# frozen_string_literal: true require "active_support/json" require "active_support/core_ext/string/access" require "active_support/core_ext/string/behavior" require "active_support/core_ext/symbol/starts_ends_with" require "active_support/core_ext/module/delegation" module ActiveSupport #:nodoc: module Multibyte #:nodoc: # Chars enables you to work transparently with UTF-8 encoding in the Ruby # String class without having extensive knowledge about the encoding. A # Chars object accepts a string upon initialization and proxies String # methods in an encoding safe manner. All the normal String methods are also # implemented on the proxy. # # String methods are proxied through the Chars object, and can be accessed # through the +mb_chars+ method. Methods which would normally return a # String object now return a Chars object so methods can be chained. # # 'The Perfect String '.mb_chars.downcase.strip # # => # # # Chars objects are perfectly interchangeable with String objects as long as # no explicit class checks are made. If certain methods do explicitly check # the class, call +to_s+ before you pass chars objects to them. # # bad.explicit_checking_method 'T'.mb_chars.downcase.to_s # # The default Chars implementation assumes that the encoding of the string # is UTF-8, if you want to handle different encodings you can write your own # multibyte string handler and configure it through # ActiveSupport::Multibyte.proxy_class. # # class CharsForUTF32 # def size # @wrapped_string.size / 4 # end # # def self.accepts?(string) # string.length % 4 == 0 # end # end # # ActiveSupport::Multibyte.proxy_class = CharsForUTF32 class Chars include Comparable attr_reader :wrapped_string alias to_s wrapped_string alias to_str wrapped_string delegate :<=>, :=~, :match?, :acts_like_string?, to: :wrapped_string # Creates a new Chars instance by wrapping _string_. def initialize(string) @wrapped_string = string @wrapped_string.force_encoding(Encoding::UTF_8) unless @wrapped_string.frozen? end # Forward all undefined methods to the wrapped string. def method_missing(method, *args, &block) result = @wrapped_string.__send__(method, *args, &block) if method.end_with?("!") self if result else result.kind_of?(String) ? chars(result) : result end end # Returns +true+ if _obj_ responds to the given method. Private methods # are included in the search only if the optional second parameter # evaluates to +true+. def respond_to_missing?(method, include_private) @wrapped_string.respond_to?(method, include_private) end # Returns +true+ when the proxy class can handle the string. Returns # +false+ otherwise. def self.consumes?(string) ActiveSupport::Deprecation.warn(<<-MSG.squish) ActiveSupport::Multibyte::Chars.consumes? is deprecated and will be removed from Rails 6.1. Use string.is_utf8? instead. MSG string.encoding == Encoding::UTF_8 end # Works just like String#split, with the exception that the items # in the resulting list are Chars instances instead of String. This makes # chaining methods easier. # # 'Café périferôl'.mb_chars.split(/é/).map { |part| part.upcase.to_s } # => ["CAF", " P", "RIFERÔL"] def split(*args) @wrapped_string.split(*args).map { |i| self.class.new(i) } end # Works like String#slice!, but returns an instance of # Chars, or +nil+ if the string was not modified. The string will not be # modified if the range given is out of bounds # # string = 'Welcome' # string.mb_chars.slice!(3) # => # # string # => 'Welome' # string.mb_chars.slice!(0..3) # => # # string # => 'me' def slice!(*args) string_sliced = @wrapped_string.slice!(*args) if string_sliced chars(string_sliced) end end # Reverses all characters in the string. # # 'Café'.mb_chars.reverse.to_s # => 'éfaC' def reverse chars(@wrapped_string.scan(/\X/).reverse.join) end # Limits the byte size of the string to a number of bytes without breaking # characters. Usable when the storage for a string is limited for some # reason. # # 'こんにちは'.mb_chars.limit(7).to_s # => "こん" def limit(limit) chars(@wrapped_string.truncate_bytes(limit, omission: nil)) end # Capitalizes the first letter of every word, when possible. # # "ÉL QUE SE ENTERÓ".mb_chars.titleize.to_s # => "Él Que Se Enteró" # "日本語".mb_chars.titleize.to_s # => "日本語" def titleize chars(downcase.to_s.gsub(/\b('?\S)/u) { $1.upcase }) end alias_method :titlecase, :titleize # Returns the KC normalization of the string by default. NFKC is # considered the best normalization form for passing strings to databases # and validations. # # * form - The form you want to normalize in. Should be one of the following: # :c, :kc, :d, or :kd. Default is # ActiveSupport::Multibyte::Unicode.default_normalization_form def normalize(form = nil) form ||= Unicode.default_normalization_form # See https://www.unicode.org/reports/tr15, Table 1 if alias_form = Unicode::NORMALIZATION_FORM_ALIASES[form] ActiveSupport::Deprecation.warn(<<-MSG.squish) ActiveSupport::Multibyte::Chars#normalize is deprecated and will be removed from Rails 6.1. Use #unicode_normalize(:#{alias_form}) instead. MSG send(:unicode_normalize, alias_form) else ActiveSupport::Deprecation.warn(<<-MSG.squish) ActiveSupport::Multibyte::Chars#normalize is deprecated and will be removed from Rails 6.1. Use #unicode_normalize instead. MSG raise ArgumentError, "#{form} is not a valid normalization variant", caller end end # Performs canonical decomposition on all the characters. # # 'é'.length # => 2 # 'é'.mb_chars.decompose.to_s.length # => 3 def decompose chars(Unicode.decompose(:canonical, @wrapped_string.codepoints.to_a).pack("U*")) end # Performs composition on all the characters. # # 'é'.length # => 3 # 'é'.mb_chars.compose.to_s.length # => 2 def compose chars(Unicode.compose(@wrapped_string.codepoints.to_a).pack("U*")) end # Returns the number of grapheme clusters in the string. # # 'क्षि'.mb_chars.length # => 4 # 'क्षि'.mb_chars.grapheme_length # => 3 def grapheme_length @wrapped_string.scan(/\X/).length end # Replaces all ISO-8859-1 or CP1252 characters by their UTF-8 equivalent # resulting in a valid UTF-8 string. # # Passing +true+ will forcibly tidy all bytes, assuming that the string's # encoding is entirely CP1252 or ISO-8859-1. def tidy_bytes(force = false) chars(Unicode.tidy_bytes(@wrapped_string, force)) end def as_json(options = nil) #:nodoc: to_s.as_json(options) end %w(reverse tidy_bytes).each do |method| define_method("#{method}!") do |*args| @wrapped_string = send(method, *args).to_s self end end private def chars(string) self.class.new(string) end end end end