->end;
1535 return if ! defined wantarray;
1536 return $i if ! defined $end; # If not a range, return the input
1538 # Save this whole range so can find the end point quickly
1539 $annotate_ranges->add_map($i, $end, $end);
1544 # Commented code below should work on Perl 5.8.
1545 ## This 'require' doesn't necessarily work in miniperl, and even if it does,
1546 ## the native perl version of it (which is what would operate under miniperl)
1547 ## is extremely slow, as it does a string eval every call.
1548 #my $has_fast_scalar_util = $
\18 !~ /miniperl/
1549 # && defined eval "require Scalar::Util";
1552 # # Returns the address of the blessed input object. Uses the XS version if
1553 # # available. It doesn't check for blessedness because that would do a
1554 # # string eval every call, and the program is structured so that this is
1555 # # never called for a non-blessed object.
1557 # return Scalar::Util::refaddr($_[0]) if $has_fast_scalar_util;
1559 # # Check at least that is a ref.
1560 # my $pkg = ref($_[0]) or return undef;
1562 # # Change to a fake package to defeat any overloaded stringify
1563 # bless $_[0], 'main::Fake';
1565 # # Numifying a ref gives its address.
1566 # my $addr = pack 'J', $_[0];
1568 # # Return to original class
1569 # bless $_[0], $pkg;
1576 return $a if $a >= $b;
1583 return $a if $a <= $b;
1587 sub clarify_number ($) {
1588 # This returns the input number with underscores inserted every 3 digits
1589 # in large (5 digits or more) numbers. Input must be entirely digits, not
1593 my $pos = length($number) - 3;
1594 return $number if $pos <= 1;
1596 substr($number, $pos, 0) = '_';
1605 # These routines give a uniform treatment of messages in this program. They
1606 # are placed in the Carp package to cause the stack trace to not include them,
1607 # although an alternative would be to use another package and set @CARP_NOT
1610 our $Verbose = 1 if main::DEBUG; # Useful info when debugging
1612 # This is a work-around suggested by Nicholas Clark to fix a problem with Carp
1613 # and overload trying to load Scalar:Util under miniperl. See
1614 # http://www.xray.mpe.mpg.de/mailing-lists/perl5-porters/2009-11/msg01057.html
1615 undef $overload::VERSION;
1618 my $message = shift || "";
1619 my $nofold = shift || 0;
1622 $message = main::join_lines($message);
1623 $message =~ s/^$0: *//; # Remove initial program name
1624 $message =~ s/[.;,]+$//; # Remove certain ending punctuation
1625 $message = "\n$0: $message;";
1627 # Fold the message with program name, semi-colon end punctuation
1628 # (which looks good with the message that carp appends to it), and a
1629 # hanging indent for continuation lines.
1630 $message = main::simple_fold($message, "", 4) unless $nofold;
1631 $message =~ s/\n$//; # Remove the trailing nl so what carp
1632 # appends is to the same line
1635 return $message if defined wantarray; # If a caller just wants the msg
1642 # This is called when it is clear that the problem is caused by a bug in
1645 my $message = shift;
1646 $message =~ s/^$0: *//;
1647 $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");
1652 sub carp_too_few_args {
1654 my_carp_bug("Wrong number of arguments: to 'carp_too_few_arguments'. No action taken.");
1658 my $args_ref = shift;
1661 my_carp_bug("Need at least $count arguments to "
1663 . ". Instead got: '"
1664 . join ', ', @$args_ref
1665 . "'. No action taken.");
1669 sub carp_extra_args {
1670 my $args_ref = shift;
1671 my_carp_bug("Too many arguments to 'carp_extra_args': (" . join(', ', @_) . "); Extras ignored.") if @_;
1673 unless (ref $args_ref) {
1674 my_carp_bug("Argument to 'carp_extra_args' ($args_ref) must be a ref. Not checking arguments.");
1677 my ($package, $file, $line) = caller;
1678 my $subroutine = (caller 1)[3];
1681 if (ref $args_ref eq 'HASH') {
1682 foreach my $key (keys %$args_ref) {
1683 $args_ref->{$key} = $UNDEF unless defined $args_ref->{$key};
1685 $list = join ', ', each %{$args_ref};
1687 elsif (ref $args_ref eq 'ARRAY') {
1688 foreach my $arg (@$args_ref) {
1689 $arg = $UNDEF unless defined $arg;
1691 $list = join ', ', @$args_ref;
1694 my_carp_bug("Can't cope with ref "
1696 . " . argument to 'carp_extra_args'. Not checking arguments.");
1700 my_carp_bug("Unrecognized parameters in options: '$list' to $subroutine. Skipped.");
1708 # This program uses the inside-out method for objects, as recommended in
1709 # "Perl Best Practices". This closure aids in generating those. There
1710 # are two routines. setup_package() is called once per package to set
1711 # things up, and then set_access() is called for each hash representing a
1712 # field in the object. These routines arrange for the object to be
1713 # properly destroyed when no longer used, and for standard accessor
1714 # functions to be generated. If you need more complex accessors, just
1715 # write your own and leave those accesses out of the call to set_access().
1716 # More details below.
1718 my %constructor_fields; # fields that are to be used in constructors; see
1721 # The values of this hash will be the package names as keys to other
1722 # hashes containing the name of each field in the package as keys, and
1723 # references to their respective hashes as values.
1727 # Sets up the package, creating standard DESTROY and dump methods
1728 # (unless already defined). The dump method is used in debugging by
1730 # The optional parameters are:
1731 # a) a reference to a hash, that gets populated by later
1732 # set_access() calls with one of the accesses being
1733 # 'constructor'. The caller can then refer to this, but it is
1734 # not otherwise used by these two routines.
1735 # b) a reference to a callback routine to call during destruction
1736 # of the object, before any fields are actually destroyed
1739 my $constructor_ref = delete $args{'Constructor_Fields'};
1740 my $destroy_callback = delete $args{'Destroy_Callback'};
1741 Carp::carp_extra_args(\@_) if main::DEBUG && %args;
1744 my $package = (caller)[0];
1746 $package_fields{$package} = \%fields;
1747 $constructor_fields{$package} = $constructor_ref;
1749 unless ($package->can('DESTROY')) {
1750 my $destroy_name = "${package}::DESTROY";
1753 # Use typeglob to give the anonymous subroutine the name we want
1754 *$destroy_name = sub {
1756 my $addr = do { no overloading; pack 'J', $self; };
1758 $self->$destroy_callback if $destroy_callback;
1759 foreach my $field (keys %{$package_fields{$package}}) {
1760 #print STDERR __LINE__, ": Destroying ", ref $self, " ", sprintf("%04X", $addr), ": ", $field, "\n";
1761 delete $package_fields{$package}{$field}{$addr};
1767 unless ($package->can('dump')) {
1768 my $dump_name = "${package}::dump";
1772 return dump_inside_out($self, $package_fields{$package}, @_);
1779 # Arrange for the input field to be garbage collected when no longer
1780 # needed. Also, creates standard accessor functions for the field
1781 # based on the optional parameters-- none if none of these parameters:
1782 # 'addable' creates an 'add_NAME()' accessor function.
1783 # 'readable' or 'readable_array' creates a 'NAME()' accessor
1785 # 'settable' creates a 'set_NAME()' accessor function.
1786 # 'constructor' doesn't create an accessor function, but adds the
1787 # field to the hash that was previously passed to
1789 # Any of the accesses can be abbreviated down, so that 'a', 'ad',
1790 # 'add' etc. all mean 'addable'.
1791 # The read accessor function will work on both array and scalar
1792 # values. If another accessor in the parameter list is 'a', the read
1793 # access assumes an array. You can also force it to be array access
1794 # by specifying 'readable_array' instead of 'readable'
1796 # A sort-of 'protected' access can be set-up by preceding the addable,
1797 # readable or settable with some initial portion of 'protected_' (but,
1798 # the underscore is required), like 'p_a', 'pro_set', etc. The
1799 # "protection" is only by convention. All that happens is that the
1800 # accessor functions' names begin with an underscore. So instead of
1801 # calling set_foo, the call is _set_foo. (Real protection could be
1802 # accomplished by having a new subroutine, end_package, called at the
1803 # end of each package, and then storing the __LINE__ ranges and
1804 # checking them on every accessor. But that is way overkill.)
1806 # We create anonymous subroutines as the accessors and then use
1807 # typeglobs to assign them to the proper package and name
1809 my $name = shift; # Name of the field
1810 my $field = shift; # Reference to the inside-out hash containing the
1813 my $package = (caller)[0];
1815 if (! exists $package_fields{$package}) {
1816 croak "$0: Must call 'setup_package' before 'set_access'";
1819 # Stash the field so DESTROY can get it.
1820 $package_fields{$package}{$name} = $field;
1822 # Remaining arguments are the accessors. For each...
1823 foreach my $access (@_) {
1824 my $access = lc $access;
1828 # Match the input as far as it goes.
1829 if ($access =~ /^(p[^_]*)_/) {
1831 if (substr('protected_', 0, length $protected)
1835 # Add 1 for the underscore not included in $protected
1836 $access = substr($access, length($protected) + 1);
1844 if (substr('addable', 0, length $access) eq $access) {
1845 my $subname = "${package}::${protected}add_$name";
1848 # add_ accessor. Don't add if already there, which we
1849 # determine using 'eq' for scalars and '==' otherwise.
1852 return Carp::carp_too_few_args(\@_, 2) if main::DEBUG && @_ < 2;
1855 my $addr = do { no overloading; pack 'J', $self; };
1856 Carp::carp_extra_args(\@_) if main::DEBUG && @_;
1858 return if grep { $value == $_ } @{$field->{$addr}};
1861 return if grep { $value eq $_ } @{$field->{$addr}};
1863 push @{$field->{$addr}}, $value;
1867 elsif (substr('constructor', 0, length $access) eq $access) {
1869 Carp::my_carp_bug("Can't set-up 'protected' constructors")
1872 $constructor_fields{$package}{$name} = $field;
1875 elsif (substr('readable_array', 0, length $access) eq $access) {
1877 # Here has read access. If one of the other parameters for
1878 # access is array, or this one specifies array (by being more
1879 # than just 'readable_'), then create a subroutine that
1880 # assumes the data is an array. Otherwise just a scalar
1881 my $subname = "${package}::${protected}$name";
1882 if (grep { /^a/i } @_
1883 or length($access) > length('readable_'))
1888 Carp::carp_extra_args(\@_) if main::DEBUG && @_ > 1;
1889 my $addr = do { no overloading; pack 'J', $_[0]; };
1890 if (ref $field->{$addr} ne 'ARRAY') {
1891 my $type = ref $field->{$addr};
1892 $type = 'scalar' unless $type;
1893 Carp::my_carp_bug("Trying to read $name as an array when it is a $type. Big problems.");
1896 return scalar @{$field->{$addr}} unless wantarray;
1898 # Make a copy; had problems with caller modifying the
1899 # original otherwise
1900 my @return = @{$field->{$addr}};
1906 # Here not an array value, a simpler function.
1910 Carp::carp_extra_args(\@_) if main::DEBUG && @_ > 1;
1912 return $field->{pack 'J', $_[0]};
1916 elsif (substr('settable', 0, length $access) eq $access) {
1917 my $subname = "${package}::${protected}set_$name";
1922 return Carp::carp_too_few_args(\@_, 2) if @_ < 2;
1923 Carp::carp_extra_args(\@_) if @_ > 2;
1925 # $self is $_[0]; $value is $_[1]
1927 $field->{pack 'J', $_[0]} = $_[1];
1932 Carp::my_carp_bug("Unknown accessor type $access. No accessor set.");
1941 # All input files use this object, which stores various attributes about them,
1942 # and provides for convenient, uniform handling. The run method wraps the
1943 # processing. It handles all the bookkeeping of opening, reading, and closing
1944 # the file, returning only significant input lines.
1946 # Each object gets a handler which processes the body of the file, and is
1947 # called by run(). Most should use the generic, default handler, which has
1948 # code scrubbed to handle things you might not expect. A handler should
1949 # basically be a while(next_line()) {...} loop.
1951 # You can also set up handlers to
1952 # 1) call before the first line is read for pre processing
1953 # 2) call to adjust each line of the input before the main handler gets them
1954 # 3) call upon EOF before the main handler exits its loop
1955 # 4) call at the end for post processing
1957 # $_ is used to store the input line, and is to be filtered by the
1958 # each_line_handler()s. So, if the format of the line is not in the desired
1959 # format for the main handler, these are used to do that adjusting. They can
1960 # be stacked (by enclosing them in an [ anonymous array ] in the constructor,
1961 # so the $_ output of one is used as the input to the next. None of the other
1962 # handlers are stackable, but could easily be changed to be so.
1964 # Most of the handlers can call insert_lines() or insert_adjusted_lines()
1965 # which insert the parameters as lines to be processed before the next input
1966 # file line is read. This allows the EOF handler to flush buffers, for
1967 # example. The difference between the two routines is that the lines inserted
1968 # by insert_lines() are subjected to the each_line_handler()s. (So if you
1969 # called it from such a handler, you would get infinite recursion.) Lines
1970 # inserted by insert_adjusted_lines() go directly to the main handler without
1971 # any adjustments. If the post-processing handler calls any of these, there
1972 # will be no effect. Some error checking for these conditions could be added,
1973 # but it hasn't been done.
1975 # carp_bad_line() should be called to warn of bad input lines, which clears $_
1976 # to prevent further processing of the line. This routine will output the
1977 # message as a warning once, and then keep a count of the lines that have the
1978 # same message, and output that count at the end of the file's processing.
1979 # This keeps the number of messages down to a manageable amount.
1981 # get_missings() should be called to retrieve any @missing input lines.
1982 # Messages will be raised if this isn't done if the options aren't to ignore
1985 sub trace { return main::trace(@_); }
1988 # Keep track of fields that are to be put into the constructor.
1989 my %constructor_fields;
1991 main::setup_package(Constructor_Fields => \%constructor_fields);
1993 my %file; # Input file name, required
1994 main::set_access('file', \%file, qw{ c r });
1996 my %first_released; # Unicode version file was first released in, required
1997 main::set_access('first_released', \%first_released, qw{ c r });
1999 my %handler; # Subroutine to process the input file, defaults to
2000 # 'process_generic_property_file'
2001 main::set_access('handler', \%handler, qw{ c });
2004 # name of property this file is for. defaults to none, meaning not
2005 # applicable, or is otherwise determinable, for example, from each line.
2006 main::set_access('property', \%property, qw{ c });
2009 # If this is true, the file is optional. If not present, no warning is
2010 # output. If it is present, the string given by this parameter is
2011 # evaluated, and if false the file is not processed.
2012 main::set_access('optional', \%optional, 'c', 'r');
2015 # This is used for debugging, to skip processing of all but a few input
2016 # files. Add 'non_skip => 1' to the constructor for those files you want
2017 # processed when you set the $debug_skip global.
2018 main::set_access('non_skip', \%non_skip, 'c');
2021 # This is used to skip processing of this input file semi-permanently,
2022 # when it evaluates to true. The value should be the reason the file is
2023 # being skipped. It is used for files that we aren't planning to process
2024 # anytime soon, but want to allow to be in the directory and not raise a
2025 # message that we are not handling. Mostly for test files. This is in
2026 # contrast to the non_skip element, which is supposed to be used very
2027 # temporarily for debugging. Sets 'optional' to 1. Also, files that we
2028 # pretty much will never look at can be placed in the global
2029 # %ignored_files instead. Ones used here will be added to that list.
2030 main::set_access('skip', \%skip, 'c');
2032 my %each_line_handler;
2033 # list of subroutines to look at and filter each non-comment line in the
2034 # file. defaults to none. The subroutines are called in order, each is
2035 # to adjust $_ for the next one, and the final one adjusts it for
2037 main::set_access('each_line_handler', \%each_line_handler, 'c');
2039 my %has_missings_defaults;
2040 # ? Are there lines in the file giving default values for code points
2041 # missing from it?. Defaults to NO_DEFAULTS. Otherwise NOT_IGNORED is
2042 # the norm, but IGNORED means it has such lines, but the handler doesn't
2043 # use them. Having these three states allows us to catch changes to the
2044 # UCD that this program should track
2045 main::set_access('has_missings_defaults',
2046 \%has_missings_defaults, qw{ c r });
2049 # Subroutine to call before doing anything else in the file. If undef, no
2050 # such handler is called.
2051 main::set_access('pre_handler', \%pre_handler, qw{ c });
2054 # Subroutine to call upon getting an EOF on the input file, but before
2055 # that is returned to the main handler. This is to allow buffers to be
2056 # flushed. The handler is expected to call insert_lines() or
2057 # insert_adjusted() with the buffered material
2058 main::set_access('eof_handler', \%eof_handler, qw{ c r });
2061 # Subroutine to call after all the lines of the file are read in and
2062 # processed. If undef, no such handler is called.
2063 main::set_access('post_handler', \%post_handler, qw{ c });
2065 my %progress_message;
2066 # Message to print to display progress in lieu of the standard one
2067 main::set_access('progress_message', \%progress_message, qw{ c });
2070 # cache open file handle, internal. Is undef if file hasn't been
2071 # processed at all, empty if has;
2072 main::set_access('handle', \%handle);
2075 # cache of lines added virtually to the file, internal
2076 main::set_access('added_lines', \%added_lines);
2079 # cache of errors found, internal
2080 main::set_access('errors', \%errors);
2083 # storage of '@missing' defaults lines
2084 main::set_access('missings', \%missings);
2089 my $self = bless \do{ my $anonymous_scalar }, $class;
2090 my $addr = do { no overloading; pack 'J', $self; };
2093 $handler{$addr} = \&main::process_generic_property_file;
2094 $non_skip{$addr} = 0;
2096 $has_missings_defaults{$addr} = $NO_DEFAULTS;
2097 $handle{$addr} = undef;
2098 $added_lines{$addr} = [ ];
2099 $each_line_handler{$addr} = [ ];
2100 $errors{$addr} = { };
2101 $missings{$addr} = [ ];
2103 # Two positional parameters.
2104 return Carp::carp_too_few_args(\@_, 2) if main::DEBUG && @_ < 2;
2105 $file{$addr} = main::internal_file_to_platform(shift);
2106 $first_released{$addr} = shift;
2108 # The rest of the arguments are key => value pairs
2109 # %constructor_fields has been set up earlier to list all possible
2110 # ones. Either set or push, depending on how the default has been set
2113 foreach my $key (keys %args) {
2114 my $argument = $args{$key};
2116 # Note that the fields are the lower case of the constructor keys
2117 my $hash = $constructor_fields{lc $key};
2118 if (! defined $hash) {
2119 Carp::my_carp_bug("Unrecognized parameters '$key => $argument' to new() for $self. Skipped");
2122 if (ref $hash->{$addr} eq 'ARRAY') {
2123 if (ref $argument eq 'ARRAY') {
2124 foreach my $argument (@{$argument}) {
2125 next if ! defined $argument;
2126 push @{$hash->{$addr}}, $argument;
2130 push @{$hash->{$addr}}, $argument if defined $argument;
2134 $hash->{$addr} = $argument;
2139 # If the file has a property for it, it means that the property is not
2140 # listed in the file's entries. So add a handler to the list of line
2141 # handlers to insert the property name into the lines, to provide a
2142 # uniform interface to the final processing subroutine.
2143 # the final code doesn't have to worry about that.
2144 if ($property{$addr}) {
2145 push @{$each_line_handler{$addr}}, \&_insert_property_into_line;
2148 if ($non_skip{$addr} && ! $debug_skip && $verbosity) {
2149 print "Warning: " . __PACKAGE__ . " constructor for $file{$addr} has useless 'non_skip' in it\n";
2152 # If skipping, set to optional, and add to list of ignored files,
2153 # including its reason
2155 $optional{$addr} = 1;
2156 $ignored_files{$file{$addr}} = $skip{$addr}
2165 qw("") => "_operator_stringify",
2166 "." => \&main::_operator_dot,
2169 sub _operator_stringify {
2172 return __PACKAGE__ . " object for " . $self->file;
2175 # flag to make sure extracted files are processed early
2176 my $seen_non_extracted_non_age = 0;
2179 # Process the input object $self. This opens and closes the file and
2180 # calls all the handlers for it. Currently, this can only be called
2181 # once per file, as it destroy's the EOF handler
2184 Carp::carp_extra_args(\@_) if main::DEBUG && @_;
2186 my $addr = do { no overloading; pack 'J', $self; };
2188 my $file = $file{$addr};
2190 # Don't process if not expecting this file (because released later
2191 # than this Unicode version), and isn't there. This means if someone
2192 # copies it into an earlier version's directory, we will go ahead and
2194 return if $first_released{$addr} gt $v_version && ! -e $file;
2196 # If in debugging mode and this file doesn't have the non-skip
2197 # flag set, and isn't one of the critical files, skip it.
2199 && $first_released{$addr} ne v0
2200 && ! $non_skip{$addr})
2202 print "Skipping $file in debugging\n" if $verbosity;
2206 # File could be optional
2207 if ($optional{$addr}) {
2208 return unless -e $file;
2209 my $result = eval $optional{$addr};
2210 if (! defined $result) {
2211 Carp::my_carp_bug("Got '$@' when tried to eval $optional{$addr}. $file Skipped.");
2216 print STDERR "Skipping processing input file '$file' because '$optional{$addr}' is not true\n";
2222 if (! defined $file || ! -e $file) {
2224 # If the file doesn't exist, see if have internal data for it
2225 # (based on first_released being 0).
2226 if ($first_released{$addr} eq v0) {
2227 $handle{$addr} = 'pretend_is_open';
2230 if (! $optional{$addr} # File could be optional
2231 && $v_version ge $first_released{$addr})
2233 print STDERR "Skipping processing input file '$file' because not found\n" if $v_version ge $first_released{$addr};
2240 # Here, the file exists. Some platforms may change the case of
2242 if ($seen_non_extracted_non_age) {
2243 if ($file =~ /$EXTRACTED/i) {
2244 Carp::my_carp_bug(join_lines(<<END
2245 $file should be processed just after the 'Prop...Alias' files, and before
2246 anything not in the $EXTRACTED_DIR directory. Proceeding, but the results may
2247 have subtle problems
2252 elsif ($EXTRACTED_DIR
2253 && $first_released{$addr} ne v0
2254 && $file !~ /$EXTRACTED/i
2255 && lc($file) ne 'dage.txt')
2257 # We don't set this (by the 'if' above) if we have no
2258 # extracted directory, so if running on an early version,
2259 # this test won't work. Not worth worrying about.
2260 $seen_non_extracted_non_age = 1;
2263 # And mark the file as having being processed, and warn if it
2264 # isn't a file we are expecting. As we process the files,
2265 # they are deleted from the hash, so any that remain at the
2266 # end of the program are files that we didn't process.
2267 my $fkey = File::Spec->rel2abs($file);
2268 my $expecting = delete $potential_files{$fkey};
2269 $expecting = delete $potential_files{lc($fkey)} unless defined $expecting;
2270 Carp::my_carp("Was not expecting '$file'.") if
2272 && ! defined $handle{$addr};
2274 # Having deleted from expected files, we can quit if not to do
2275 # anything. Don't print progress unless really want verbosity
2277 print "Skipping $file.\n" if $verbosity >= $VERBOSE;
2281 # Open the file, converting the slashes used in this program
2282 # into the proper form for the OS
2284 if (not open $file_handle, "<", $file) {
2285 Carp::my_carp("Can't open $file. Skipping: $!");
2288 $handle{$addr} = $file_handle; # Cache the open file handle
2291 if ($verbosity >= $PROGRESS) {
2292 if ($progress_message{$addr}) {
2293 print "$progress_message{$addr}\n";
2296 # If using a virtual file, say so.
2297 print "Processing ", (-e $file)
2299 : "substitute $file",
2305 # Call any special handler for before the file.
2306 &{$pre_handler{$addr}}($self) if $pre_handler{$addr};
2308 # Then the main handler
2309 &{$handler{$addr}}($self);
2311 # Then any special post-file handler.
2312 &{$post_handler{$addr}}($self) if $post_handler{$addr};
2314 # If any errors have been accumulated, output the counts (as the first
2315 # error message in each class was output when it was encountered).
2316 if ($errors{$addr}) {
2319 foreach my $error (keys %{$errors{$addr}}) {
2320 $total += $errors{$addr}->{$error};
2321 delete $errors{$addr}->{$error};
2326 = "A total of $total lines had errors in $file. ";
2328 $message .= ($types == 1)
2329 ? '(Only the first one was displayed.)'
2330 : '(Only the first of each type was displayed.)';
2331 Carp::my_carp($message);
2335 if (@{$missings{$addr}}) {
2336 Carp::my_carp_bug("Handler for $file didn't look at all the \@missing lines. Generated tables likely are wrong");
2339 # If a real file handle, close it.
2340 close $handle{$addr} or Carp::my_carp("Can't close $file: $!") if
2342 $handle{$addr} = ""; # Uses empty to indicate that has already seen
2343 # the file, as opposed to undef
2348 # Sets $_ to be the next logical input line, if any. Returns non-zero
2349 # if such a line exists. 'logical' means that any lines that have
2350 # been added via insert_lines() will be returned in $_ before the file
2354 Carp::carp_extra_args(\@_) if main::DEBUG && @_;
2356 my $addr = do { no overloading; pack 'J', $self; };
2358 # Here the file is open (or if the handle is not a ref, is an open
2359 # 'virtual' file). Get the next line; any inserted lines get priority
2360 # over the file itself.
2364 while (1) { # Loop until find non-comment, non-empty line
2365 #local $to_trace = 1 if main::DEBUG;
2366 my $inserted_ref = shift @{$added_lines{$addr}};
2367 if (defined $inserted_ref) {
2368 ($adjusted, $_) = @{$inserted_ref};
2369 trace $adjusted, $_ if main::DEBUG && $to_trace;
2370 return 1 if $adjusted;
2373 last if ! ref $handle{$addr}; # Don't read unless is real file
2374 last if ! defined ($_ = readline $handle{$addr});
2377 trace $_ if main::DEBUG && $to_trace;
2379 # See if this line is the comment line that defines what property
2380 # value that code points that are not listed in the file should
2381 # have. The format or existence of these lines is not guaranteed
2382 # by Unicode since they are comments, but the documentation says
2383 # that this was added for machine-readability, so probably won't
2384 # change. This works starting in Unicode Version 5.0. They look
2387 # @missing: 0000..10FFFF; Not_Reordered
2388 # @missing: 0000..10FFFF; Decomposition_Mapping; <code point>
2389 # @missing: 0000..10FFFF; ; NaN
2391 # Save the line for a later get_missings() call.
2392 if (/$missing_defaults_prefix/) {
2393 if ($has_missings_defaults{$addr} == $NO_DEFAULTS) {
2394 $self->carp_bad_line("Unexpected \@missing line. Assuming no missing entries");
2396 elsif ($has_missings_defaults{$addr} == $NOT_IGNORED) {
2397 my @defaults = split /\s* ; \s*/x, $_;
2399 # The first field is the @missing, which ends in a
2400 # semi-colon, so can safely shift.
2403 # Some of these lines may have empty field placeholders
2404 # which get in the way. An example is:
2405 # @missing: 0000..10FFFF; ; NaN
2406 # Remove them. Process starting from the top so the
2407 # splice doesn't affect things still to be looked at.
2408 for (my $i = @defaults - 1; $i >= 0; $i--) {
2409 next if $defaults[$i] ne "";
2410 splice @defaults, $i, 1;
2413 # What's left should be just the property (maybe) and the
2414 # default. Having only one element means it doesn't have
2418 if (@defaults >= 1) {
2419 if (@defaults == 1) {
2420 $default = $defaults[0];
2423 $property = $defaults[0];
2424 $default = $defaults[1];
2430 || ($default =~ /^</
2431 && $default !~ /^<code *point>$/i
2432 && $default !~ /^<none>$/i))
2434 $self->carp_bad_line("Unrecognized \@missing line: $_. Assuming no missing entries");
2438 # If the property is missing from the line, it should
2439 # be the one for the whole file
2440 $property = $property{$addr} if ! defined $property;
2442 # Change <none> to the null string, which is what it
2443 # really means. If the default is the code point
2444 # itself, set it to <code point>, which is what
2445 # Unicode uses (but sometimes they've forgotten the
2447 if ($default =~ /^<none>$/i) {
2450 elsif ($default =~ /^<code *point>$/i) {
2451 $default = $CODE_POINT;
2454 # Store them as a sub-arrays with both components.
2455 push @{$missings{$addr}}, [ $default, $property ];
2459 # There is nothing for the caller to process on this comment
2464 # Remove comments and trailing space, and skip this line if the
2470 # Call any handlers for this line, and skip further processing of
2471 # the line if the handler sets the line to null.
2472 foreach my $sub_ref (@{$each_line_handler{$addr}}) {
2477 # Here the line is ok. return success.
2479 } # End of looping through lines.
2481 # If there is an EOF handler, call it (only once) and if it generates
2482 # more lines to process go back in the loop to handle them.
2483 if ($eof_handler{$addr}) {
2484 &{$eof_handler{$addr}}($self);
2485 $eof_handler{$addr} = ""; # Currently only get one shot at it.
2486 goto LINE if $added_lines{$addr};
2489 # Return failure -- no more lines.
2494 # Not currently used, not fully tested.
2496 # # Non-destructive look-ahead one non-adjusted, non-comment, non-blank
2497 # # record. Not callable from an each_line_handler(), nor does it call
2498 # # an each_line_handler() on the line.
2501 # my $addr = do { no overloading; pack 'J', $self; };
2503 # foreach my $inserted_ref (@{$added_lines{$addr}}) {
2504 # my ($adjusted, $line) = @{$inserted_ref};
2505 # next if $adjusted;
2507 # # Remove comments and trailing space, and return a non-empty
2510 # $line =~ s/\s+$//;
2511 # return $line if $line ne "";
2514 # return if ! ref $handle{$addr}; # Don't read unless is real file
2515 # while (1) { # Loop until find non-comment, non-empty line
2516 # local $to_trace = 1 if main::DEBUG;
2517 # trace $_ if main::DEBUG && $to_trace;
2518 # return if ! defined (my $line = readline $handle{$addr});
2520 # push @{$added_lines{$addr}}, [ 0, $line ];
2523 # $line =~ s/\s+$//;
2524 # return $line if $line ne "";
2532 # Lines can be inserted so that it looks like they were in the input
2533 # file at the place it was when this routine is called. See also
2534 # insert_adjusted_lines(). Lines inserted via this routine go through
2535 # any each_line_handler()
2539 # Each inserted line is an array, with the first element being 0 to
2540 # indicate that this line hasn't been adjusted, and needs to be
2543 push @{$added_lines{pack 'J', $self}}, map { [ 0, $_ ] } @_;
2547 sub insert_adjusted_lines {
2548 # Lines can be inserted so that it looks like they were in the input
2549 # file at the place it was when this routine is called. See also
2550 # insert_lines(). Lines inserted via this routine are already fully
2551 # adjusted, ready to be processed; each_line_handler()s handlers will
2552 # not be called. This means this is not a completely general
2553 # facility, as only the last each_line_handler on the stack should
2554 # call this. It could be made more general, by passing to each of the
2555 # line_handlers their position on the stack, which they would pass on
2556 # to this routine, and that would replace the boolean first element in
2557 # the anonymous array pushed here, so that the next_line routine could
2558 # use that to call only those handlers whose index is after it on the
2559 # stack. But this is overkill for what is needed now.
2562 trace $_[0] if main::DEBUG && $to_trace;
2564 # Each inserted line is an array, with the first element being 1 to
2565 # indicate that this line has been adjusted
2567 push @{$added_lines{pack 'J', $self}}, map { [ 1, $_ ] } @_;
2572 # Returns the stored up @missings lines' values, and clears the list.
2573 # The values are in an array, consisting of the default in the first
2574 # element, and the property in the 2nd. However, since these lines
2575 # can be stacked up, the return is an array of all these arrays.
2578 Carp::carp_extra_args(\@_) if main::DEBUG && @_;
2580 my $addr = do { no overloading; pack 'J', $self; };
2582 # If not accepting a list return, just return the first one.
2583 return shift @{$missings{$addr}} unless wantarray;
2585 my @return = @{$missings{$addr}};
2586 undef @{$missings{$addr}};
2590 sub _insert_property_into_line {
2591 # Add a property field to $_, if this file requires it.
2594 my $addr = do { no overloading; pack 'J', $self; };
2595 my $property = $property{$addr};
2596 Carp::carp_extra_args(\@_) if main::DEBUG && @_;
2598 $_ =~ s/(;|$)/; $property$1/;
2603 # Output consistent error messages, using either a generic one, or the
2604 # one given by the optional parameter. To avoid gazillions of the
2605 # same message in case the syntax of a file is way off, this routine
2606 # only outputs the first instance of each message, incrementing a
2607 # count so the totals can be output at the end of the file.
2610 my $message = shift;
2611 Carp::carp_extra_args(\@_) if main::DEBUG && @_;
2613 my $addr = do { no overloading; pack 'J', $self; };
2615 $message = 'Unexpected line' unless $message;
2617 # No trailing punctuation so as to fit with our addenda.
2618 $message =~ s/[.:;,]$//;
2620 # If haven't seen this exact message before, output it now. Otherwise
2621 # increment the count of how many times it has occurred
2622 unless ($errors{$addr}->{$message}) {
2623 Carp::my_carp("$message in '$_' in "
2625 . " at line $.. Skipping this line;");
2626 $errors{$addr}->{$message} = 1;
2629 $errors{$addr}->{$message}++;
2632 # Clear the line to prevent any further (meaningful) processing of it.
2639 package Multi_Default;
2641 # Certain properties in early versions of Unicode had more than one possible
2642 # default for code points missing from the files. In these cases, one
2643 # default applies to everything left over after all the others are applied,
2644 # and for each of the others, there is a description of which class of code
2645 # points applies to it. This object helps implement this by storing the
2646 # defaults, and for all but that final default, an eval string that generates
2647 # the class that it applies to.
2652 main::setup_package();
2655 # The defaults structure for the classes
2656 main::set_access('class_defaults', \%class_defaults);
2659 # The default that applies to everything left over.
2660 main::set_access('other_default', \%other_default, 'r');
2664 # The constructor is called with default => eval pairs, terminated by
2665 # the left-over default. e.g.
2666 # Multi_Default->new(
2667 # 'T' => '$gc->table("Mn") + $gc->table("Cf") - 0x200C
2669 # 'R' => 'some other expression that evaluates to code points',
2677 my $self = bless \do{my $anonymous_scalar}, $class;
2678 my $addr = do { no overloading; pack 'J', $self; };
2681 my $default = shift;
2683 $class_defaults{$addr}->{$default} = $eval;
2686 $other_default{$addr} = shift;
2691 sub get_next_defaults {
2692 # Iterates and returns the next class of defaults.
2694 Carp::carp_extra_args(\@_) if main::DEBUG && @_;
2696 my $addr = do { no overloading; pack 'J', $self; };
2698 return each %{$class_defaults{$addr}};
2704 # An alias is one of the names that a table goes by. This class defines them
2705 # including some attributes. Everything is currently setup in the
2711 main::setup_package();
2714 main::set_access('name', \%name, 'r');
2717 # Should this name match loosely or not.
2718 main::set_access('loose_match', \%loose_match, 'r');
2720 my %make_re_pod_entry;
2721 # Some aliases should not get their own entries in the re section of the
2722 # pod, because they are covered by a wild-card, and some we want to
2723 # discourage use of. Binary
2724 main::set_access('make_re_pod_entry', \%make_re_pod_entry, 'r', 's');
2727 # Is this documented to be accessible via Unicode::UCD
2728 main::set_access('ucd', \%ucd, 'r', 's');
2731 # Aliases have a status, like deprecated, or even suppressed (which means
2732 # they don't appear in documentation). Enum
2733 main::set_access('status', \%status, 'r');
2736 # Similarly, some aliases should not be considered as usable ones for
2737 # external use, such as file names, or we don't want documentation to
2738 # recommend them. Boolean
2739 main::set_access('ok_as_filename', \%ok_as_filename, 'r');
2744 my $self = bless \do { my $anonymous_scalar }, $class;
2745 my $addr = do { no overloading; pack 'J', $self; };
2747 $name{$addr} = shift;
2748 $loose_match{$addr} = shift;
2749 $make_re_pod_entry{$addr} = shift;
2750 $ok_as_filename{$addr} = shift;
2751 $status{$addr} = shift;
2752 $ucd{$addr} = shift;
2754 Carp::carp_extra_args(\@_) if main::DEBUG && @_;
2756 # Null names are never ok externally
2757 $ok_as_filename{$addr} = 0 if $name{$addr} eq "";
2765 # A range is the basic unit for storing code points, and is described in the
2766 # comments at the beginning of the program. Each range has a starting code
2767 # point; an ending code point (not less than the starting one); a value
2768 # that applies to every code point in between the two end-points, inclusive;
2769 # and an enum type that applies to the value. The type is for the user's
2770 # convenience, and has no meaning here, except that a non-zero type is
2771 # considered to not obey the normal Unicode rules for having standard forms.
2773 # The same structure is used for both map and match tables, even though in the
2774 # latter, the value (and hence type) is irrelevant and could be used as a
2775 # comment. In map tables, the value is what all the code points in the range
2776 # map to. Type 0 values have the standardized version of the value stored as
2777 # well, so as to not have to recalculate it a lot.
2779 sub trace { return main::trace(@_); }
2783 main::setup_package();
2786 main::set_access('start', \%start, 'r', 's');
2789 main::set_access('end', \%end, 'r', 's');
2792 main::set_access('value', \%value, 'r');
2795 main::set_access('type', \%type, 'r');
2798 # The value in internal standard form. Defined only if the type is 0.
2799 main::set_access('standard_form', \%standard_form);
2801 # Note that if these fields change, the dump() method should as well
2804 return Carp::carp_too_few_args(\@_, 3) if main::DEBUG && @_ < 3;
2807 my $self = bless \do { my $anonymous_scalar }, $class;
2808 my $addr = do { no overloading; pack 'J', $self; };
2810 $start{$addr} = shift;
2811 $end{$addr} = shift;
2815 my $value = delete $args{'Value'}; # Can be 0
2816 $value = "" unless defined $value;
2817 $value{$addr} = $value;
2819 $type{$addr} = delete $args{'Type'} || 0;
2821 Carp::carp_extra_args(\%args) if main::DEBUG && %args;
2823 if (! $type{$addr}) {
2824 $standard_form{$addr} = main::standardize($value);
2832 qw("") => "_operator_stringify",
2833 "." => \&main::_operator_dot,
2836 sub _operator_stringify {
2838 my $addr = do { no overloading; pack 'J', $self; };
2840 # Output it like '0041..0065 (value)'
2841 my $return = sprintf("%04X", $start{$addr})
2843 . sprintf("%04X", $end{$addr});
2844 my $value = $value{$addr};
2845 my $type = $type{$addr};
2847 $return .= "$value";
2848 $return .= ", Type=$type" if $type != 0;
2855 # The standard form is the value itself if the standard form is
2856 # undefined (that is if the value is special)
2859 Carp::carp_extra_args(\@_) if main::DEBUG && @_;
2861 my $addr = do { no overloading; pack 'J', $self; };
2863 return $standard_form{$addr} if defined $standard_form{$addr};
2864 return $value{$addr};
2868 # Human, not machine readable. For machine readable, comment out this
2869 # entire routine and let the standard one take effect.
2872 Carp::carp_extra_args(\@_) if main::DEBUG && @_;
2874 my $addr = do { no overloading; pack 'J', $self; };
2876 my $return = $indent
2877 . sprintf("%04X", $start{$addr})
2879 . sprintf("%04X", $end{$addr})
2880 . " '$value{$addr}';";
2881 if (! defined $standard_form{$addr}) {
2882 $return .= "(type=$type{$addr})";
2884 elsif ($standard_form{$addr} ne $value{$addr}) {
2885 $return .= "(standard '$standard_form{$addr}')";
2891 package _Range_List_Base;
2893 # Base class for range lists. A range list is simply an ordered list of
2894 # ranges, so that the ranges with the lowest starting numbers are first in it.
2896 # When a new range is added that is adjacent to an existing range that has the
2897 # same value and type, it merges with it to form a larger range.
2899 # Ranges generally do not overlap, except that there can be multiple entries
2900 # of single code point ranges. This is because of NameAliases.txt.
2902 # In this program, there is a standard value such that if two different
2903 # values, have the same standard value, they are considered equivalent. This
2904 # value was chosen so that it gives correct results on Unicode data
2906 # There are a number of methods to manipulate range lists, and some operators
2907 # are overloaded to handle them.
2909 sub trace { return main::trace(@_); }
2915 main::setup_package();
2918 # The list of ranges
2919 main::set_access('ranges', \%ranges, 'readable_array');
2922 # The highest code point in the list. This was originally a method, but
2923 # actual measurements said it was used a lot.
2924 main::set_access('max', \%max, 'r');
2926 my %each_range_iterator;
2927 # Iterator position for each_range()
2928 main::set_access('each_range_iterator', \%each_range_iterator);
2931 # Name of parent this is attached to, if any. Solely for better error
2933 main::set_access('owner_name_of', \%owner_name_of, 'p_r');
2935 my %_search_ranges_cache;
2936 # A cache of the previous result from _search_ranges(), for better
2938 main::set_access('_search_ranges_cache', \%_search_ranges_cache);
2944 # Optional initialization data for the range list.
2945 my $initialize = delete $args{'Initialize'};
2949 # Use _union() to initialize. _union() returns an object of this
2950 # class, which means that it will call this constructor recursively.
2951 # But it won't have this $initialize parameter so that it won't
2952 # infinitely loop on this.
2953 return _union($class, $initialize, %args) if defined $initialize;
2955 $self = bless \do { my $anonymous_scalar }, $class;
2956 my $addr = do { no overloading; pack 'J', $self; };
2958 # Optional parent object, only for debug info.
2959 $owner_name_of{$addr} = delete $args{'Owner'};
2960 $owner_name_of{$addr} = "" if ! defined $owner_name_of{$addr};
2962 # Stringify, in case it is an object.
2963 $owner_name_of{$addr} = "$owner_name_of{$addr}";
2965 # This is used only for error messages, and so a colon is added
2966 $owner_name_of{$addr} .= ": " if $owner_name_of{$addr} ne "";
2968 Carp::carp_extra_args(\%args) if main::DEBUG && %args;
2970 # Max is initialized to a negative value that isn't adjacent to 0,
2974 $_search_ranges_cache{$addr} = 0;
2975 $ranges{$addr} = [];
2982 qw("") => "_operator_stringify",
2983 "." => \&main::_operator_dot,
2986 sub _operator_stringify {
2988 my $addr = do { no overloading; pack 'J', $self; };
2990 return "Range_List attached to '$owner_name_of{$addr}'"
2991 if $owner_name_of{$addr};
2992 return "anonymous Range_List " . \$self;
2996 # Returns the union of the input code points. It can be called as
2997 # either a constructor or a method. If called as a method, the result
2998 # will be a new() instance of the calling object, containing the union
2999 # of that object with the other parameter's code points; if called as
3000 # a constructor, the first parameter gives the class the new object
3001 # should be, and the second parameter gives the code points to go into
3003 # In either case, there are two parameters looked at by this routine;
3004 # any additional parameters are passed to the new() constructor.
3006 # The code points can come in the form of some object that contains
3007 # ranges, and has a conventionally named method to access them; or
3008 # they can be an array of individual code points (as integers); or
3009 # just a single code point.
3011 # If they are ranges, this routine doesn't make any effort to preserve
3012 # the range values of one input over the other. Therefore this base
3013 # class should not allow _union to be called from other than
3014 # initialization code, so as to prevent two tables from being added
3015 # together where the range values matter. The general form of this
3016 # routine therefore belongs in a derived class, but it was moved here
3017 # to avoid duplication of code. The failure to overload this in this
3018 # class keeps it safe.
3022 my @args; # Arguments to pass to the constructor
3026 # If a method call, will start the union with the object itself, and
3027 # the class of the new object will be the same as self.
3034 # Add the other required parameter.
3036 # Rest of parameters are passed on to the constructor
3038 # Accumulate all records from both lists.
3040 for my $arg (@args) {
3041 #local $to_trace = 0 if main::DEBUG;
3042 trace "argument = $arg" if main::DEBUG && $to_trace;
3043 if (! defined $arg) {
3045 if (defined $self) {
3047 $message .= $owner_name_of{pack 'J', $self};
3049 Carp::my_carp_bug($message .= "Undefined argument to _union. No union done.");
3052 $arg = [ $arg ] if ! ref $arg;
3053 my $type = ref $arg;
3054 if ($type eq 'ARRAY') {
3055 foreach my $element (@$arg) {
3056 push @records, Range->new($element, $element);
3059 elsif ($arg->isa('Range')) {
3060 push @records, $arg;
3062 elsif ($arg->can('ranges')) {
3063 push @records, $arg->ranges;
3067 if (defined $self) {
3069 $message .= $owner_name_of{pack 'J', $self};
3071 Carp::my_carp_bug($message . "Cannot take the union of a $type. No union done.");
3076 # Sort with the range containing the lowest ordinal first, but if
3077 # two ranges start at the same code point, sort with the bigger range
3078 # of the two first, because it takes fewer cycles.
3079 @records = sort { ($a->start <=> $b->start)
3081 # if b is shorter than a, b->end will be
3082 # less than a->end, and we want to select
3083 # a, so want to return -1
3084 ($b->end <=> $a->end)
3087 my $new = $class->new(@_);
3089 # Fold in records so long as they add new information.
3090 for my $set (@records) {
3091 my $start = $set->start;
3092 my $end = $set->end;
3093 my $value = $set->value;
3094 if ($start > $new->max) {
3095 $new->_add_delete('+', $start, $end, $value);
3097 elsif ($end > $new->max) {
3098 $new->_add_delete('+', $new->max +1, $end, $value);
3105 sub range_count { # Return the number of ranges in the range list
3107 Carp::carp_extra_args(\@_) if main::DEBUG && @_;
3110 return scalar @{$ranges{pack 'J', $self}};
3114 # Returns the minimum code point currently in the range list, or if
3115 # the range list is empty, 2 beyond the max possible. This is a
3116 # method because used so rarely, that not worth saving between calls,
3117 # and having to worry about changing it as ranges are added and
3121 Carp::carp_extra_args(\@_) if main::DEBUG && @_;
3123 my $addr = do { no overloading; pack 'J', $self; };
3125 # If the range list is empty, return a large value that isn't adjacent
3126 # to any that could be in the range list, for simpler tests
3127 return $MAX_UNICODE_CODEPOINT + 2 unless scalar @{$ranges{$addr}};
3128 return $ranges{$addr}->[0]->start;
3132 # Boolean: Is argument in the range list? If so returns $i such that:
3133 # range[$i]->end < $codepoint <= range[$i+1]->end
3134 # which is one beyond what you want; this is so that the 0th range
3135 # doesn't return false
3137 my $codepoint = shift;
3138 Carp::carp_extra_args(\@_) if main::DEBUG && @_;
3140 my $i = $self->_search_ranges($codepoint);
3141 return 0 unless defined $i;
3143 # The search returns $i, such that
3144 # range[$i-1]->end < $codepoint <= range[$i]->end
3145 # So is in the table if and only iff it is at least the start position
3148 return 0 if $ranges{pack 'J', $self}->[$i]->start > $codepoint;
3152 sub containing_range {
3153 # Returns the range object that contains the code point, undef if none
3156 my $codepoint = shift;
3157 Carp::carp_extra_args(\@_) if main::DEBUG && @_;
3159 my $i = $self->contains($codepoint);
3162 # contains() returns 1 beyond where we should look
3164 return $ranges{pack 'J', $self}->[$i-1];
3168 # Returns the value associated with the code point, undef if none
3171 my $codepoint = shift;
3172 Carp::carp_extra_args(\@_) if main::DEBUG && @_;
3174 my $range = $self->containing_range($codepoint);
3175 return unless defined $range;
3177 return $range->value;
3181 # Returns the type of the range containing the code point, undef if
3182 # the code point is not in the table
3185 my $codepoint = shift;
3186 Carp::carp_extra_args(\@_) if main::DEBUG && @_;
3188 my $range = $self->containing_range($codepoint);
3189 return unless defined $range;
3191 return $range->type;
3194 sub _search_ranges {
3195 # Find the range in the list which contains a code point, or where it
3196 # should go if were to add it. That is, it returns $i, such that:
3197 # range[$i-1]->end < $codepoint <= range[$i]->end
3198 # Returns undef if no such $i is possible (e.g. at end of table), or
3199 # if there is an error.
3202 my $code_point = shift;
3203 Carp::carp_extra_args(\@_) if main::DEBUG && @_;
3205 my $addr = do { no overloading; pack 'J', $self; };
3207 return if $code_point > $max{$addr};
3208 my $r = $ranges{$addr}; # The current list of ranges
3209 my $range_list_size = scalar @$r;
3212 use integer; # want integer division
3214 # Use the cached result as the starting guess for this one, because,
3215 # an experiment on 5.1 showed that 90% of the time the cache was the
3216 # same as the result on the next call (and 7% it was one less).
3217 $i = $_search_ranges_cache{$addr};
3218 $i = 0 if $i >= $range_list_size; # Reset if no longer valid (prob.
3219 # from an intervening deletion
3220 #local $to_trace = 1 if main::DEBUG;
3221 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);
3222 return $i if $code_point <= $r->[$i]->end
3223 && ($i == 0 || $r->[$i-1]->end < $code_point);
3225 # Here the cache doesn't yield the correct $i. Try adding 1.
3226 if ($i < $range_list_size - 1
3227 && $r->[$i]->end < $code_point &&
3228 $code_point <= $r->[$i+1]->end)
3231 trace "next \$i is correct: $i" if main::DEBUG && $to_trace;
3232 $_search_ranges_cache{$addr} = $i;
3236 # Here, adding 1 also didn't work. We do a binary search to
3237 # find the correct position, starting with current $i
3239 my $upper = $range_list_size - 1;
3241 trace "top of loop i=$i:", sprintf("%04X", $r->[$lower]->start), "[$lower] .. ", sprintf("%04X", $r->[$i]->start), "[$i] .. ", sprintf("%04X", $r->[$upper]->start), "[$upper]" if main::DEBUG && $to_trace;
3243 if ($code_point <= $r->[$i]->end) {
3245 # Here we have met the upper constraint. We can quit if we
3246 # also meet the lower one.
3247 last if $i == 0 || $r->[$i-1]->end < $code_point;
3249 $upper = $i; # Still too high.
3254 # Here, $r[$i]->end < $code_point, so look higher up.
3258 # Split search domain in half to try again.
3259 my $temp = ($upper + $lower) / 2;
3261 # No point in continuing unless $i changes for next time
3265 # We can't reach the highest element because of the averaging.
3266 # So if one below the upper edge, force it there and try one
3268 if ($i == $range_list_size - 2) {
3270 trace "Forcing to upper edge" if main::DEBUG && $to_trace;
3271 $i = $range_list_size - 1;
3273 # Change $lower as well so if fails next time through,
3274 # taking the average will yield the same $i, and we will
3275 # quit with the error message just below.
3279 Carp::my_carp_bug("$owner_name_of{$addr}Can't find where the range ought to go. No action taken.");
3283 } # End of while loop
3285 if (main::DEBUG && $to_trace) {
3286 trace 'i-1=[', $i-1, ']', $r->[$i-1] if $i;
3287 trace "i= [ $i ]", $r->[$i];
3288 trace 'i+1=[', $i+1, ']', $r->[$i+1] if $i < $range_list_size - 1;
3291 # Here we have found the offset. Cache it as a starting point for the
3293 $_search_ranges_cache{$addr} = $i;
3298 # Add, replace or delete ranges to or from a list. The $type
3299 # parameter gives which:
3300 # '+' => insert or replace a range, returning a list of any changed
3302 # '-' => delete a range, returning a list of any deleted ranges.
3304 # The next three parameters give respectively the start, end, and
3305 # value associated with the range. 'value' should be null unless the
3308 # The range list is kept sorted so that the range with the lowest
3309 # starting position is first in the list, and generally, adjacent
3310 # ranges with the same values are merged into a single larger one (see
3311 # exceptions below).
3313 # There are more parameters; all are key => value pairs:
3314 # Type gives the type of the value. It is only valid for '+'.
3315 # All ranges have types; if this parameter is omitted, 0 is
3316 # assumed. Ranges with type 0 are assumed to obey the
3317 # Unicode rules for casing, etc; ranges with other types are
3318 # not. Otherwise, the type is arbitrary, for the caller's
3319 # convenience, and looked at only by this routine to keep
3320 # adjacent ranges of different types from being merged into
3321 # a single larger range, and when Replace =>
3322 # $IF_NOT_EQUIVALENT is specified (see just below).
3323 # Replace determines what to do if the range list already contains
3324 # ranges which coincide with all or portions of the input
3325 # range. It is only valid for '+':
3326 # => $NO means that the new value is not to replace
3327 # any existing ones, but any empty gaps of the
3328 # range list coinciding with the input range
3329 # will be filled in with the new value.
3330 # => $UNCONDITIONALLY means to replace the existing values with
3331 # this one unconditionally. However, if the
3332 # new and old values are identical, the
3333 # replacement is skipped to save cycles
3334 # => $IF_NOT_EQUIVALENT means to replace the existing values
3335 # with this one if they are not equivalent.
3336 # Ranges are equivalent if their types are the
3337 # same, and they are the same string; or if
3338 # both are type 0 ranges, if their Unicode
3339 # standard forms are identical. In this last
3340 # case, the routine chooses the more "modern"
3341 # one to use. This is because some of the
3342 # older files are formatted with values that
3343 # are, for example, ALL CAPs, whereas the
3344 # derived files have a more modern style,
3345 # which looks better. By looking for this
3346 # style when the pre-existing and replacement
3347 # standard forms are the same, we can move to
3349 # => $MULTIPLE means that if this range duplicates an
3350 # existing one, but has a different value,
3351 # don't replace the existing one, but insert
3352 # this, one so that the same range can occur
3353 # multiple times. They are stored LIFO, so
3354 # that the final one inserted is the first one
3355 # returned in an ordered search of the table.
3356 # => anything else is the same as => $IF_NOT_EQUIVALENT
3358 # "same value" means identical for non-type-0 ranges, and it means
3359 # having the same standard forms for type-0 ranges.
3361 return Carp::carp_too_few_args(\@_, 5) if main::DEBUG && @_ < 5;
3364 my $operation = shift; # '+' for add/replace; '-' for delete;
3371 $value = "" if not defined $value; # warning: $value can be "0"
3373 my $replace = delete $args{'Replace'};
3374 $replace = $IF_NOT_EQUIVALENT unless defined $replace;
3376 my $type = delete $args{'Type'};
3377 $type = 0 unless defined $type;
3379 Carp::carp_extra_args(\%args) if main::DEBUG && %args;
3381 my $addr = do { no overloading; pack 'J', $self; };
3383 if ($operation ne '+' && $operation ne '-') {
3384 Carp::my_carp_bug("$owner_name_of{$addr}First parameter to _add_delete must be '+' or '-'. No action taken.");
3387 unless (defined $start && defined $end) {
3388 Carp::my_carp_bug("$owner_name_of{$addr}Undefined start and/or end to _add_delete. No action taken.");
3391 unless ($end >= $start) {
3392 Carp::my_carp_bug("$owner_name_of{$addr}End of range (" . sprintf("%04X", $end) . ") must not be before start (" . sprintf("%04X", $start) . "). No action taken.");
3395 #local $to_trace = 1 if main::DEBUG;
3397 if ($operation eq '-') {
3398 if ($replace != $IF_NOT_EQUIVALENT) {
3399 Carp::my_carp_bug("$owner_name_of{$addr}Replace => \$IF_NOT_EQUIVALENT is required when deleting a range from a range list. Assuming Replace => \$IF_NOT_EQUIVALENT.");
3400 $replace = $IF_NOT_EQUIVALENT;
3403 Carp::my_carp_bug("$owner_name_of{$addr}Type => 0 is required when deleting a range from a range list. Assuming Type => 0.");
3407 Carp::my_carp_bug("$owner_name_of{$addr}Value => \"\" is required when deleting a range from a range list. Assuming Value => \"\".");
3412 my $r = $ranges{$addr}; # The current list of ranges
3413 my $range_list_size = scalar @$r; # And its size
3414 my $max = $max{$addr}; # The current high code point in
3415 # the list of ranges
3417 # Do a special case requiring fewer machine cycles when the new range
3418 # starts after the current highest point. The Unicode input data is
3419 # structured so this is common.
3420 if ($start > $max) {
3422 trace "$owner_name_of{$addr} $operation", sprintf("%04X", $start) . '..' . sprintf("%04X", $end) . " ($value) type=$type" if main::DEBUG && $to_trace;
3423 return if $operation eq '-'; # Deleting a non-existing range is a
3426 # If the new range doesn't logically extend the current final one
3427 # in the range list, create a new range at the end of the range
3428 # list. (max cleverly is initialized to a negative number not
3429 # adjacent to 0 if the range list is empty, so even adding a range
3430 # to an empty range list starting at 0 will have this 'if'
3432 if ($start > $max + 1 # non-adjacent means can't extend.
3433 || @{$r}[-1]->value ne $value # values differ, can't extend.
3434 || @{$r}[-1]->type != $type # types differ, can't extend.
3436 push @$r, Range->new($start, $end,
3442 # Here, the new range starts just after the current highest in
3443 # the range list, and they have the same type and value.
3444 # Extend the current range to incorporate the new one.
3445 @{$r}[-1]->set_end($end);
3448 # This becomes the new maximum.
3453 #local $to_trace = 0 if main::DEBUG;
3455 trace "$owner_name_of{$addr} $operation", sprintf("%04X", $start) . '..' . sprintf("%04X", $end) . " ($value) replace=$replace" if main::DEBUG && $to_trace;
3457 # Here, the input range isn't after the whole rest of the range list.
3458 # Most likely 'splice' will be needed. The rest of the routine finds
3459 # the needed splice parameters, and if necessary, does the splice.
3460 # First, find the offset parameter needed by the splice function for
3461 # the input range. Note that the input range may span multiple
3462 # existing ones, but we'll worry about that later. For now, just find
3463 # the beginning. If the input range is to be inserted starting in a
3464 # position not currently in the range list, it must (obviously) come
3465 # just after the range below it, and just before the range above it.
3466 # Slightly less obviously, it will occupy the position currently
3467 # occupied by the range that is to come after it. More formally, we
3468 # are looking for the position, $i, in the array of ranges, such that:
3470 # r[$i-1]->start <= r[$i-1]->end < $start < r[$i]->start <= r[$i]->end
3472 # (The ordered relationships within existing ranges are also shown in
3473 # the equation above). However, if the start of the input range is
3474 # within an existing range, the splice offset should point to that
3475 # existing range's position in the list; that is $i satisfies a
3476 # somewhat different equation, namely:
3478 #r[$i-1]->start <= r[$i-1]->end < r[$i]->start <= $start <= r[$i]->end
3480 # More briefly, $start can come before or after r[$i]->start, and at
3481 # this point, we don't know which it will be. However, these
3482 # two equations share these constraints:
3484 # r[$i-1]->end < $start <= r[$i]->end
3486 # And that is good enough to find $i.
3488 my $i = $self->_search_ranges($start);
3490 Carp::my_carp_bug("Searching $self for range beginning with $start unexpectedly returned undefined. Operation '$operation' not performed");
3494 # The search function returns $i such that:
3496 # r[$i-1]->end < $start <= r[$i]->end
3498 # That means that $i points to the first range in the range list
3499 # that could possibly be affected by this operation. We still don't
3500 # know if the start of the input range is within r[$i], or if it
3501 # points to empty space between r[$i-1] and r[$i].
3502 trace "[$i] is the beginning splice point. Existing range there is ", $r->[$i] if main::DEBUG && $to_trace;
3504 # Special case the insertion of data that is not to replace any
3506 if ($replace == $NO) { # If $NO, has to be operation '+'
3507 #local $to_trace = 1 if main::DEBUG;
3508 trace "Doesn't replace" if main::DEBUG && $to_trace;
3510 # Here, the new range is to take effect only on those code points
3511 # that aren't already in an existing range. This can be done by
3512 # looking through the existing range list and finding the gaps in
3513 # the ranges that this new range affects, and then calling this
3514 # function recursively on each of those gaps, leaving untouched
3515 # anything already in the list. Gather up a list of the changed
3516 # gaps first so that changes to the internal state as new ranges
3517 # are added won't be a problem.
3520 # First, if the starting point of the input range is outside an
3521 # existing one, there is a gap from there to the beginning of the
3522 # existing range -- add a span to fill the part that this new
3524 if ($start < $r->[$i]->start) {
3525 push @gap_list, Range->new($start,
3527 $r->[$i]->start - 1),
3529 trace "gap before $r->[$i] [$i], will add", $gap_list[-1] if main::DEBUG && $to_trace;
3532 # Then look through the range list for other gaps until we reach
3533 # the highest range affected by the input one.
3535 for ($j = $i+1; $j < $range_list_size; $j++) {
3536 trace "j=[$j]", $r->[$j] if main::DEBUG && $to_trace;
3537 last if $end < $r->[$j]->start;
3539 # If there is a gap between when this range starts and the
3540 # previous one ends, add a span to fill it. Note that just
3541 # because there are two ranges doesn't mean there is a
3542 # non-zero gap between them. It could be that they have
3543 # different values or types
3544 if ($r->[$j-1]->end + 1 != $r->[$j]->start) {
3546 Range->new($r->[$j-1]->end + 1,
3547 $r->[$j]->start - 1,
3549 trace "gap between $r->[$j-1] and $r->[$j] [$j], will add: $gap_list[-1]" if main::DEBUG && $to_trace;
3553 # Here, we have either found an existing range in the range list,
3554 # beyond the area affected by the input one, or we fell off the
3555 # end of the loop because the input range affects the whole rest
3556 # of the range list. In either case, $j is 1 higher than the
3557 # highest affected range. If $j == $i, it means that there are no
3558 # affected ranges, that the entire insertion is in the gap between
3559 # r[$i-1], and r[$i], which we already have taken care of before
3561 # On the other hand, if there are affected ranges, it might be
3562 # that there is a gap that needs filling after the final such
3563 # range to the end of the input range
3564 if ($r->[$j-1]->end < $end) {
3565 push @gap_list, Range->new(main::max($start,
3566 $r->[$j-1]->end + 1),
3569 trace "gap after $r->[$j-1], will add $gap_list[-1]" if main::DEBUG && $to_trace;
3572 # Call recursively to fill in all the gaps.
3573 foreach my $gap (@gap_list) {
3574 $self->_add_delete($operation,
3584 # Here, we have taken care of the case where $replace is $NO.
3585 # Remember that here, r[$i-1]->end < $start <= r[$i]->end
3586 # If inserting a multiple record, this is where it goes, before the
3587 # first (if any) existing one. This implies an insertion, and no
3588 # change to any existing ranges. Note that $i can be -1 if this new
3589 # range doesn't actually duplicate any existing, and comes at the
3590 # beginning of the list.
3591 if ($replace == $MULTIPLE) {
3593 if ($start != $end) {
3594 Carp::my_carp_bug("$owner_name_of{$addr}Can't cope with adding a multiple record when the range ($start..$end) contains more than one code point. No action taken.");
3598 # Don't add an exact duplicate, as it isn't really a multiple
3599 if ($end >= $r->[$i]->start) {
3600 my $existing_value = $r->[$i]->value;
3601 my $existing_type = $r->[$i]->type;
3602 return if $value eq $existing_value && $type eq $existing_type;
3604 # If the multiple value is part of an existing range, we want
3605 # to split up that range, so that only the single code point
3606 # is affected. To do this, we first call ourselves
3607 # recursively to delete that code point from the table, having
3608 # preserved its current data above. Then we call ourselves
3609 # recursively again to add the new multiple, which we know by
3610 # the test just above is different than the current code
3611 # point's value, so it will become a range containing a single
3612 # code point: just itself. Finally, we add back in the
3613 # pre-existing code point, which will again be a single code
3614 # point range. Because 'i' likely will have changed as a
3615 # result of these operations, we can't just continue on, but
3616 # do this operation recursively as well.
3617 if ($r->[$i]->start != $r->[$i]->end) {
3618 $self->_add_delete('-', $start, $end, "");
3619 $self->_add_delete('+', $start, $end, $value, Type => $type);
3620 return $self->_add_delete('+', $start, $end, $existing_value, Type => $existing_type, Replace => $MULTIPLE);
3624 trace "Adding multiple record at $i with $start..$end, $value" if main::DEBUG && $to_trace;
3625 my @return = splice @$r,
3632 if (main::DEBUG && $to_trace) {
3633 trace "After splice:";
3634 trace 'i-2=[', $i-2, ']', $r->[$i-2] if $i >= 2;
3635 trace 'i-1=[', $i-1, ']', $r->[$i-1] if $i >= 1;
3636 trace "i =[", $i, "]", $r->[$i] if $i >= 0;
3637 trace 'i+1=[', $i+1, ']', $r->[$i+1] if $i < @$r - 1;
3638 trace 'i+2=[', $i+2, ']', $r->[$i+2] if $i < @$r - 2;
3639 trace 'i+3=[', $i+3, ']', $r->[$i+3] if $i < @$r - 3;
3644 # Here, we have taken care of $NO and $MULTIPLE replaces. This leaves
3645 # delete, insert, and replace either unconditionally or if not
3646 # equivalent. $i still points to the first potential affected range.
3647 # Now find the highest range affected, which will determine the length
3648 # parameter to splice. (The input range can span multiple existing
3649 # ones.) If this isn't a deletion, while we are looking through the
3650 # range list, see also if this is a replacement rather than a clean
3651 # insertion; that is if it will change the values of at least one
3652 # existing range. Start off assuming it is an insert, until find it
3654 my $clean_insert = $operation eq '+';
3655 my $j; # This will point to the highest affected range
3657 # For non-zero types, the standard form is the value itself;
3658 my $standard_form = ($type) ? $value : main::standardize($value);
3660 for ($j = $i; $j < $range_list_size; $j++) {
3661 trace "Looking for highest affected range; the one at $j is ", $r->[$j] if main::DEBUG && $to_trace;
3663 # If find a range that it doesn't overlap into, we can stop
3665 last if $end < $r->[$j]->start;
3667 # Here, overlaps the range at $j. If the values don't match,
3668 # and so far we think this is a clean insertion, it becomes a
3669 # non-clean insertion, i.e., a 'change' or 'replace' instead.
3670 if ($clean_insert) {
3671 if ($r->[$j]->standard_form ne $standard_form) {
3673 if ($replace == $CROAK) {
3674 main::croak("The range to add "
3675 . sprintf("%04X", $start)
3677 . sprintf("%04X", $end)
3678 . " with value '$value' overlaps an existing range $r->[$j]");
3683 # Here, the two values are essentially the same. If the
3684 # two are actually identical, replacing wouldn't change
3685 # anything so skip it.
3686 my $pre_existing = $r->[$j]->value;
3687 if ($pre_existing ne $value) {
3689 # Here the new and old standardized values are the
3690 # same, but the non-standardized values aren't. If
3691 # replacing unconditionally, then replace
3692 if( $replace == $UNCONDITIONALLY) {
3697 # Here, are replacing conditionally. Decide to
3698 # replace or not based on which appears to look
3699 # the "nicest". If one is mixed case and the
3700 # other isn't, choose the mixed case one.
3701 my $new_mixed = $value =~ /[A-Z]/
3702 && $value =~ /[a-z]/;
3703 my $old_mixed = $pre_existing =~ /[A-Z]/
3704 && $pre_existing =~ /[a-z]/;
3706 if ($old_mixed != $new_mixed) {
3707 $clean_insert = 0 if $new_mixed;
3708 if (main::DEBUG && $to_trace) {
3709 if ($clean_insert) {
3710 trace "Retaining $pre_existing over $value";
3713 trace "Replacing $pre_existing with $value";
3719 # Here casing wasn't different between the two.
3720 # If one has hyphens or underscores and the
3721 # other doesn't, choose the one with the
3723 my $new_punct = $value =~ /[-_]/;
3724 my $old_punct = $pre_existing =~ /[-_]/;
3726 if ($old_punct != $new_punct) {
3727 $clean_insert = 0 if $new_punct;
3728 if (main::DEBUG && $to_trace) {
3729 if ($clean_insert) {
3730 trace "Retaining $pre_existing over $value";
3733 trace "Replacing $pre_existing with $value";
3736 } # else existing one is just as "good";
3737 # retain it to save cycles.
3743 } # End of loop looking for highest affected range.
3745 # Here, $j points to one beyond the highest range that this insertion
3746 # affects (hence to beyond the range list if that range is the final
3747 # one in the range list).
3749 # The splice length is all the affected ranges. Get it before
3750 # subtracting, for efficiency, so we don't have to later add 1.
3751 my $length = $j - $i;
3753 $j--; # $j now points to the highest affected range.
3754 trace "Final affected range is $j: $r->[$j]" if main::DEBUG && $to_trace;
3756 # Here, have taken care of $NO and $MULTIPLE replaces.
3757 # $j points to the highest affected range. But it can be < $i or even
3758 # -1. These happen only if the insertion is entirely in the gap
3759 # between r[$i-1] and r[$i]. Here's why: j < i means that the j loop
3760 # above exited first time through with $end < $r->[$i]->start. (And
3761 # then we subtracted one from j) This implies also that $start <
3762 # $r->[$i]->start, but we know from above that $r->[$i-1]->end <
3763 # $start, so the entire input range is in the gap.
3766 # Here the entire input range is in the gap before $i.
3768 if (main::DEBUG && $to_trace) {
3770 trace "Entire range is between $r->[$i-1] and $r->[$i]";
3773 trace "Entire range is before $r->[$i]";
3776 return if $operation ne '+'; # Deletion of a non-existent range is
3781 # Here part of the input range is not in the gap before $i. Thus,
3782 # there is at least one affected one, and $j points to the highest
3785 # At this point, here is the situation:
3786 # This is not an insertion of a multiple, nor of tentative ($NO)
3788 # $i points to the first element in the current range list that
3789 # may be affected by this operation. In fact, we know
3790 # that the range at $i is affected because we are in
3791 # the else branch of this 'if'
3792 # $j points to the highest affected range.
3794 # r[$i-1]->end < $start <= r[$i]->end
3796 # r[$i-1]->end < $start <= $end <= r[$j]->end
3799 # $clean_insert is a boolean which is set true if and only if
3800 # this is a "clean insertion", i.e., not a change nor a
3801 # deletion (multiple was handled above).
3803 # We now have enough information to decide if this call is a no-op
3804 # or not. It is a no-op if this is an insertion of already
3807 if (main::DEBUG && $to_trace && $clean_insert
3809 && $start >= $r->[$i]->start)
3813 return if $clean_insert
3814 && $i == $j # more than one affected range => not no-op
3816 # Here, r[$i-1]->end < $start <= $end <= r[$i]->end
3817 # Further, $start and/or $end is >= r[$i]->start
3818 # The test below hence guarantees that
3819 # r[$i]->start < $start <= $end <= r[$i]->end
3820 # This means the input range is contained entirely in
3821 # the one at $i, so is a no-op
3822 && $start >= $r->[$i]->start;
3825 # Here, we know that some action will have to be taken. We have
3826 # calculated the offset and length (though adjustments may be needed)
3827 # for the splice. Now start constructing the replacement list.
3829 my $splice_start = $i;
3834 # See if should extend any adjacent ranges.
3835 if ($operation eq '-') { # Don't extend deletions
3836 $extends_below = $extends_above = 0;
3838 else { # Here, should extend any adjacent ranges. See if there are
3840 $extends_below = ($i > 0
3841 # can't extend unless adjacent
3842 && $r->[$i-1]->end == $start -1
3843 # can't extend unless are same standard value
3844 && $r->[$i-1]->standard_form eq $standard_form
3845 # can't extend unless share type
3846 && $r->[$i-1]->type == $type);
3847 $extends_above = ($j+1 < $range_list_size
3848 && $r->[$j+1]->start == $end +1
3849 && $r->[$j+1]->standard_form eq $standard_form
3850 && $r->[$j+1]->type == $type);
3852 if ($extends_below && $extends_above) { # Adds to both
3853 $splice_start--; # start replace at element below
3854 $length += 2; # will replace on both sides
3855 trace "Extends both below and above ranges" if main::DEBUG && $to_trace;
3857 # The result will fill in any gap, replacing both sides, and
3858 # create one large range.
3859 @replacement = Range->new($r->[$i-1]->start,
3866 # Here we know that the result won't just be the conglomeration of
3867 # a new range with both its adjacent neighbors. But it could
3868 # extend one of them.
3870 if ($extends_below) {
3872 # Here the new element adds to the one below, but not to the
3873 # one above. If inserting, and only to that one range, can
3874 # just change its ending to include the new one.
3875 if ($length == 0 && $clean_insert) {
3876 $r->[$i-1]->set_end($end);
3877 trace "inserted range extends range to below so it is now $r->[$i-1]" if main::DEBUG && $to_trace;
3881 trace "Changing inserted range to start at ", sprintf("%04X", $r->[$i-1]->start), " instead of ", sprintf("%04X", $start) if main::DEBUG && $to_trace;
3882 $splice_start--; # start replace at element below
3883 $length++; # will replace the element below
3884 $start = $r->[$i-1]->start;
3887 elsif ($extends_above) {
3889 # Here the new element adds to the one above, but not below.
3890 # Mirror the code above
3891 if ($length == 0 && $clean_insert) {
3892 $r->[$j+1]->set_start($start);
3893 trace "inserted range extends range to above so it is now $r->[$j+1]" if main::DEBUG && $to_trace;
3897 trace "Changing inserted range to end at ", sprintf("%04X", $r->[$j+1]->end), " instead of ", sprintf("%04X", $end) if main::DEBUG && $to_trace;
3898 $length++; # will replace the element above
3899 $end = $r->[$j+1]->end;
3903 trace "Range at $i is $r->[$i]" if main::DEBUG && $to_trace;
3905 # Finally, here we know there will have to be a splice.
3906 # If the change or delete affects only the highest portion of the
3907 # first affected range, the range will have to be split. The
3908 # splice will remove the whole range, but will replace it by a new
3909 # range containing just the unaffected part. So, in this case,
3910 # add to the replacement list just this unaffected portion.
3911 if (! $extends_below
3912 && $start > $r->[$i]->start && $start <= $r->[$i]->end)
3915 Range->new($r->[$i]->start,
3917 Value => $r->[$i]->value,
3918 Type => $r->[$i]->type);
3921 # In the case of an insert or change, but not a delete, we have to
3922 # put in the new stuff; this comes next.
3923 if ($operation eq '+') {
3924 push @replacement, Range->new($start,
3930 trace "Range at $j is $r->[$j]" if main::DEBUG && $to_trace && $j != $i;
3931 #trace "$end >=", $r->[$j]->start, " && $end <", $r->[$j]->end if main::DEBUG && $to_trace;
3933 # And finally, if we're changing or deleting only a portion of the
3934 # highest affected range, it must be split, as the lowest one was.
3935 if (! $extends_above
3936 && $j >= 0 # Remember that j can be -1 if before first
3938 && $end >= $r->[$j]->start
3939 && $end < $r->[$j]->end)
3942 Range->new($end + 1,
3944 Value => $r->[$j]->value,
3945 Type => $r->[$j]->type);
3949 # And do the splice, as calculated above
3950 if (main::DEBUG && $to_trace) {
3951 trace "replacing $length element(s) at $i with ";
3952 foreach my $replacement (@replacement) {
3953 trace " $replacement";
3955 trace "Before splice:";
3956 trace 'i-2=[', $i-2, ']', $r->[$i-2] if $i >= 2;
3957 trace 'i-1=[', $i-1, ']', $r->[$i-1] if $i >= 1;
3958 trace "i =[", $i, "]", $r->[$i];
3959 trace 'i+1=[', $i+1, ']', $r->[$i+1] if $i < @$r - 1;
3960 trace 'i+2=[', $i+2, ']', $r->[$i+2] if $i < @$r - 2;
3963 my @return = splice @$r, $splice_start, $length, @replacement;
3965 if (main::DEBUG && $to_trace) {
3966 trace "After splice:";
3967 trace 'i-2=[', $i-2, ']', $r->[$i-2] if $i >= 2;