This library wraps the utf8proc
library, giving Prolog code access to Unicode character properties,
string normalization, case folding, and grapheme-cluster iteration.
Three levels of API are provided:
- Normalization: unicode_nfd/2, unicode_nfc/2, unicode_nfkd/2,
unicode_nfkc/2 implement the
four standard Unicode normalization forms (NFD, NFC, NFKD, NFKC; see UAX#15). unicode_nfkc_casefold/2
combines NFKC with case folding for caseless identifier matching (see
UAX#31).
- Per-codepoint properties: unicode_property/2
queries the Unicode property database (general category, bidi class,
decomposition type, display width, case mappings, grapheme boundary
class, ...).
- Mixed string-level transformations: unicode_map/3
is the workhorse; it accepts a list of flags chosen from a fixed set and
performs the corresponding composition of decompose / compose / strip /
lump / case-fold / grapheme-boundary-mark operations in a single pass. unicode_casefold/2
is a convenience wrapper.
Grapheme clusters (user-perceived characters) can be iterated with
atom_graphemes/2 and string_graphemes/2.
Lump handling:
U+0020 <-- all space characters (general category Zs)
U+0027 ' <-- left/right single quotation mark U+2018..2019,
modifier letter apostrophe U+02BC,
modifier letter vertical line U+02C8
U+002D - <-- all dash characters (general category Pd),
minus U+2212
U+002F / <-- fraction slash U+2044,
division slash U+2215
U+003A : <-- ratio U+2236
U+003C < <-- single left-pointing angle quotation mark U+2039,
left-pointing angle bracket U+2329,
left angle bracket U+3008
U+003E > <-- single right-pointing angle quotation mark U+203A,
right-pointing angle bracket U+232A,
right angle bracket U+3009
U+005C \ <-- set minus U+2216
U+005E ^ <-- modifier letter up arrowhead U+02C4,
modifier letter circumflex accent U+02C6,
caret U+2038,
up arrowhead U+2303
U+005F _ <-- all connector characters (general category Pc),
modifier letter low macron U+02CD
U+0060 ` <-- modifier letter grave accent U+02CB
U+007C | <-- divides U+2223
U+007E ~ <-- tilde operator U+223C
@see http://www.unicode.org/reports/tr15/
(UAX#15 Normalization) @see http://www.unicode.org/reports/tr29/
(UAX#29 Grapheme Clusters) @see http://www.unicode.org/reports/tr31/
(UAX#31 Identifiers) @see https://github.com/JuliaStrings/utf8proc
- [det]unicode_map(+In,
-Out, +Options)
- Perform a Unicode mapping on In, returning Out. Options
is a list that may contain any combination of the flags below; a call is
roughly equivalent to
utf8proc_map(In, Options) in the C
API.
- stable
- Respect Unicode versioning stability --- the result does not depend on
which (recent) version of Unicode is in use.
- compat
- Use compatibility decomposition (i.e. formatting information is lost).
- compose
- Produce a composed result (e.g. NFC or NFKC, depending on the presence
of
compat).
- decompose
- Produce a decomposed result (NFD/NFKD).
- ignore
- Strip "default ignorable" characters (e.g. soft hyphen, zero-width
space).
- rejectna
- Raise an error instead of returning output when the input contains
unassigned code points.
- nlf2ls
- Convert all NLF-sequences (LF, CRLF, CR, NEL) to U+2028 LINE SEPARATOR.
- nlf2ps
- Convert all NLF-sequences to U+2029 PARAGRAPH SEPARATOR.
- nlf2lf
- Convert all NLF-sequences to U+000A LINE FEED.
- stripcc
- Strip or convert control characters. NLF-sequences become a space,
except if one of the NLF-conversion flags is set; HT and FF are treated
as NLF in this case. All other control characters are removed.
- casefold
- Apply Unicode case folding (for caseless comparison).
- charbound
- Insert a U+00FF byte at the beginning of every grapheme cluster (UAX#29).
The result can be split on 0xFF to recover individual graphemes; atom_graphemes/2
wraps this pattern.
- lump
- Normalise typographic variants to their ASCII equivalents (see module
header for the full list). Combined with
nlf2lf, paragraph and line separators become U+000A as
well.
- stripmark
- Strip all combining marks (non-spacing, spacing, enclosing). Must be
combined with
compose or decompose.
- [det]unicode_nfd(+In,
-Out)
- Characters in In are decomposed by canonical equivalence
(NFD). Precomposed characters expand into base + combining marks. For
example U+00C5 (LATIN CAPITAL LETTER A WITH RING ABOVE) becomes the
two-code sequence A + U+030A.
- See also
- http://www.unicode.org/reports/tr15/
- [det]unicode_nfc(+In,
-Out)
- Characters in In are decomposed and then recomposed by
canonical equivalence (NFC). Precomposed code points are preferred; for
example A + U+030A becomes the single code point U+00C5.
- See also
- http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Unicode_equivalence\#Normal_forms
- [det]unicode_nfkd(+In,
-Out)
- Characters in In are decomposed by compatibility equivalence
(NFKD). Compatibility decomposition expands presentation forms
(ligatures, subscripts, fullwidth letters) into their base forms; for
example U+FB03 (LATIN SMALL LIGATURE FFI) becomes‘f f i`.
- [det]unicode_nfkc(+In,
-Out)
- Characters in In are decomposed by compatibility equivalence,
then recomposed by canonical equivalence (NFKC).
- [det]unicode_nfkc_casefold(+In,
-Out)
- Equivalent to unicode_nfkc/2
followed by unicode_casefold/2
done in a single pass. This is the normalisation form recommended by UAX#31
for caseless identifier matching. For example German
'Strasse' written with U+00DF (LATIN SMALL LETTER SHARP S)
maps to 'strasse', and U+FB03 (LATIN SMALL LIGATURE FFI)
maps to 'ffi'.
- [det]unicode_casefold(+In,
-Out)
- Out is the case-folded form of In. Use this for
caseless comparison that does not require NFKC; otherwise prefer
unicode_nfkc_casefold/2.
- [nondet]unicode_property(?Code,
?Property)
- Query the Unicode character database for Code. Code
is an integer code point (0 .. 0x10FFFF) or a single-character atom; Property
is a term of the form Name(Value) drawn from the list below.
This predicate is a thin wrapper over utf8proc's property struct, so
its vocabulary matches the utf8proc documentation. In the modes (+,?)
and (-,?) the predicate enumerates properties for the given code (or the
code for the given property); in (+,+) it is a deterministic test.
Supported properties:
- category(Atom)
- Unicode general category. Atom is one of
cc, cf, cn,
co, cs, ll, lm, lo, lt, lu, mc, me, mn,
nd, nl, no, pc, pd, pe, pf, pi, po, ps,
sc, sk, sm, so, zl, zp, zs.
When querying, the single capital letter of a subcategory stands for all
its subcategories; e.g.
?- unicode_property(0'A, category('L')).
true.
- combining_class(Integer)
- Canonical combining class (0 for base characters, 230 for accents above,
etc.).
- bidi_class(Atom)
- Bidirectional class. One of
l, lre, lro, r, al,
rle, rlo, pdf, en, es, et, an, cs, nsm,
bn, b, s, ws, on.
- bidi_mirrored(Bool)
true if the character is mirrored for bidi (parentheses,
brackets, math operators, ...).
- decomp_type(Atom)
- Compatibility decomposition type. One of
font, nobreak,
initial, medial, final, isolated, circle, super,
sub, vertical, wide, narrow, small, square,
fraction, compat. Fails when there is no
decomposition.
- ignorable(Bool)
true if the character is a "default ignorable" code point.
- boundclass(Atom)
- UAX#29 grapheme-cluster break class. One of
start,
other, cr, lf, control, extend, l, v, t,
lv, lvt, regional_indicator, spacingmark, prepend,
zwj, extended_pictographic, e_zwg.
- width(Integer)
- Display width in fixed-width cells, 0..3. Zero for combining marks and
control characters, 1 for most, 2 for "wide" characters (CJK, emoji).
- ambiguous_width(Bool)
true if the character has East-Asian Ambiguous width ---
normally one column, but two in a legacy CJK context.
- uppercase(Code)
- lowercase(Code)
- titlecase(Code)
- Single-code-point case mapping. Fails when the code point has no mapping
of that kind (e.g.
unicode_property(0'A, uppercase(_))
fails because 'A' is already upper-case). For characters
whose case mapping produces more than one code point (e.g. U+00DF LATIN
SMALL LETTER SHARP S maps to "SS"), use unicode_map/3
with the [casefold] option or
unicode_casefold/2 for a
full string-level transformation.
- indic_conjunct_break(Atom)
- Indic_Conjunct_Break property (Unicode 15+; UAX#44). One of
none, linker, consonant, extend.
Used by the grapheme-cluster-break algorithm for Devanagari, Bengali,
etc.
- See also
- http://www.unicode.org/reports/tr44/
(Unicode property database)
- [det]atom_graphemes(?Atom,
?Graphemes)
- Relate Atom to a list of its grapheme clusters. Grapheme
clusters are "user-perceived characters" as defined by UAX#29 --- e.g.
the precomposed U+00E9 (LATIN SMALL LETTER E WITH ACUTE) and the
decomposed sequence
e + U+0301 are both one grapheme, an
emoji ZWJ sequence such as MAN + ZWJ + WOMAN + ZWJ + GIRL
is one grapheme, and a regional-indicator pair (e.g. U+1F1F3 U+1F1F1,
rendered as the Dutch flag) is one grapheme.
In the forward mode (+Atom, ?Graphemes), Atom
is decomposed into a list of atoms, each covering one cluster. In the
reverse mode (?Atom, +Graphemes), the elements of Graphemes
are concatenated into Atom. Both arguments instantiated means
both modes run and the result must agree.
?- atom_codes(A, [0'c, 0'a, 0'f, 0'e, 0x0301]),
atom_graphemes(A, Gs).
Gs = [c, a, f, G],
atom_codes(G, [0'e, 0x0301]).
?- atom_graphemes(A, [a, b, c]).
A = abc.
- See also
- string_graphemes/2 for
the string analogue.
- [det]string_graphemes(?String,
?Graphemes)
- As atom_graphemes/2, but
the elements of Graphemes are strings.
- [det]unicode_version(-Version)
- Version is an atom describing the Unicode version implemented
by the linked utf8proc library, e.g.
'15.1.0'.
- [semidet]unicode_codepoint_valid(+Code)
- True when Code is a non-negative integer that is a valid and
assigned Unicode code point. Unassigned code points (general
category Cn), surrogate halves (Cs), and integers
outside‘0..0x10FFFF` all fail.