summaryrefslogtreecommitdiff
path: root/lib/utf8_heavy.pl
blob: 675a8d1d470e66396b3e61a42c30da88163879a8 (plain)
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
40
41
42
43
44
45
46
47
48
49
50
51
52
53
54
55
56
57
58
59
60
61
62
63
64
65
66
67
68
69
70
71
72
73
74
75
76
77
78
79
80
81
82
83
84
85
86
87
88
89
90
91
92
93
94
95
96
97
98
99
100
101
102
103
104
105
106
107
108
109
110
111
112
113
114
115
116
117
118
119
120
121
122
123
124
125
126
127
128
129
130
131
132
133
134
135
136
137
138
139
140
141
142
143
144
145
146
147
148
149
150
151
152
153
154
155
156
157
158
159
160
161
162
163
164
165
166
167
168
169
170
171
172
173
174
175
176
177
178
179
180
181
182
183
184
185
186
187
188
189
190
191
192
193
194
195
196
197
198
199
200
201
202
203
204
205
206
207
208
209
210
211
212
213
214
215
216
217
218
219
220
221
222
223
224
225
226
227
228
229
230
231
232
233
234
235
236
237
238
239
240
241
242
243
244
245
246
247
248
249
250
251
252
253
254
255
256
257
258
259
260
261
262
263
264
265
266
267
268
269
270
271
272
273
274
275
276
277
278
279
280
281
282
283
284
285
286
287
288
289
290
291
292
293
294
295
296
297
298
299
300
301
302
303
304
305
306
307
308
309
310
311
312
313
314
315
316
317
318
319
320
321
322
323
324
325
326
327
328
329
330
331
332
333
334
335
336
337
338
339
340
341
342
343
344
345
346
347
348
349
350
351
352
353
354
355
356
357
358
359
360
361
362
363
364
365
366
367
368
369
370
371
372
373
374
375
376
377
378
379
380
381
382
383
384
385
386
387
388
389
390
391
392
393
394
395
396
397
398
399
400
401
402
403
404
405
406
407
408
409
410
411
412
413
414
415
416
417
418
419
420
421
422
423
424
425
426
427
428
429
430
431
432
433
434
435
436
437
438
439
440
441
442
443
444
445
446
447
448
449
450
451
452
453
454
455
456
457
458
459
460
461
462
463
464
465
466
467
468
469
470
471
472
473
474
475
476
477
478
479
480
481
482
483
484
485
486
487
488
489
490
491
492
493
494
495
496
497
498
499
500
501
502
503
504
505
506
507
508
509
510
511
512
513
514
515
516
517
518
519
520
521
522
523
524
525
526
527
528
529
530
531
532
533
534
535
536
537
538
539
540
541
542
543
544
545
546
547
548
549
550
551
552
553
554
555
556
557
558
559
560
561
562
563
564
565
566
567
568
569
570
571
572
573
574
575
576
577
578
579
580
581
582
583
584
585
586
587
588
589
590
591
592
593
594
595
596
597
598
599
600
601
602
603
604
605
606
607
608
609
610
611
612
613
614
615
616
617
618
619
620
621
622
623
624
625
626
627
628
629
630
631
632
633
634
635
636
637
638
639
640
641
642
643
644
645
646
647
648
649
650
651
652
653
654
655
656
657
658
659
660
661
662
663
664
665
666
667
668
669
package utf8;
use strict;
use warnings;

sub DEBUG () { 0 }
$|=1 if DEBUG;

sub DESTROY {}

my %Cache;

sub croak { require Carp; Carp::croak(@_) }

sub _loose_name ($) {
    # Given a lowercase property or property-value name, return its
    # standardized version that is expected for look-up in the 'loose' hashes
    # in Heavy.pl (hence, this depends on what mktables does).  This squeezes
    # out blanks, underscores and dashes.  The complication stems from the
    # grandfathered-in 'L_', which retains a single trailing underscore.

    my $loose = $_[0] =~ s/[-\s_]//rg;

    return $loose if $loose !~ / ^ (?: is | to )? l $/x;
    return 'l_' if $_[0] =~ / l .* _ /x;    # If original had a trailing '_'
    return $loose;
}

##
## "SWASH" == "SWATCH HASH". A "swatch" is a swatch of the Unicode landscape.
## It's a data structure that encodes a set of Unicode characters.
##

{
    # If a floating point number is within this distance from the value of a
    # fraction, it is considered to be that fraction, even if many more digits
    # are specified that don't exactly match.
    my $min_floating_slop;

    # To guard against this program calling something that in turn ends up
    # calling this program with the same inputs, and hence infinitely
    # recursing, we keep a stack of the properties that are currently in
    # progress, pushed upon entry, popped upon return.
    my @recursed;

    sub SWASHNEW {
        my ($class, $type, $list, $minbits, $none) = @_;
        my $user_defined = 0;
        local $^D = 0 if $^D;

        $class = "" unless defined $class;
        print STDERR __LINE__, ": class=$class, type=$type, list=",
                                (defined $list) ? $list : ':undef:',
                                ", minbits=$minbits, none=$none\n" if DEBUG;

        ##
        ## Get the list of codepoints for the type.
        ## Called from swash_init (see utf8.c) or SWASHNEW itself.
        ##
        ## Callers of swash_init:
        ##     op.c:pmtrans             -- for tr/// and y///
        ##     regexec.c:regclass_swash -- for /[]/, \p, and \P
        ##     utf8.c:is_utf8_common    -- for common Unicode properties
        ##     utf8.c:to_utf8_case      -- for lc, uc, ucfirst, etc. and //i
        ##     Unicode::UCD::prop_invlist
        ##     Unicode::UCD::prop_invmap
        ##
        ## Given a $type, our goal is to fill $list with the set of codepoint
        ## ranges. If $type is false, $list passed is used.
        ##
        ## $minbits:
        ##     For binary properties, $minbits must be 1.
        ##     For character mappings (case and transliteration), $minbits must
        ##     be a number except 1.
        ##
        ## $list (or that filled according to $type):
        ##     Refer to perlunicode.pod, "User-Defined Character Properties."
        ##     
        ##     For binary properties, only characters with the property value
        ##     of True should be listed. The 3rd column, if any, will be ignored
        ##
        ## $none is undocumented, so I'm (khw) trying to do some documentation
        ## of it now.  It appears to be if there is a mapping in an input file
        ## that maps to 'XXXX', then that is replaced by $none+1, expressed in
        ## hexadecimal.  It is used somehow in tr///.
        ##
        ## To make the parsing of $type clear, this code takes the a rather
        ## unorthodox approach of last'ing out of the block once we have the
        ## info we need. Were this to be a subroutine, the 'last' would just
        ## be a 'return'.
        ##
        #   If a problem is found $type is returned;
        #   Upon success, a new (or cached) blessed object is returned with
        #   keys TYPE, BITS, EXTRAS, LIST, and NONE with values having the
        #   same meanings as the input parameters.
        #   SPECIALS contains a reference to any special-treatment hash in the
        #   INVERT_IT is non-zero if the result should be inverted before use
        #   USER_DEFINED is non-zero if the result came from a user-defined
        #       property.
        my $file; ## file to load data from, and also part of the %Cache key.

        # Change this to get a different set of Unicode tables
        my $unicore_dir = 'unicore';
        my $invert_it = 0;
        my $list_is_from_mktables = 0;  # Is $list returned from a mktables
                                        # generated file?  If so, we know it's
                                        # well behaved.

        if ($type)
        {
            # Verify that this isn't a recursive call for this property.
            # Can't use croak, as it may try to recurse to here itself.
            my $class_type = $class . "::$type";
            if (grep { $_ eq $class_type } @recursed) {
                CORE::die "panic: Infinite recursion in SWASHNEW for '$type'\n";
            }
            push @recursed, $class_type;

            $type =~ s/^\s+//;
            $type =~ s/\s+$//;

            # regcomp.c surrounds the property name with '__" and '_i' if this
            # is to be caseless matching.
            my $caseless = $type =~ s/^(.*)__(.*)_i$/$1$2/;

            print STDERR __LINE__, ": type=$type, caseless=$caseless\n" if DEBUG;

        GETFILE:
            {
                ##
                ## It could be a user-defined property.  Look in current
                ## package if no package given
                ##


                my $caller0 = caller(0);
                my $caller1 = $type =~ s/(.+)::// ? $1 : $caller0 eq 'main' ?
                'main' : caller(1);

                if (defined $caller1 && $type =~ /^I[ns]\w+$/) {
                    my $prop = "${caller1}::$type";
                    if (exists &{$prop}) {
                        # stolen from Scalar::Util::PP::tainted()
                        my $tainted;
                        {
                            local($@, $SIG{__DIE__}, $SIG{__WARN__});
                            local $^W = 0;
                            no warnings;
                            eval { kill 0 * $prop };
                            $tainted = 1 if $@ =~ /^Insecure/;
                        }
                        die "Insecure user-defined property \\p{$prop}\n"
                            if $tainted;
                        no strict 'refs';
                        $list = &{$prop}($caseless);
                        $user_defined = 1;
                        last GETFILE;
                    }
                }

                # During Perl's compilation, this routine may be called before
                # the tables are constructed.  If so, we have a chicken/egg
                # problem.  If we die, the tables never get constructed, so
                # keep going, but return an empty table so only what the code
                # has compiled in internally (currently ASCII/Latin1 range
                # matching) will work.
                BEGIN {
                    # Poor man's constant, to avoid a run-time check.
                    $utf8::{miniperl}
                        = \! defined &DynaLoader::boot_DynaLoader;
                }
                if (miniperl) {
                    eval "require '$unicore_dir/Heavy.pl'";
                    last GETFILE if $@;
                }
                else {
                    require "$unicore_dir/Heavy.pl";
                }
                BEGIN { delete $utf8::{miniperl} }

                # All property names are matched caselessly
                my $property_and_table = CORE::lc $type;
                print STDERR __LINE__, ": $property_and_table\n" if DEBUG;

                # See if is of the compound form 'property=value', where the
                # value indicates the table we should use.
                my ($property, $table, @remainder) =
                                    split /\s*[:=]\s*/, $property_and_table, -1;
                if (@remainder) {
                    pop @recursed if @recursed;
                    return $type;
                }

                my $prefix;
                if (! defined $table) {
                        
                    # Here, is the single form.  The property becomes empty, and
                    # the whole value is the table.
                    $table = $property;
                    $prefix = $property = "";
                } else {
                    print STDERR __LINE__, ": $property\n" if DEBUG;

                    # Here it is the compound property=table form.  The property
                    # name is always loosely matched, and always can have an
                    # optional 'is' prefix (which isn't true in the single
                    # form).
                    $property = _loose_name($property) =~ s/^is//r;

                    # And convert to canonical form.  Quit if not valid.
                    $property = $utf8::loose_property_name_of{$property};
                    if (! defined $property) {
                        pop @recursed if @recursed;
                        return $type;
                    }

                    $prefix = "$property=";

                    # If the rhs looks like it is a number...
                    print STDERR __LINE__, ": table=$table\n" if DEBUG;
                    if ($table =~ qr{ ^ [ \s 0-9 _  + / . -]+ $ }x) {
                        print STDERR __LINE__, ": table=$table\n" if DEBUG;

                        # Don't allow leading nor trailing slashes 
                        if ($table =~ / ^ \/ | \/ $ /x) {
                            pop @recursed if @recursed;
                            return $type;
                        }

                        # Split on slash, in case it is a rational, like \p{1/5}
                        my @parts = split qr{ \s* / \s* }x, $table, -1;
                        print __LINE__, ": $type\n" if @parts > 2 && DEBUG;

                        # Can have maximum of one slash
                        if (@parts > 2) {
                            pop @recursed if @recursed;
                            return $type;
                        }

                        foreach my $part (@parts) {
                            print __LINE__, ": part=$part\n" if DEBUG;

                            $part =~ s/^\+\s*//;    # Remove leading plus
                            $part =~ s/^-\s*/-/;    # Remove blanks after unary
                                                    # minus

                            # Remove underscores between digits.
                            $part =~ s/( ?<= [0-9] ) _ (?= [0-9] ) //xg;

                            # No leading zeros (but don't make a single '0'
                            # into a null string)
                            $part =~ s/ ^ ( -? ) 0+ /$1/x;
                            $part .= '0' if $part eq '-' || $part eq "";

                            # No trailing zeros after a decimal point
                            $part =~ s/ ( \. .*? ) 0+ $ /$1/x;

                            # Begin with a 0 if a leading decimal point
                            $part =~ s/ ^ ( -? ) \. /${1}0./x;

                            # Ensure not a trailing decimal point: turn into an
                            # integer
                            $part =~ s/ \. $ //x;

                            print STDERR __LINE__, ": part=$part\n" if DEBUG;
                            #return $type if $part eq "";
                            
                            # Result better look like a number.  (This test is
                            # needed because, for example could have a plus in
                            # the middle.)
                            if ($part !~ / ^ -? [0-9]+ ( \. [0-9]+)? $ /x) {
                                pop @recursed if @recursed;
                                return $type;
                            }
                        }

                        #  If a rational...
                        if (@parts == 2) {

                            # If denominator is negative, get rid of it, and ...
                            if ($parts[1] =~ s/^-//) {

                                # If numerator is also negative, convert the
                                # whole thing to positive, or move the minus to
                                # the numerator
                                if ($parts[0] !~ s/^-//) {
                                    $parts[0] = '-' . $parts[0];
                                }
                            }
                            $table = join '/', @parts;
                        }
                        elsif ($property ne 'nv' || $parts[0] !~ /\./) {

                            # Here is not numeric value, or doesn't have a
                            # decimal point.  No further manipulation is
                            # necessary.  (Note the hard-coded property name.
                            # This could fail if other properties eventually
                            # had fractions as well; perhaps the cjk ones
                            # could evolve to do that.  This hard-coding could
                            # be fixed by mktables generating a list of
                            # properties that could have fractions.)
                            $table = $parts[0];
                        } else {

                            # Here is a floating point numeric_value.  Try to
                            # convert to rational.  First see if is in the list
                            # of known ones.
                            if (exists $utf8::nv_floating_to_rational{$parts[0]}) {
                                $table = $utf8::nv_floating_to_rational{$parts[0]};
                            } else {

                                # Here not in the list.  See if is close
                                # enough to something in the list.  First
                                # determine what 'close enough' means.  It has
                                # to be as tight as what mktables says is the
                                # maximum slop, and as tight as how many
                                # digits we were passed.  That is, if the user
                                # said .667, .6667, .66667, etc.  we match as
                                # many digits as they passed until get to
                                # where it doesn't matter any more due to the
                                # machine's precision.  If they said .6666668,
                                # we fail.
                                (my $fraction = $parts[0]) =~ s/^.*\.//;
                                my $epsilon = 10 ** - (length($fraction));
                                if ($epsilon > $utf8::max_floating_slop) {
                                    $epsilon = $utf8::max_floating_slop;
                                }

                                # But it can't be tighter than the minimum
                                # precision for this machine.  If haven't
                                # already calculated that minimum, do so now.
                                if (! defined $min_floating_slop) {

                                    # Keep going down an order of magnitude
                                    # until find that adding this quantity to
                                    # 1 remains 1; but put an upper limit on
                                    # this so in case this algorithm doesn't
                                    # work properly on some platform, that we
                                    # won't loop forever.
                                    my $count = 0;
                                    $min_floating_slop = 1;
                                    while (1+ $min_floating_slop != 1
                                           && $count++ < 50)
                                    {
                                        my $next = $min_floating_slop / 10;
                                        last if $next == 0; # If underflows,
                                                            # use previous one
                                        $min_floating_slop = $next;
                                        print STDERR __LINE__, ": min_float_slop=$min_floating_slop\n" if DEBUG;
                                    }

                                    # Back off a couple orders of magnitude,
                                    # just to be safe.
                                    $min_floating_slop *= 100;
                                }
                                    
                                if ($epsilon < $min_floating_slop) {
                                    $epsilon = $min_floating_slop;
                                }
                                print STDERR __LINE__, ": fraction=.$fraction; epsilon=$epsilon\n" if DEBUG;

                                undef $table;

                                # And for each possible rational in the table,
                                # see if it is within epsilon of the input.
                                foreach my $official
                                        (keys %utf8::nv_floating_to_rational)
                                {
                                    print STDERR __LINE__, ": epsilon=$epsilon, official=$official, diff=", abs($parts[0] - $official), "\n" if DEBUG;
                                    if (abs($parts[0] - $official) < $epsilon) {
                                      $table =
                                      $utf8::nv_floating_to_rational{$official};
                                        last;
                                    }
                                }

                                # Quit if didn't find one.
                                if (! defined $table) {
                                    pop @recursed if @recursed;
                                    return $type;
                                }
                            }
                        }
                        print STDERR __LINE__, ": $property=$table\n" if DEBUG;
                    }
                }

                # Combine lhs (if any) and rhs to get something that matches
                # the syntax of the lookups.
                $property_and_table = "$prefix$table";
                print STDERR __LINE__, ": $property_and_table\n" if DEBUG;

                # First try stricter matching.
                $file = $utf8::stricter_to_file_of{$property_and_table};

                # If didn't find it, try again with looser matching by editing
                # out the applicable characters on the rhs and looking up
                # again.
                if (! defined $file) {
                    $table = _loose_name($table);
                    $property_and_table = "$prefix$table";
                    print STDERR __LINE__, ": $property_and_table\n" if DEBUG;
                    $file = $utf8::loose_to_file_of{$property_and_table};
                }

                # Add the constant and go fetch it in.
                if (defined $file) {

                    # A beginning ! means to invert.  The 0+ makes sure is
                    # numeric
                    $invert_it = 0 + $file =~ s/^!//;

                    if ($utf8::why_deprecated{$file}) {
                        warnings::warnif('deprecated', "Use of '$type' in \\p{} or \\P{} is deprecated because: $utf8::why_deprecated{$file};");
                    }

                    if ($caseless
                        && exists $utf8::caseless_equivalent{$property_and_table})
                    {
                        $file = $utf8::caseless_equivalent{$property_and_table};
                    }
                    $file= "$unicore_dir/lib/$file.pl";
                    last GETFILE;
                }
                print STDERR __LINE__, ": didn't find $property_and_table\n" if DEBUG;

                ##
                ## Last attempt -- see if it's a standard "To" name
                ## (e.g. "ToLower")  ToTitle is used by ucfirst().
                ## The user-level way to access ToDigit() and ToFold()
                ## is to use Unicode::UCD.
                ##
                # Only check if caller wants non-binary
                my $retried = 0;
                if ($minbits != 1 && $property_and_table =~ s/^to//) {{
                    # Look input up in list of properties for which we have
                    # mapping files.
                    if (defined ($file =
                          $utf8::loose_property_to_file_of{$property_and_table}))
                    {
                        $type = $utf8::file_to_swash_name{$file};
                        print STDERR __LINE__, ": type set to $type\n" if DEBUG;
                        $file = "$unicore_dir/$file.pl";
                        last GETFILE;
                    }   # If that fails see if there is a corresponding binary
                        # property file
                    elsif (defined ($file =
                                   $utf8::loose_to_file_of{$property_and_table}))
                    {

                        # Here, there is no map file for the property we are
                        # trying to get the map of, but this is a binary
                        # property, and there is a file for it that can easily
                        # be translated to a mapping.

                        # In the case of properties that are forced to binary,
                        # they are a combination.  We return the actual
                        # mapping instead of the binary.  If the input is
                        # something like 'Tocjkkiicore', it will be found in
                        # %loose_property_to_file_of above as => 'To/kIICore'.
                        # But the form like ToIskiicore won't be.  To fix
                        # this, it was easiest to do it here.  These
                        # properties are the complements of the default
                        # property, so there is an entry in %loose_to_file_of
                        # that is 'iskiicore' => '!kIICore/N', If we find such
                        # an entry, strip off things and try again, which
                        # should find the entry in %loose_property_to_file_of.
                        # Actual binary properties that are of this form, such
                        # as this entry: 'ishrkt' => '!Perl/Any' will also be
                        # retried, but won't be in %loose_property_to_file_of,
                        # and instead the next time through, it will find
                        # 'hrkt' => '!Perl/Any' and proceed.
                        redo if ! $retried
                                && $file =~ /^!/
                                && $property_and_table =~ s/^is//;

                        # This is a binary property.  Setting this here causes
                        # it to be stored as such in the cache, so if someone
                        # comes along later looking for just a binary, they
                        # get it.
                        $minbits = 1;

                        # The 0+ makes sure is numeric
                        $invert_it = 0 + $file =~ s/^!//;
                        $file = "$unicore_dir/lib/$file.pl";
                        last GETFILE;
                    }
                } }

                ##
                ## If we reach this line, it's because we couldn't figure
                ## out what to do with $type. Ouch.
                ##

                pop @recursed if @recursed;
                return $type;
            } # end of GETFILE block

            if (defined $file) {
                print STDERR __LINE__, ": found it (file='$file')\n" if DEBUG;

                ##
                ## If we reach here, it was due to a 'last GETFILE' above
                ## (exception: user-defined properties and mappings), so we
                ## have a filename, so now we load it if we haven't already.
                ## If we have, return the cached results. The cache key is the
                ## class and file to load, and whether the results need to be
                ## inverted.
                ##
                my $found = $Cache{$class, $file, $invert_it};
                if ($found and ref($found) eq $class) {
                    print STDERR __LINE__, ": Returning cached swash for '$class,$file,$invert_it' for \\p{$type}\n" if DEBUG;
                    pop @recursed if @recursed;
                    return $found;
                }

                local $@;
                local $!;
                $list = do $file; die $@ if $@;
                $list_is_from_mktables = 1;
            }
        } # End of $type is non-null

        # Here, either $type was null, or we found the requested property and
        # read it into $list

        my $extras = "";

        my $bits = $minbits;

        # mktables lists don't have extras, like '&utf8::prop', so don't need
        # to separate them; also lists are already sorted, so don't need to do
        # that.
        if ($list && ! $list_is_from_mktables) {
            my $taint = substr($list,0,0); # maintain taint

            # Separate the extras from the code point list, and for
            # user-defined properties, make sure the latter are well-behaved
            # for downstream code.
            if ($user_defined) {
                my @tmp = split(/^/m, $list);
                my %seen;
                no warnings;

                # The extras are anything that doesn't begin with a hex digit.
                $extras = join '', $taint, grep /^[^0-9a-fA-F]/, @tmp;

                # Remove the extras, and sort the remaining entries by the
                # numeric value of their beginning hex digits, removing any
                # duplicates.
                $list = join '', $taint,
                        map  { $_->[1] }
                        sort { $a->[0] <=> $b->[0] }
                        map  { /^([0-9a-fA-F]+)/; [ CORE::hex($1), $_ ] }
                        grep { /^([0-9a-fA-F]+)/ and not $seen{$1}++ } @tmp; # XXX doesn't do ranges right
            }
            else {
                # mktables has gone to some trouble to make non-user defined
                # properties well-behaved, so we can skip the effort we do for
                # user-defined ones.  Any extras are at the very beginning of
                # the string.

                # This regex splits out the first lines of $list into $1 and
                # strips them off from $list, until we get one that begins
                # with a hex number, alone on the line, or followed by a tab.
                # Either portion may be empty.
                $list =~ s/ \A ( .*? )
                            (?: \z | (?= ^ [0-9a-fA-F]+ (?: \t | $) ) )
                          //msx;

                $extras = "$taint$1";
            }
        }

        if ($none) {
            my $hextra = sprintf "%04x", $none + 1;
            $list =~ s/\tXXXX$/\t$hextra/mg;
        }

        if ($minbits != 1 && $minbits < 32) { # not binary property
            my $top = 0;
            while ($list =~ /^([0-9a-fA-F]+)(?:[\t]([0-9a-fA-F]+)?)(?:[ \t]([0-9a-fA-F]+))?/mg) {
                my $min = CORE::hex $1;
                my $max = defined $2 ? CORE::hex $2 : $min;
                my $val = defined $3 ? CORE::hex $3 : 0;
                $val += $max - $min if defined $3;
                $top = $val if $val > $top;
            }
            my $topbits =
                $top > 0xffff ? 32 :
                $top > 0xff ? 16 : 8;
            $bits = $topbits if $bits < $topbits;
        }

        my @extras;
        if ($extras) {
            for my $x ($extras) {
                my $taint = substr($x,0,0); # maintain taint
                pos $x = 0;
                while ($x =~ /^([^0-9a-fA-F\n])(.*)/mg) {
                    my $char = "$1$taint";
                    my $name = "$2$taint";
                    print STDERR __LINE__, ": char [$char] => name [$name]\n"
                        if DEBUG;
                    if ($char =~ /[-+!&]/) {
                        my ($c,$t) = split(/::/, $name, 2);	# bogus use of ::, really
                        my $subobj;
                        if ($c eq 'utf8') {
                            $subobj = utf8->SWASHNEW($t, "", $minbits, 0);
                        }
                        elsif (exists &$name) {
                            $subobj = utf8->SWASHNEW($name, "", $minbits, 0);
                        }
                        elsif ($c =~ /^([0-9a-fA-F]+)/) {
                            $subobj = utf8->SWASHNEW("", $c, $minbits, 0);
                        }
                        print STDERR __LINE__, ": returned from getting sub object for $name\n" if DEBUG;
                        if (! ref $subobj) {
                            pop @recursed if @recursed && $type;
                            return $subobj;
                        }
                        push @extras, $name => $subobj;
                        $bits = $subobj->{BITS} if $bits < $subobj->{BITS};
                        $user_defined = $subobj->{USER_DEFINED}
                                              if $subobj->{USER_DEFINED};
                    }
                }
            }
        }

        if (DEBUG) {
            print STDERR __LINE__, ": CLASS = $class, TYPE => $type, BITS => $bits, NONE => $none, INVERT_IT => $invert_it, USER_DEFINED => $user_defined";
            print STDERR "\nLIST =>\n$list" if defined $list;
            print STDERR "\nEXTRAS =>\n$extras" if defined $extras;
            print STDERR "\n";
        }

        my $SWASH = bless {
            TYPE => $type,
            BITS => $bits,
            EXTRAS => $extras,
            LIST => $list,
            NONE => $none,
            USER_DEFINED => $user_defined,
            @extras,
        } => $class;

        if ($file) {
            $Cache{$class, $file, $invert_it} = $SWASH;
            if ($type
                && exists $utf8::SwashInfo{$type}
                && exists $utf8::SwashInfo{$type}{'specials_name'})
            {
                my $specials_name = $utf8::SwashInfo{$type}{'specials_name'};
                no strict "refs";
                print STDERR "\nspecials_name => $specials_name\n" if DEBUG;
                $SWASH->{'SPECIALS'} = \%$specials_name;
            }
            $SWASH->{'INVERT_IT'} = $invert_it;
        }

        pop @recursed if @recursed && $type;

        return $SWASH;
    }
}

# Now SWASHGET is recasted into a C function S_swatch_get (see utf8.c).

1;