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It is not very user friendly to list functions as "Functions found in file FOO". Better is to group them by purpose, as many were already. I went through and placed the ones that weren't already so grouped into groups. Patches welcome if you have a better classification. I changed the headings of some so that the important disctinction was the first word so that they are placed in the file more appropriately. And a couple of ones that I had created myself, I came up with a name that I think is better than the original
669 lines
30 KiB
C
669 lines
30 KiB
C
/* utf8.h
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*
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* This file contains definitions for use with the UTF-8 encoding. It
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* actually also works with the variant UTF-8 encoding called UTF-EBCDIC, and
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* hides almost all of the differences between these from the caller. In other
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* words, someone should #include this file, and if the code is being compiled
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* on an EBCDIC platform, things should mostly just work.
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*
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* Copyright (C) 2000, 2001, 2002, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2009,
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* 2010, 2011 by Larry Wall and others
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*
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* You may distribute under the terms of either the GNU General Public
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* License or the Artistic License, as specified in the README file.
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*
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*/
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#ifndef H_UTF8 /* Guard against recursive inclusion */
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#define H_UTF8 1
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/* Use UTF-8 as the default script encoding?
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* Turning this on will break scripts having non-UTF-8 binary
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* data (such as Latin-1) in string literals. */
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#ifdef USE_UTF8_SCRIPTS
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# define USE_UTF8_IN_NAMES (!IN_BYTES)
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#else
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# define USE_UTF8_IN_NAMES (PL_hints & HINT_UTF8)
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#endif
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#include "regcharclass.h"
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#include "unicode_constants.h"
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/* For to_utf8_fold_flags, q.v. */
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#define FOLD_FLAGS_LOCALE 0x1
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#define FOLD_FLAGS_FULL 0x2
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#define FOLD_FLAGS_NOMIX_ASCII 0x4
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/* For _core_swash_init(), internal core use only */
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#define _CORE_SWASH_INIT_USER_DEFINED_PROPERTY 0x1
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#define _CORE_SWASH_INIT_RETURN_IF_UNDEF 0x2
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#define _CORE_SWASH_INIT_ACCEPT_INVLIST 0x4
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#define uvchr_to_utf8(a,b) uvchr_to_utf8_flags(a,b,0)
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#define uvchr_to_utf8_flags(d,uv,flags) \
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uvoffuni_to_utf8_flags(d,NATIVE_TO_UNI(uv),flags)
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#define utf8_to_uvchr_buf(s, e, lenp) \
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utf8n_to_uvchr(s, (U8*)(e) - (U8*)(s), lenp, \
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ckWARN_d(WARN_UTF8) ? 0 : UTF8_ALLOW_ANY)
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#define to_uni_fold(c, p, lenp) _to_uni_fold_flags(c, p, lenp, FOLD_FLAGS_FULL)
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#define to_utf8_fold(c, p, lenp) _to_utf8_fold_flags(c, p, lenp, FOLD_FLAGS_FULL)
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#define to_utf8_lower(a,b,c) _to_utf8_lower_flags(a,b,c,0)
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#define to_utf8_upper(a,b,c) _to_utf8_upper_flags(a,b,c,0)
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#define to_utf8_title(a,b,c) _to_utf8_title_flags(a,b,c,0)
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/* Source backward compatibility. */
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#define is_utf8_string_loc(s, len, ep) is_utf8_string_loclen(s, len, ep, 0)
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#define foldEQ_utf8(s1, pe1, l1, u1, s2, pe2, l2, u2) \
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foldEQ_utf8_flags(s1, pe1, l1, u1, s2, pe2, l2, u2, 0)
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#define FOLDEQ_UTF8_NOMIX_ASCII (1 << 0)
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#define FOLDEQ_LOCALE (1 << 1)
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#define FOLDEQ_S1_ALREADY_FOLDED (1 << 2)
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#define FOLDEQ_S2_ALREADY_FOLDED (1 << 3)
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#define ibcmp_utf8(s1, pe1, l1, u1, s2, pe2, l2, u2) \
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cBOOL(! foldEQ_utf8(s1, pe1, l1, u1, s2, pe2, l2, u2))
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#ifdef EBCDIC
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/* The equivalent of these macros but implementing UTF-EBCDIC
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are in the following header file:
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*/
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#include "utfebcdic.h"
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#else /* ! EBCDIC */
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START_EXTERN_C
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#ifdef DOINIT
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EXTCONST unsigned char PL_utf8skip[] = {
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/* 0x00 */ 1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1, /* ascii */
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/* 0x10 */ 1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1, /* ascii */
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/* 0x20 */ 1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1, /* ascii */
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/* 0x30 */ 1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1, /* ascii */
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/* 0x40 */ 1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1, /* ascii */
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/* 0x50 */ 1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1, /* ascii */
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/* 0x60 */ 1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1, /* ascii */
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/* 0x70 */ 1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1, /* ascii */
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/* 0x80 */ 1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1, /* bogus: continuation byte */
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/* 0x90 */ 1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1, /* bogus: continuation byte */
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/* 0xA0 */ 1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1, /* bogus: continuation byte */
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/* 0xB0 */ 1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1, /* bogus: continuation byte */
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/* 0xC0 */ 2,2, /* overlong */
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/* 0xC2 */ 2,2,2,2,2,2,2,2,2,2,2,2,2,2, /* U+0080 to U+03FF */
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/* 0xD0 */ 2,2,2,2,2,2,2,2,2,2,2,2,2,2,2,2, /* U+0400 to U+07FF */
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/* 0xE0 */ 3,3,3,3,3,3,3,3,3,3,3,3,3,3,3,3, /* U+0800 to U+FFFF */
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/* 0xF0 */ 4,4,4,4,4,4,4,4,5,5,5,5,6,6, /* above BMP to 2**31 - 1 */
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/* 0xFE */ 7,13, /* Perl extended (never was official UTF-8). Up to 72bit
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allowed (64-bit + reserved). */
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};
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#else
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EXTCONST unsigned char PL_utf8skip[];
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#endif
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END_EXTERN_C
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/* Native character to/from iso-8859-1. Are the identity functions on ASCII
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* platforms */
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#define NATIVE_TO_LATIN1(ch) (ch)
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#define LATIN1_TO_NATIVE(ch) (ch)
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/* I8 is an intermediate version of UTF-8 used only in UTF-EBCDIC. We thus
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* consider it to be identical to UTF-8 on ASCII platforms. Strictly speaking
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* UTF-8 and UTF-EBCDIC are two different things, but we often conflate them
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* because they are 8-bit encodings that serve the same purpose in Perl, and
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* rarely do we need to distinguish them. The term "NATIVE_UTF8" applies to
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* whichever one is applicable on the current platform */
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#define NATIVE_UTF8_TO_I8(ch) (ch)
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#define I8_TO_NATIVE_UTF8(ch) (ch)
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/* Transforms in wide UV chars */
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#define UNI_TO_NATIVE(ch) (ch)
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#define NATIVE_TO_UNI(ch) (ch)
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/*
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The following table is from Unicode 3.2.
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Code Points 1st Byte 2nd Byte 3rd Byte 4th Byte
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U+0000..U+007F 00..7F
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U+0080..U+07FF * C2..DF 80..BF
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U+0800..U+0FFF E0 * A0..BF 80..BF
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U+1000..U+CFFF E1..EC 80..BF 80..BF
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U+D000..U+D7FF ED 80..9F 80..BF
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U+D800..U+DFFF ED A0..BF 80..BF (surrogates)
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U+E000..U+FFFF EE..EF 80..BF 80..BF
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U+10000..U+3FFFF F0 * 90..BF 80..BF 80..BF
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U+40000..U+FFFFF F1..F3 80..BF 80..BF 80..BF
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U+100000..U+10FFFF F4 80..8F 80..BF 80..BF
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Below are non-Unicode code points
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U+110000..U+13FFFF F4 90..BF 80..BF 80..BF
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U+110000..U+1FFFFF F5..F7 80..BF 80..BF 80..BF
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U+200000..: F8.. * 88..BF 80..BF 80..BF 80..BF
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Note the gaps before several of the byte entries above marked by '*'. These are
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caused by legal UTF-8 avoiding non-shortest encodings: it is technically
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possible to UTF-8-encode a single code point in different ways, but that is
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explicitly forbidden, and the shortest possible encoding should always be used
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(and that is what Perl does). The non-shortest ones are called 'overlongs'.
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*/
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/*
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Another way to look at it, as bits:
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Code Points 1st Byte 2nd Byte 3rd Byte 4th Byte
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0aaa aaaa 0aaa aaaa
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0000 0bbb bbaa aaaa 110b bbbb 10aa aaaa
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cccc bbbb bbaa aaaa 1110 cccc 10bb bbbb 10aa aaaa
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00 000d ddcc cccc bbbb bbaa aaaa 1111 0ddd 10cc cccc 10bb bbbb 10aa aaaa
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As you can see, the continuation bytes all begin with C<10>, and the
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leading bits of the start byte tell how many bytes there are in the
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encoded character.
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Perl's extended UTF-8 means we can have start bytes up to FF.
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*/
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/* Is the representation of the Unicode code point 'c' the same regardless of
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* being encoded in UTF-8 or not? */
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#define UNI_IS_INVARIANT(c) (((UV)c) < 0x80)
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/* Is the UTF8-encoded byte 'c' part of a variant sequence in UTF-8? This is
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* the inverse of UTF8_IS_INVARIANT */
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#define UTF8_IS_CONTINUED(c) (((U8)c) & 0x80)
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/* Is the byte 'c' the first byte of a multi-byte UTF8-8 encoded sequence?
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* This doesn't catch invariants (they are single-byte). It also excludes the
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* illegal overlong sequences that begin with C0 and C1. */
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#define UTF8_IS_START(c) (((U8)c) >= 0xc2)
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/* Is the byte 'c' part of a multi-byte UTF8-8 encoded sequence, and not the
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* first byte thereof? */
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#define UTF8_IS_CONTINUATION(c) ((((U8)c) & 0xC0) == 0x80)
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/* Is the UTF8-encoded byte 'c' the first byte of a two byte sequence? Use
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* UTF8_IS_NEXT_CHAR_DOWNGRADEABLE() instead if the input isn't known to
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* be well-formed. Masking with 0xfe allows the low bit to be 0 or 1; thus
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* this matches 0xc[23]. */
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#define UTF8_IS_DOWNGRADEABLE_START(c) (((U8)(c) & 0xfe) == 0xc2)
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/* Is the UTF8-encoded byte 'c' the first byte of a sequence of bytes that
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* represent a code point > 255? */
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#define UTF8_IS_ABOVE_LATIN1(c) ((U8)(c) >= 0xc4)
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/* This defines the 1-bits that are to be in the first byte of a multi-byte
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* UTF-8 encoded character that give the number of bytes that comprise the
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* character. 'len' is the number of bytes in the multi-byte sequence. */
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#define UTF_START_MARK(len) (((len) > 7) ? 0xFF : (0xFF & (0xFE << (7-(len)))))
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/* Masks out the initial one bits in a start byte, leaving the real data ones.
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* Doesn't work on an invariant byte. 'len' is the number of bytes in the
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* multi-byte sequence that comprises the character. */
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#define UTF_START_MASK(len) (((len) >= 7) ? 0x00 : (0x1F >> ((len)-2)))
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/* This defines the bits that are to be in the continuation bytes of a multi-byte
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* UTF-8 encoded character that indicate it is a continuation byte. */
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#define UTF_CONTINUATION_MARK 0x80
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/* This is the number of low-order bits a continuation byte in a UTF-8 encoded
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* sequence contributes to the specification of the code point. In the bit
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* maps above, you see that the first 2 bits are a constant '10', leaving 6 of
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* real information */
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#define UTF_ACCUMULATION_SHIFT 6
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/* 2**UTF_ACCUMULATION_SHIFT - 1 */
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#define UTF_CONTINUATION_MASK ((U8)0x3f)
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/* If a value is anded with this, and the result is non-zero, then using the
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* original value in UTF8_ACCUMULATE will overflow, shifting bits off the left
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* */
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#define UTF_ACCUMULATION_OVERFLOW_MASK \
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(((UV) UTF_CONTINUATION_MASK) << ((sizeof(UV) * CHARBITS) \
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- UTF_ACCUMULATION_SHIFT))
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#if UVSIZE >= 8
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# define UTF8_QUAD_MAX UINT64_C(0x1000000000)
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/* Input is a true Unicode (not-native) code point */
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#define OFFUNISKIP(uv) ( (uv) < 0x80 ? 1 : \
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(uv) < 0x800 ? 2 : \
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(uv) < 0x10000 ? 3 : \
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(uv) < 0x200000 ? 4 : \
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(uv) < 0x4000000 ? 5 : \
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(uv) < 0x80000000 ? 6 : \
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(uv) < UTF8_QUAD_MAX ? 7 : 13 )
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#else
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/* No, I'm not even going to *TRY* putting #ifdef inside a #define */
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#define OFFUNISKIP(uv) ( (uv) < 0x80 ? 1 : \
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(uv) < 0x800 ? 2 : \
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(uv) < 0x10000 ? 3 : \
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(uv) < 0x200000 ? 4 : \
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(uv) < 0x4000000 ? 5 : \
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(uv) < 0x80000000 ? 6 : 7 )
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#endif
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/* How wide can a single UTF-8 encoded character become in bytes. */
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/* NOTE: Strictly speaking Perl's UTF-8 should not be called UTF-8 since UTF-8
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* is an encoding of Unicode, and Unicode's upper limit, 0x10FFFF, can be
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* expressed with 4 bytes. However, Perl thinks of UTF-8 as a way to encode
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* non-negative integers in a binary format, even those above Unicode */
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#define UTF8_MAXBYTES 13
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/* The maximum number of UTF-8 bytes a single Unicode character can
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* uppercase/lowercase/fold into. Unicode guarantees that the maximum
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* expansion is 3 characters. On ASCIIish platforms, the highest Unicode
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* character occupies 4 bytes, therefore this number would be 12, but this is
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* smaller than the maximum width a single above-Unicode character can occupy,
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* so use that instead */
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#if UTF8_MAXBYTES < 12
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#error UTF8_MAXBYTES must be at least 12
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#endif
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/* ^? is defined to be DEL on ASCII systems. See the definition of toCTRL()
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* for more */
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#define QUESTION_MARK_CTRL DEL_NATIVE
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#define MAX_UTF8_TWO_BYTE 0x7FF
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#define UTF8_MAXBYTES_CASE UTF8_MAXBYTES
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#endif /* EBCDIC vs ASCII */
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/* Rest of these are attributes of Unicode and perl's internals rather than the
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* encoding, or happen to be the same in both ASCII and EBCDIC (at least at
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* this level; the macros that some of these call may have different
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* definitions in the two encodings */
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/* In domain restricted to ASCII, these may make more sense to the reader than
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* the ones with Latin1 in the name */
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#define NATIVE_TO_ASCII(ch) NATIVE_TO_LATIN1(ch)
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#define ASCII_TO_NATIVE(ch) LATIN1_TO_NATIVE(ch)
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/* More or less misleadingly-named defines, retained for back compat */
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#define NATIVE_TO_UTF(ch) NATIVE_UTF8_TO_I8(ch)
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#define NATIVE_TO_I8(ch) NATIVE_UTF8_TO_I8(ch)
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#define UTF_TO_NATIVE(ch) I8_TO_NATIVE_UTF8(ch)
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#define I8_TO_NATIVE(ch) I8_TO_NATIVE_UTF8(ch)
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#define NATIVE8_TO_UNI(ch) NATIVE_TO_LATIN1(ch)
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/* Adds a UTF8 continuation byte 'new' of information to a running total code
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* point 'old' of all the continuation bytes so far. This is designed to be
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* used in a loop to convert from UTF-8 to the code point represented. Note
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* that this is asymmetric on EBCDIC platforms, in that the 'new' parameter is
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* the UTF-EBCDIC byte, whereas the 'old' parameter is a Unicode (not EBCDIC)
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* code point in process of being generated */
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#define UTF8_ACCUMULATE(old, new) (((old) << UTF_ACCUMULATION_SHIFT) \
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| ((NATIVE_UTF8_TO_I8((U8)new)) \
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& UTF_CONTINUATION_MASK))
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/* This works in the face of malformed UTF-8. */
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#define UTF8_IS_NEXT_CHAR_DOWNGRADEABLE(s, e) (UTF8_IS_DOWNGRADEABLE_START(*s) \
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&& ( (e) - (s) > 1) \
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&& UTF8_IS_CONTINUATION(*((s)+1)))
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/* Number of bytes a code point occupies in UTF-8. */
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#define NATIVE_SKIP(uv) OFFUNISKIP(NATIVE_TO_UNI(uv))
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/* Most code which says UNISKIP is really thinking in terms of native code
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* points (0-255) plus all those beyond. This is an imprecise term, but having
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* it means existing code continues to work. For precision, use NATIVE_SKIP
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* and OFFUNISKIP */
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#define UNISKIP(uv) NATIVE_SKIP(uv)
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/* Convert a two (not one) byte utf8 character to a native code point value.
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* Needs just one iteration of accumulate. Should not be used unless it is
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* known that the two bytes are legal: 1) two-byte start, and 2) continuation.
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* Note that the result can be larger than 255 if the input character is not
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* downgradable */
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#define TWO_BYTE_UTF8_TO_NATIVE(HI, LO) \
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UNI_TO_NATIVE(UTF8_ACCUMULATE((NATIVE_UTF8_TO_I8(HI) & UTF_START_MASK(2)), \
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(LO)))
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/* Should never be used, and be deprecated */
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#define TWO_BYTE_UTF8_TO_UNI(HI, LO) NATIVE_TO_UNI(TWO_BYTE_UTF8_TO_NATIVE(HI, LO))
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/* How many bytes in the UTF-8 encoded character whose first (perhaps only)
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* byte is pointed to by 's' */
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#define UTF8SKIP(s) PL_utf8skip[*(const U8*)(s)]
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/* Is the byte 'c' the same character when encoded in UTF-8 as when not. This
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* works on both UTF-8 encoded strings and non-encoded, as it returns TRUE in
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* each for the exact same set of bit patterns. (And it works on any byte in a
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* UTF-8 encoded string) */
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#define UTF8_IS_INVARIANT(c) UNI_IS_INVARIANT(NATIVE_UTF8_TO_I8(c))
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/* Like the above, but its name implies a non-UTF8 input, and is implemented
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* differently (for no particular reason) */
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#define NATIVE_BYTE_IS_INVARIANT(c) UNI_IS_INVARIANT(NATIVE_TO_LATIN1(c))
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/* Like the above, but accepts any UV as input */
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#define UVCHR_IS_INVARIANT(uv) UNI_IS_INVARIANT(NATIVE_TO_UNI(uv))
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#define MAX_PORTABLE_UTF8_TWO_BYTE 0x3FF /* constrained by EBCDIC */
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/* The macros in the next 4 sets are used to generate the two utf8 or utfebcdic
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* bytes from an ordinal that is known to fit into exactly two (not one) bytes;
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* it must be less than 0x3FF to work across both encodings. */
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/* These two are helper macros for the other three sets, and should not be used
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* directly anywhere else. 'translate_function' is either NATIVE_TO_LATIN1
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* (which works for code points up to 0xFF) or NATIVE_TO_UNI which works for any
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* code point */
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#define __BASE_TWO_BYTE_HI(c, translate_function) \
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I8_TO_NATIVE_UTF8((translate_function(c) >> UTF_ACCUMULATION_SHIFT) \
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| UTF_START_MARK(2))
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#define __BASE_TWO_BYTE_LO(c, translate_function) \
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I8_TO_NATIVE_UTF8((translate_function(c) & UTF_CONTINUATION_MASK) \
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|
| UTF_CONTINUATION_MARK)
|
|
|
|
/* The next two macros should not be used. They were designed to be usable as
|
|
* the case label of a switch statement, but this doesn't work for EBCDIC. Use
|
|
* regen/unicode_constants.pl instead */
|
|
#define UTF8_TWO_BYTE_HI_nocast(c) __BASE_TWO_BYTE_HI(c, NATIVE_TO_UNI)
|
|
#define UTF8_TWO_BYTE_LO_nocast(c) __BASE_TWO_BYTE_LO(c, NATIVE_TO_UNI)
|
|
|
|
/* The next two macros are used when the source should be a single byte
|
|
* character; checked for under DEBUGGING */
|
|
#define UTF8_EIGHT_BIT_HI(c) (__ASSERT_(FITS_IN_8_BITS(c)) \
|
|
((U8) __BASE_TWO_BYTE_HI(c, NATIVE_TO_LATIN1)))
|
|
#define UTF8_EIGHT_BIT_LO(c) (__ASSERT_(FITS_IN_8_BITS(c)) \
|
|
((U8) __BASE_TWO_BYTE_LO(c, NATIVE_TO_LATIN1)))
|
|
|
|
/* These final two macros in the series are used when the source can be any
|
|
* code point whose UTF-8 is known to occupy 2 bytes; they are less efficient
|
|
* than the EIGHT_BIT versions on EBCDIC platforms. We use the logical '~'
|
|
* operator instead of "<=" to avoid getting compiler warnings.
|
|
* MAX_PORTABLE_UTF8_TWO_BYTE should be exactly all one bits in the lower few
|
|
* places, so the ~ works */
|
|
#define UTF8_TWO_BYTE_HI(c) \
|
|
(__ASSERT_((sizeof(c) == 1) \
|
|
|| !(((WIDEST_UTYPE)(c)) & ~MAX_PORTABLE_UTF8_TWO_BYTE)) \
|
|
((U8) __BASE_TWO_BYTE_HI(c, NATIVE_TO_LATIN1)))
|
|
#define UTF8_TWO_BYTE_LO(c) \
|
|
(__ASSERT_((sizeof(c) == 1) \
|
|
|| !(((WIDEST_UTYPE)(c)) & ~MAX_PORTABLE_UTF8_TWO_BYTE)) \
|
|
((U8) __BASE_TWO_BYTE_LO(c, NATIVE_TO_LATIN1)))
|
|
|
|
/* This is illegal in any well-formed UTF-8 in both EBCDIC and ASCII
|
|
* as it is only in overlongs. */
|
|
#define ILLEGAL_UTF8_BYTE I8_TO_NATIVE_UTF8(0xC1)
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
* 'UTF' is whether or not p is encoded in UTF8. The names 'foo_lazy_if' stem
|
|
* from an earlier version of these macros in which they didn't call the
|
|
* foo_utf8() macros (i.e. were 'lazy') unless they decided that *p is the
|
|
* beginning of a utf8 character. Now that foo_utf8() determines that itself,
|
|
* no need to do it again here
|
|
*/
|
|
#define isIDFIRST_lazy_if(p,UTF) ((IN_BYTES || !UTF ) \
|
|
? isIDFIRST(*(p)) \
|
|
: isIDFIRST_utf8((const U8*)p))
|
|
#define isWORDCHAR_lazy_if(p,UTF) ((IN_BYTES || (!UTF )) \
|
|
? isWORDCHAR(*(p)) \
|
|
: isWORDCHAR_utf8((const U8*)p))
|
|
#define isALNUM_lazy_if(p,UTF) isWORDCHAR_lazy_if(p,UTF)
|
|
|
|
#define UTF8_MAXLEN UTF8_MAXBYTES
|
|
|
|
/* A Unicode character can fold to up to 3 characters */
|
|
#define UTF8_MAX_FOLD_CHAR_EXPAND 3
|
|
|
|
#define IN_BYTES (CopHINTS_get(PL_curcop) & HINT_BYTES)
|
|
#define DO_UTF8(sv) (SvUTF8(sv) && !IN_BYTES)
|
|
#define IN_UNI_8_BIT \
|
|
(((CopHINTS_get(PL_curcop) & (HINT_UNI_8_BIT)) \
|
|
|| (CopHINTS_get(PL_curcop) & HINT_LOCALE_PARTIAL \
|
|
/* -1 below is for :not_characters */ \
|
|
&& _is_in_locale_category(FALSE, -1))) \
|
|
&& ! IN_BYTES)
|
|
|
|
|
|
#define UTF8_ALLOW_EMPTY 0x0001 /* Allow a zero length string */
|
|
|
|
/* Allow first byte to be a continuation byte */
|
|
#define UTF8_ALLOW_CONTINUATION 0x0002
|
|
|
|
/* Allow second... bytes to be non-continuation bytes */
|
|
#define UTF8_ALLOW_NON_CONTINUATION 0x0004
|
|
|
|
/* expecting more bytes than were available in the string */
|
|
#define UTF8_ALLOW_SHORT 0x0008
|
|
|
|
/* Overlong sequence; i.e., the code point can be specified in fewer bytes. */
|
|
#define UTF8_ALLOW_LONG 0x0010
|
|
|
|
#define UTF8_DISALLOW_SURROGATE 0x0020 /* Unicode surrogates */
|
|
#define UTF8_WARN_SURROGATE 0x0040
|
|
|
|
#define UTF8_DISALLOW_NONCHAR 0x0080 /* Unicode non-character */
|
|
#define UTF8_WARN_NONCHAR 0x0100 /* code points */
|
|
|
|
#define UTF8_DISALLOW_SUPER 0x0200 /* Super-set of Unicode: code */
|
|
#define UTF8_WARN_SUPER 0x0400 /* points above the legal max */
|
|
|
|
/* Code points which never were part of the original UTF-8 standard, the first
|
|
* byte of which is a FE or FF on ASCII platforms. If the first byte is FF, it
|
|
* will overflow a 32-bit word. If the first byte is FE, it will overflow a
|
|
* signed 32-bit word. */
|
|
#define UTF8_DISALLOW_FE_FF 0x0800
|
|
#define UTF8_WARN_FE_FF 0x1000
|
|
|
|
#define UTF8_CHECK_ONLY 0x2000
|
|
|
|
/* For backwards source compatibility. They do nothing, as the default now
|
|
* includes what they used to mean. The first one's meaning was to allow the
|
|
* just the single non-character 0xFFFF */
|
|
#define UTF8_ALLOW_FFFF 0
|
|
#define UTF8_ALLOW_SURROGATE 0
|
|
|
|
#define UTF8_DISALLOW_ILLEGAL_INTERCHANGE (UTF8_DISALLOW_SUPER|UTF8_DISALLOW_NONCHAR|UTF8_DISALLOW_SURROGATE|UTF8_DISALLOW_FE_FF)
|
|
#define UTF8_WARN_ILLEGAL_INTERCHANGE \
|
|
(UTF8_WARN_SUPER|UTF8_WARN_NONCHAR|UTF8_WARN_SURROGATE|UTF8_WARN_FE_FF)
|
|
#define UTF8_ALLOW_ANY \
|
|
(~(UTF8_DISALLOW_ILLEGAL_INTERCHANGE|UTF8_WARN_ILLEGAL_INTERCHANGE))
|
|
#define UTF8_ALLOW_ANYUV \
|
|
(UTF8_ALLOW_EMPTY \
|
|
& ~(UTF8_DISALLOW_ILLEGAL_INTERCHANGE|UTF8_WARN_ILLEGAL_INTERCHANGE))
|
|
#define UTF8_ALLOW_DEFAULT (ckWARN(WARN_UTF8) ? 0 : \
|
|
UTF8_ALLOW_ANYUV)
|
|
|
|
/* Surrogates, non-character code points and above-Unicode code points are
|
|
* problematic in some contexts. This allows code that needs to check for
|
|
* those to to quickly exclude the vast majority of code points it will
|
|
* encounter */
|
|
#define UTF8_FIRST_PROBLEMATIC_CODE_POINT_FIRST_BYTE \
|
|
FIRST_SURROGATE_UTF8_FIRST_BYTE
|
|
|
|
#define UTF8_IS_SURROGATE(s) cBOOL(is_SURROGATE_utf8(s))
|
|
#define UTF8_IS_REPLACEMENT(s, send) cBOOL(is_REPLACEMENT_utf8_safe(s,send))
|
|
|
|
/* ASCII EBCDIC I8
|
|
* U+10FFFF: \xF4\x8F\xBF\xBF \xF9\xA1\xBF\xBF\xBF max legal Unicode
|
|
* U+110000: \xF4\x90\x80\x80 \xF9\xA2\xA0\xA0\xA0
|
|
* U+110001: \xF4\x90\x80\x81 \xF9\xA2\xA0\xA0\xA1
|
|
*/
|
|
#ifdef EBCDIC /* Both versions assume well-formed UTF8 */
|
|
# define UTF8_IS_SUPER(s) (NATIVE_UTF8_TO_I8(* (U8*) (s)) >= 0xF9 \
|
|
&& (NATIVE_UTF8_TO_I8(* (U8*) (s)) > 0xF9 \
|
|
|| (NATIVE_UTF8_TO_I8(* ((U8*) (s) + 1)) >= 0xA2)))
|
|
#else
|
|
# define UTF8_IS_SUPER(s) (*(U8*) (s) >= 0xF4 \
|
|
&& (*(U8*) (s) > 0xF4 || (*((U8*) (s) + 1) >= 0x90)))
|
|
#endif
|
|
|
|
/* These are now machine generated, and the 'given' clause is no longer
|
|
* applicable */
|
|
#define UTF8_IS_NONCHAR_GIVEN_THAT_NON_SUPER_AND_GE_PROBLEMATIC(s) \
|
|
cBOOL(is_NONCHAR_utf8(s))
|
|
#define UTF8_IS_NONCHAR_(s) \
|
|
UTF8_IS_NONCHAR_GIVEN_THAT_NON_SUPER_AND_GE_PROBLEMATIC(s)
|
|
|
|
#define UNICODE_SURROGATE_FIRST 0xD800
|
|
#define UNICODE_SURROGATE_LAST 0xDFFF
|
|
#define UNICODE_REPLACEMENT 0xFFFD
|
|
#define UNICODE_BYTE_ORDER_MARK 0xFEFF
|
|
|
|
/* Though our UTF-8 encoding can go beyond this,
|
|
* let's be conservative and do as Unicode says. */
|
|
#define PERL_UNICODE_MAX 0x10FFFF
|
|
|
|
#define UNICODE_WARN_SURROGATE 0x0001 /* UTF-16 surrogates */
|
|
#define UNICODE_WARN_NONCHAR 0x0002 /* Non-char code points */
|
|
#define UNICODE_WARN_SUPER 0x0004 /* Above 0x10FFFF */
|
|
#define UNICODE_WARN_FE_FF 0x0008 /* Above 0x10FFFF */
|
|
#define UNICODE_DISALLOW_SURROGATE 0x0010
|
|
#define UNICODE_DISALLOW_NONCHAR 0x0020
|
|
#define UNICODE_DISALLOW_SUPER 0x0040
|
|
#define UNICODE_DISALLOW_FE_FF 0x0080
|
|
#define UNICODE_WARN_ILLEGAL_INTERCHANGE \
|
|
(UNICODE_WARN_SURROGATE|UNICODE_WARN_NONCHAR|UNICODE_WARN_SUPER)
|
|
#define UNICODE_DISALLOW_ILLEGAL_INTERCHANGE \
|
|
(UNICODE_DISALLOW_SURROGATE|UNICODE_DISALLOW_NONCHAR|UNICODE_DISALLOW_SUPER)
|
|
|
|
/* For backward source compatibility, as are now the default */
|
|
#define UNICODE_ALLOW_SURROGATE 0
|
|
#define UNICODE_ALLOW_SUPER 0
|
|
#define UNICODE_ALLOW_ANY 0
|
|
|
|
#define UNICODE_IS_SURROGATE(c) ((c) >= UNICODE_SURROGATE_FIRST && \
|
|
(c) <= UNICODE_SURROGATE_LAST)
|
|
#define UNICODE_IS_REPLACEMENT(c) ((c) == UNICODE_REPLACEMENT)
|
|
#define UNICODE_IS_BYTE_ORDER_MARK(c) ((c) == UNICODE_BYTE_ORDER_MARK)
|
|
#define UNICODE_IS_NONCHAR(c) ((c >= 0xFDD0 && c <= 0xFDEF) \
|
|
/* The other noncharacters end in FFFE or FFFF, which \
|
|
* the mask below catches both of, but beyond the last \
|
|
* official unicode code point, they aren't \
|
|
* noncharacters, since those aren't Unicode \
|
|
* characters at all */ \
|
|
|| ((((c & 0xFFFE) == 0xFFFE)) && ! UNICODE_IS_SUPER(c)))
|
|
#define UNICODE_IS_SUPER(c) ((c) > PERL_UNICODE_MAX)
|
|
#define UNICODE_IS_FE_FF(c) ((c) > 0x7FFFFFFF)
|
|
|
|
#define LATIN_SMALL_LETTER_SHARP_S LATIN_SMALL_LETTER_SHARP_S_NATIVE
|
|
#define LATIN_SMALL_LETTER_Y_WITH_DIAERESIS \
|
|
LATIN_SMALL_LETTER_Y_WITH_DIAERESIS_NATIVE
|
|
#define MICRO_SIGN MICRO_SIGN_NATIVE
|
|
#define LATIN_CAPITAL_LETTER_A_WITH_RING_ABOVE \
|
|
LATIN_CAPITAL_LETTER_A_WITH_RING_ABOVE_NATIVE
|
|
#define LATIN_SMALL_LETTER_A_WITH_RING_ABOVE \
|
|
LATIN_SMALL_LETTER_A_WITH_RING_ABOVE_NATIVE
|
|
#define UNICODE_GREEK_CAPITAL_LETTER_SIGMA 0x03A3
|
|
#define UNICODE_GREEK_SMALL_LETTER_FINAL_SIGMA 0x03C2
|
|
#define UNICODE_GREEK_SMALL_LETTER_SIGMA 0x03C3
|
|
#define GREEK_SMALL_LETTER_MU 0x03BC
|
|
#define GREEK_CAPITAL_LETTER_MU 0x039C /* Upper and title case
|
|
of MICRON */
|
|
#define LATIN_CAPITAL_LETTER_Y_WITH_DIAERESIS 0x0178 /* Also is title case */
|
|
#define LATIN_CAPITAL_LETTER_SHARP_S 0x1E9E
|
|
#define LATIN_SMALL_LETTER_LONG_S 0x017F
|
|
#define LATIN_SMALL_LIGATURE_LONG_S_T 0xFB05
|
|
#define LATIN_SMALL_LIGATURE_ST 0xFB06
|
|
#define KELVIN_SIGN 0x212A
|
|
#define ANGSTROM_SIGN 0x212B
|
|
|
|
#define UNI_DISPLAY_ISPRINT 0x0001
|
|
#define UNI_DISPLAY_BACKSLASH 0x0002
|
|
#define UNI_DISPLAY_QQ (UNI_DISPLAY_ISPRINT|UNI_DISPLAY_BACKSLASH)
|
|
#define UNI_DISPLAY_REGEX (UNI_DISPLAY_ISPRINT|UNI_DISPLAY_BACKSLASH)
|
|
|
|
#define ANYOF_FOLD_SHARP_S(node, input, end) \
|
|
(ANYOF_BITMAP_TEST(node, LATIN_SMALL_LETTER_SHARP_S) && \
|
|
(ANYOF_NONBITMAP(node)) && \
|
|
(ANYOF_FLAGS(node) & ANYOF_LOC_NONBITMAP_FOLD) && \
|
|
((end) > (input) + 1) && \
|
|
toFOLD((input)[0]) == 's' && \
|
|
toFOLD((input)[1]) == 's')
|
|
|
|
#define SHARP_S_SKIP 2
|
|
|
|
/* If you want to exclude surrogates, and beyond legal Unicode, see the blame
|
|
* log for earlier versions which gave details for these */
|
|
|
|
/* A helper macro for isUTF8_CHAR, so use that one, and not this one. This is
|
|
* retained solely for backwards compatibility and may be deprecated and
|
|
* removed in a future Perl version.
|
|
*
|
|
* regen/regcharclass.pl generates is_UTF8_CHAR_utf8() macros for up to these
|
|
* number of bytes. So this has to be coordinated with that file */
|
|
#ifdef EBCDIC
|
|
# define IS_UTF8_CHAR_FAST(n) ((n) <= 3)
|
|
#else
|
|
# define IS_UTF8_CHAR_FAST(n) ((n) <= 4)
|
|
#endif
|
|
|
|
#ifndef EBCDIC
|
|
/* A helper macro for isUTF8_CHAR, so use that one instead of this. This was
|
|
* generated by regen/regcharclass.pl, and then moved here. The lines that
|
|
* generated it were then commented out. This was done solely because it takes
|
|
* on the order of 10 minutes to generate, and is never going to change, unless
|
|
* the generated code is improved.
|
|
*
|
|
* The EBCDIC versions have been cut to not cover all of legal Unicode, so
|
|
* don't take too long to generate, and there is a separate one for each code
|
|
* page, so they are in regcharclass.h instead of here */
|
|
/*
|
|
UTF8_CHAR: Matches legal UTF-8 encoded characters from 2 through 4 bytes
|
|
|
|
0x80 - 0x1FFFFF
|
|
*/
|
|
/*** GENERATED CODE ***/
|
|
#define is_UTF8_CHAR_utf8_no_length_checks(s) \
|
|
( ( 0xC2 <= ((U8*)s)[0] && ((U8*)s)[0] <= 0xDF ) ? \
|
|
( ( ( ((U8*)s)[1] & 0xC0 ) == 0x80 ) ? 2 : 0 ) \
|
|
: ( 0xE0 == ((U8*)s)[0] ) ? \
|
|
( ( ( ( ((U8*)s)[1] & 0xE0 ) == 0xA0 ) && ( ( ((U8*)s)[2] & 0xC0 ) == 0x80 ) ) ? 3 : 0 )\
|
|
: ( 0xE1 <= ((U8*)s)[0] && ((U8*)s)[0] <= 0xEF ) ? \
|
|
( ( ( ( ((U8*)s)[1] & 0xC0 ) == 0x80 ) && ( ( ((U8*)s)[2] & 0xC0 ) == 0x80 ) ) ? 3 : 0 )\
|
|
: ( 0xF0 == ((U8*)s)[0] ) ? \
|
|
( ( ( ( 0x90 <= ((U8*)s)[1] && ((U8*)s)[1] <= 0xBF ) && ( ( ((U8*)s)[2] & 0xC0 ) == 0x80 ) ) && ( ( ((U8*)s)[3] & 0xC0 ) == 0x80 ) ) ? 4 : 0 )\
|
|
: ( ( ( ( 0xF1 <= ((U8*)s)[0] && ((U8*)s)[0] <= 0xF7 ) && ( ( ((U8*)s)[1] & 0xC0 ) == 0x80 ) ) && ( ( ((U8*)s)[2] & 0xC0 ) == 0x80 ) ) && ( ( ((U8*)s)[3] & 0xC0 ) == 0x80 ) ) ? 4 : 0 )
|
|
#endif
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
=head1 Unicode Support
|
|
|
|
=for apidoc Am|STRLEN|isUTF8_CHAR|const U8 *s|const U8 *e
|
|
|
|
Returns the number of bytes beginning at C<s> which form a legal UTF-8 (or
|
|
UTF-EBCDIC) encoded character, looking no further than C<e - s> bytes into
|
|
C<s>. Returns 0 if the sequence starting at C<s> through C<e - 1> is not
|
|
well-formed UTF-8
|
|
|
|
Note that an INVARIANT character (i.e. ASCII on non-EBCDIC
|
|
machines) is a valid UTF-8 character.
|
|
|
|
=cut
|
|
*/
|
|
|
|
#define isUTF8_CHAR(s, e) (UNLIKELY((e) <= (s)) \
|
|
? 0 \
|
|
: (UTF8_IS_INVARIANT(*s)) \
|
|
? 1 \
|
|
: UNLIKELY(((e) - (s)) < UTF8SKIP(s)) \
|
|
? 0 \
|
|
: LIKELY(IS_UTF8_CHAR_FAST(UTF8SKIP(s))) \
|
|
? is_UTF8_CHAR_utf8_no_length_checks(s) \
|
|
: _is_utf8_char_slow(s, e))
|
|
|
|
#define is_utf8_char_buf(buf, buf_end) isUTF8_CHAR(buf, buf_end)
|
|
|
|
/* Do not use; should be deprecated. Use isUTF8_CHAR() instead; this is
|
|
* retained solely for backwards compatibility */
|
|
#define IS_UTF8_CHAR(p, n) (isUTF8_CHAR(p, (p) + (n)) == n)
|
|
|
|
#endif /* H_UTF8 */
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
* Local variables:
|
|
* c-indentation-style: bsd
|
|
* c-basic-offset: 4
|
|
* indent-tabs-mode: nil
|
|
* End:
|
|
*
|
|
* ex: set ts=8 sts=4 sw=4 et:
|
|
*/
|