doc.go 5.3 KB

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  1. /*
  2. Package uniseg implements Unicode Text Segmentation, Unicode Line Breaking, and
  3. string width calculation for monospace fonts. Unicode Text Segmentation conforms
  4. to Unicode Standard Annex #29 (https://unicode.org/reports/tr29/) and Unicode
  5. Line Breaking conforms to Unicode Standard Annex #14
  6. (https://unicode.org/reports/tr14/).
  7. In short, using this package, you can split a string into grapheme clusters
  8. (what people would usually refer to as a "character"), into words, and into
  9. sentences. Or, in its simplest case, this package allows you to count the number
  10. of characters in a string, especially when it contains complex characters such
  11. as emojis, combining characters, or characters from Asian, Arabic, Hebrew, or
  12. other languages. Additionally, you can use it to implement line breaking (or
  13. "word wrapping"), that is, to determine where text can be broken over to the
  14. next line when the width of the line is not big enough to fit the entire text.
  15. Finally, you can use it to calculate the display width of a string for monospace
  16. fonts.
  17. # Getting Started
  18. If you just want to count the number of characters in a string, you can use
  19. [GraphemeClusterCount]. If you want to determine the display width of a string,
  20. you can use [StringWidth]. If you want to iterate over a string, you can use
  21. [Step], [StepString], or the [Graphemes] class (more convenient but less
  22. performant). This will provide you with all information: grapheme clusters,
  23. word boundaries, sentence boundaries, line breaks, and monospace character
  24. widths. The specialized functions [FirstGraphemeCluster],
  25. [FirstGraphemeClusterInString], [FirstWord], [FirstWordInString],
  26. [FirstSentence], and [FirstSentenceInString] can be used if only one type of
  27. information is needed.
  28. # Grapheme Clusters
  29. Consider the rainbow flag emoji: 🏳️‍🌈. On most modern systems, it appears as one
  30. character. But its string representation actually has 14 bytes, so counting
  31. bytes (or using len("🏳️‍🌈")) will not work as expected. Counting runes won't,
  32. either: The flag has 4 Unicode code points, thus 4 runes. The stdlib function
  33. utf8.RuneCountInString("🏳️‍🌈") and len([]rune("🏳️‍🌈")) will both return 4.
  34. The [GraphemeClusterCount] function will return 1 for the rainbow flag emoji.
  35. The Graphemes class and a variety of functions in this package will allow you to
  36. split strings into its grapheme clusters.
  37. # Word Boundaries
  38. Word boundaries are used in a number of different contexts. The most familiar
  39. ones are selection (double-click mouse selection), cursor movement ("move to
  40. next word" control-arrow keys), and the dialog option "Whole Word Search" for
  41. search and replace. This package provides methods for determining word
  42. boundaries.
  43. # Sentence Boundaries
  44. Sentence boundaries are often used for triple-click or some other method of
  45. selecting or iterating through blocks of text that are larger than single words.
  46. They are also used to determine whether words occur within the same sentence in
  47. database queries. This package provides methods for determining sentence
  48. boundaries.
  49. # Line Breaking
  50. Line breaking, also known as word wrapping, is the process of breaking a section
  51. of text into lines such that it will fit in the available width of a page,
  52. window or other display area. This package provides methods to determine the
  53. positions in a string where a line must be broken, may be broken, or must not be
  54. broken.
  55. # Monospace Width
  56. Monospace width, as referred to in this package, is the width of a string in a
  57. monospace font. This is commonly used in terminal user interfaces or text
  58. displays or editors that don't support proportional fonts. A width of 1
  59. corresponds to a single character cell. The C function [wcswidth()] and its
  60. implementation in other programming languages is in widespread use for the same
  61. purpose. However, there is no standard for the calculation of such widths, and
  62. this package differs from wcswidth() in a number of ways, presumably to generate
  63. more visually pleasing results.
  64. To start, we assume that every code point has a width of 1, with the following
  65. exceptions:
  66. - Code points with grapheme cluster break properties Control, CR, LF, Extend,
  67. and ZWJ have a width of 0.
  68. - U+2E3A, Two-Em Dash, has a width of 3.
  69. - U+2E3B, Three-Em Dash, has a width of 4.
  70. - Characters with the East-Asian Width properties "Fullwidth" (F) and "Wide"
  71. (W) have a width of 2. (Properties "Ambiguous" (A) and "Neutral" (N) both
  72. have a width of 1.)
  73. - Code points with grapheme cluster break property Regional Indicator have a
  74. width of 2.
  75. - Code points with grapheme cluster break property Extended Pictographic have
  76. a width of 2, unless their Emoji Presentation flag is "No", in which case
  77. the width is 1.
  78. For Hangul grapheme clusters composed of conjoining Jamo and for Regional
  79. Indicators (flags), all code points except the first one have a width of 0. For
  80. grapheme clusters starting with an Extended Pictographic, any additional code
  81. point will force a total width of 2, except if the Variation Selector-15
  82. (U+FE0E) is included, in which case the total width is always 1. Grapheme
  83. clusters ending with Variation Selector-16 (U+FE0F) have a width of 2.
  84. Note that whether these widths appear correct depends on your application's
  85. render engine, to which extent it conforms to the Unicode Standard, and its
  86. choice of font.
  87. [wcswidth()]: https://man7.org/linux/man-pages/man3/wcswidth.3.html
  88. */
  89. package uniseg