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137 lines
5.5 KiB
Ruby
137 lines
5.5 KiB
Ruby
require 'active_support/multibyte/handlers/utf8_handler'
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require 'active_support/multibyte/handlers/passthru_handler'
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# Encapsulates all the functionality related to the Chars proxy.
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module ActiveSupport::Multibyte #:nodoc:
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# Chars enables you to work transparently with multibyte encodings in the Ruby String class without having extensive
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# knowledge about the encoding. A Chars object accepts a string upon initialization and proxies String methods in an
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# encoding safe manner. All the normal String methods are also implemented on the proxy.
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#
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# String methods are proxied through the Chars object, and can be accessed through the +chars+ method. Methods
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# which would normally return a String object now return a Chars object so methods can be chained.
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#
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# "The Perfect String ".chars.downcase.strip.normalize # => "the perfect string"
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#
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# Chars objects are perfectly interchangeable with String objects as long as no explicit class checks are made.
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# If certain methods do explicitly check the class, call +to_s+ before you pass chars objects to them.
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#
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# bad.explicit_checking_method "T".chars.downcase.to_s
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#
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# The actual operations on the string are delegated to handlers. Theoretically handlers can be implemented for
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# any encoding, but the default handler handles UTF-8. This handler is set during initialization, if you want to
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# use you own handler, you can set it on the Chars class. Look at the UTF8Handler source for an example how to
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# implement your own handler. If you your own handler to work on anything but UTF-8 you probably also
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# want to override Chars#handler.
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#
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# ActiveSupport::Multibyte::Chars.handler = MyHandler
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#
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# Note that a few methods are defined on Chars instead of the handler because they are defined on Object or Kernel
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# and method_missing can't catch them.
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class Chars
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attr_reader :string # The contained string
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alias_method :to_s, :string
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include Comparable
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# The magic method to make String and Chars comparable
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def to_str
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# Using any other ways of overriding the String itself will lead you all the way from infinite loops to
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# core dumps. Don't go there.
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@string
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end
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# Make duck-typing with String possible
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def respond_to?(method, include_priv = false)
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super || @string.respond_to?(method, include_priv) ||
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handler.respond_to?(method, include_priv) ||
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(method.to_s =~ /(.*)!/ && handler.respond_to?($1, include_priv)) ||
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false
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end
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# Create a new Chars instance.
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def initialize(str)
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@string = str.respond_to?(:string) ? str.string : str
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end
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# Returns -1, 0 or +1 depending on whether the Chars object is to be sorted before, equal or after the
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# object on the right side of the operation. It accepts any object that implements +to_s+. See String.<=>
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# for more details.
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def <=>(other); @string <=> other.to_s; end
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# Works just like String#split, with the exception that the items in the resulting list are Chars
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# instances instead of String. This makes chaining methods easier.
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def split(*args)
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@string.split(*args).map { |i| i.chars }
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end
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# Gsub works exactly the same as gsub on a normal string.
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def gsub(*a, &b); @string.gsub(*a, &b).chars; end
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# Like String.=~ only it returns the character offset (in codepoints) instead of the byte offset.
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def =~(other)
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handler.translate_offset(@string, @string =~ other)
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end
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# Try to forward all undefined methods to the handler, when a method is not defined on the handler, send it to
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# the contained string. Method_missing is also responsible for making the bang! methods destructive.
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def method_missing(m, *a, &b)
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begin
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# Simulate methods with a ! at the end because we can't touch the enclosed string from the handlers.
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if m.to_s =~ /^(.*)\!$/ && handler.respond_to?($1)
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result = handler.send($1, @string, *a, &b)
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if result == @string
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result = nil
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else
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@string.replace result
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end
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elsif handler.respond_to?(m)
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result = handler.send(m, @string, *a, &b)
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else
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result = @string.send(m, *a, &b)
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end
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rescue Handlers::EncodingError
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@string.replace handler.tidy_bytes(@string)
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retry
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end
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if result.kind_of?(String)
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result.chars
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else
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result
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end
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end
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# Set the handler class for the Char objects.
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def self.handler=(klass)
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@@handler = klass
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end
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# Returns the proper handler for the contained string depending on $KCODE and the encoding of the string. This
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# method is used internally to always redirect messages to the proper classes depending on the context.
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def handler
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if utf8_pragma?
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@@handler
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else
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ActiveSupport::Multibyte::Handlers::PassthruHandler
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end
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end
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private
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# +utf8_pragma+ checks if it can send this string to the handlers. It makes sure @string isn't nil and $KCODE is
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# set to 'UTF8'.
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def utf8_pragma?
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!@string.nil? && ($KCODE == 'UTF8')
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end
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end
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end
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# When we can load the utf8proc library, override normalization with the faster methods
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begin
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require 'utf8proc_native'
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require 'active_support/multibyte/handlers/utf8_handler_proc'
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ActiveSupport::Multibyte::Chars.handler = ActiveSupport::Multibyte::Handlers::UTF8HandlerProc
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rescue LoadError
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ActiveSupport::Multibyte::Chars.handler = ActiveSupport::Multibyte::Handlers::UTF8Handler
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end
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