#!perl -w use v5.15.8; use strict; use warnings; require 'regen/regen_lib.pl'; require 'regen/charset_translations.pl'; # This program outputs l1_charclass_tab.h, which defines the guts of the # PL_charclass table. Each line is a bit map of properties that the Unicode # code point at the corresponding position in the table array has. The first # line corresponds to code point U+0000, NULL, the last line to U+00FF. For # an application to see if the code point "i" has a particular property, it # just does # 'PL_charclass[i] & BIT' # The bit names are of the form '_CC_property_suffix', where 'CC' stands for # character class, and 'property' is the corresponding property, and 'suffix' # is one of '_A' to mean the property is true only if the corresponding code # point is ASCII, and '_L1' means that the range includes any Latin1 # character (ISO-8859-1 including the C0 and C1 controls). A property without # these suffixes does not have different forms for both ranges. # This program need be run only when adding new properties to it, or upon a # new Unicode release, to make sure things haven't been changed by it. my @properties = qw( NONLATIN1_SIMPLE_FOLD NONLATIN1_FOLD ALPHANUMERIC ALPHA ASCII BLANK CASED CHARNAME_CONT CNTRL DIGIT GRAPH IDFIRST LOWER NON_FINAL_FOLD PRINT PSXSPC PUNCT QUOTEMETA SPACE UPPER WORDCHAR XDIGIT VERTSPACE IS_IN_SOME_FOLD MNEMONIC_CNTRL ); # Read in the case fold mappings. my %folded_closure; my @hex_non_final_folds; my @non_latin1_simple_folds; my @folds; use Unicode::UCD; BEGIN { # Have to do this at compile time because using user-defined \p{property} # Use the Unicode data file if we are on an ASCII platform (which its data # is for), and it is in the modern format (starting in Unicode 3.1.0) and # it is available. This avoids being affected by potential bugs # introduced by other layers of Perl my $file="lib/unicore/CaseFolding.txt"; if (ord('A') == 65 && pack("C*", split /\./, Unicode::UCD::UnicodeVersion()) ge v3.1.0 && open my $fh, "<", $file) { @folds = <$fh>; } else { my ($invlist_ref, $invmap_ref, undef, $default) = Unicode::UCD::prop_invmap('Case_Folding'); for my $i (0 .. @$invlist_ref - 1 - 1) { next if $invmap_ref->[$i] == $default; my $adjust = -1; for my $j ($invlist_ref->[$i] .. $invlist_ref->[$i+1] -1) { $adjust++; # Single-code point maps go to a 'C' type if (! ref $invmap_ref->[$i]) { push @folds, sprintf("%04X; C; %04X\n", $j, $invmap_ref->[$i] + $adjust); } else { # Multi-code point maps go to 'F'. prop_invmap() # guarantees that no adjustment is needed for these, # as the range will contain just one element push @folds, sprintf("%04X; F; %s\n", $j, join " ", map { sprintf "%04X", $_ } @{$invmap_ref->[$i]}); } } } } for (@folds) { chomp; # Lines look like (without the initial '#' #0130; F; 0069 0307; # LATIN CAPITAL LETTER I WITH DOT ABOVE # Get rid of comments, ignore blank or comment-only lines my $line = $_ =~ s/ (?: \s* \# .* )? $ //rx; next unless length $line; my ($hex_from, $fold_type, @folded) = split /[\s;]+/, $line; my $from = hex $hex_from; # Perl only deals with S, C, and F folds next if $fold_type ne 'C' and $fold_type ne 'F' and $fold_type ne 'S'; # Get each code point in the range that participates in this line's fold. # The hash has keys of each code point in the range, and values of what it # folds to and what folds to it for my $i (0 .. @folded - 1) { my $hex_fold = $folded[$i]; my $fold = hex $hex_fold; push @{$folded_closure{$fold}}, $from if $fold < 256; push @{$folded_closure{$from}}, $fold if $from < 256; if (($fold_type eq 'C' || $fold_type eq 'S') && ($fold < 256 != $from < 256)) { # Fold is simple (hence can't be a non-final fold, so the 'if' # above is mutualy exclusive from the 'if below) and crosses # 255/256 boundary. We keep track of the Latin1 code points # in such folds. push @non_latin1_simple_folds, ($fold < 256) ? $fold : $from; } elsif ($i < @folded-1 && $fold < 256 && ! grep { $_ eq $hex_fold } @hex_non_final_folds) { push @hex_non_final_folds, $hex_fold; # Also add the upper case, which in the latin1 range folds to # $fold push @hex_non_final_folds, sprintf "%04X", ord uc chr $fold; } } } # Now having read all the lines, combine them into the full closure of each # code point in the range by adding lists together that share a common # element foreach my $folded (keys %folded_closure) { foreach my $from (grep { $_ < 256 } @{$folded_closure{$folded}}) { push @{$folded_closure{$from}}, @{$folded_closure{$folded}}; } } # We have the single-character folds that cross the 255/256, like KELVIN # SIGN => 'k', but we need the closure, so add like 'K' to it foreach my $folded (@non_latin1_simple_folds) { foreach my $fold (@{$folded_closure{$folded}}) { if ($fold < 256 && ! grep { $fold == $_ } @non_latin1_simple_folds) { push @non_latin1_simple_folds, $fold; } } } } sub Is_Non_Latin1_Fold { my @return; foreach my $folded (keys %folded_closure) { push @return, sprintf("%X", $folded), if grep { $_ > 255 } @{$folded_closure{$folded}}; } return join("\n", @return) . "\n"; } sub Is_Non_Latin1_Simple_Fold { # Latin1 code points that are folded to by # non-Latin1 code points as single character # folds return join("\n", map { sprintf "%X", $_ } @non_latin1_simple_folds) . "\n"; } sub Is_Non_Final_Fold { return join("\n", @hex_non_final_folds) . "\n"; } my @bits; # Bit map for each code point # For each character, calculate which properties it matches. for my $ord (0..255) { my $char = chr($ord); utf8::upgrade($char); # Important to use Unicode rules! # Look at all the properties we care about here. for my $property (@properties) { my $name = $property; # Remove the suffix to get the actual property name. # Currently the suffixes are '_L1', '_A', and none. # If is a latin1 version, no further checking is needed. if (! ($name =~ s/_L1$//)) { # Here, isn't an _L1. If its _A, it's automatically false for # non-ascii. The only current ones (besides ASCII) without a # suffix are valid over the whole range. next if $name =~ s/_A$// && $char !~ /\p{ASCII}/; } my $re; if ($name eq 'PUNCT') {; # Sadly, this is inconsistent: \pP and \pS for the ascii range, # just \pP outside it. $re = qr/\p{Punct}|[^\P{Symbol}\P{ASCII}]/; } elsif ($name eq 'CHARNAME_CONT') {; $re = qr/\p{_Perl_Charname_Continue}/, } elsif ($name eq 'SPACE') {; $re = qr/\p{XPerlSpace}/; } elsif ($name eq 'IDFIRST') { $re = qr/[_\p{Alpha}]/; } elsif ($name eq 'PSXSPC') { $re = qr/[\v\p{Space}]/; } elsif ($name eq 'WORDCHAR') { $re = qr/\p{XPosixWord}/; } elsif ($name eq 'ALPHANUMERIC') { # Like \w, but no underscore $re = qr/\p{Alnum}/; } elsif ($name eq 'QUOTEMETA') { $re = qr/\p{_Perl_Quotemeta}/; } elsif ($name eq 'NONLATIN1_FOLD') { $re = qr/\p{Is_Non_Latin1_Fold}/; } elsif ($name eq 'NONLATIN1_SIMPLE_FOLD') { $re = qr/\p{Is_Non_Latin1_Simple_Fold}/; } elsif ($name eq 'NON_FINAL_FOLD') { $re = qr/\p{Is_Non_Final_Fold}/; } elsif ($name eq 'IS_IN_SOME_FOLD') { $re = qr/\p{_Perl_Any_Folds}/; } elsif ($name eq 'MNEMONIC_CNTRL') { # These are the control characters that there are mnemonics for $re = qr/[\a\b\e\f\n\r\t]/; } else { # The remainder have the same name and values as Unicode $re = eval "qr/\\p{$name}/"; use Carp; carp $@ if ! defined $re; } #print "$ord, $name $property, $re\n"; if ($char =~ $re) { # Add this property if matches $bits[$ord] .= '|' if $bits[$ord]; $bits[$ord] .= "(1U<<_CC_$property)"; } } #print __LINE__, " $ord $char $bits[$ord]\n"; } my $out_fh = open_new('l1_char_class_tab.h', '>', {style => '*', by => $0, from => "property definitions"}); print $out_fh <[$which]; if (! ref $map) { $name = $map; } else { # Just pick the first abbreviation if more than one my @names = grep { $_ =~ /abbreviation/ } @$map; $name = $names[0]; } $name =~ s/:.*//; } } my $index = $a2n[$ord]; $out[$index] = ($ord == $index) ? sprintf "/* U+%02X %s */ %s,\n", $ord, $name, $bits[$ord] : sprintf "/* 0x%02X U+%02X %s */ %s,\n", $index, $ord, $name, $bits[$ord]; } print $out_fh join "", @out; print $out_fh "\n" . get_conditional_compile_line_end(); } read_only_bottom_close_and_rename($out_fh)