| /* |
| * "$Id: fl_utf.c 8585 2011-04-13 15:43:22Z ianmacarthur $" |
| * |
| * This is the utf.c file from fltk2 adapted for use in my fltk1.1 port |
| */ |
| /* Copyright 2006-2011 by Bill Spitzak and others. |
| * |
| * This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or |
| * modify it under the terms of the GNU Library General Public |
| * License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either |
| * version 2 of the License, or (at your option) any later version. |
| * |
| * This library is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, |
| * but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of |
| * MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU |
| * Library General Public License for more details. |
| * |
| * You should have received a copy of the GNU Library General Public |
| * License along with this library; if not, write to the Free Software |
| * Foundation, Inc., 59 Temple Place, Suite 330, Boston, MA 02111-1307 |
| * USA. |
| * |
| * Please report all bugs and problems on the following page: |
| * |
| * http://www.fltk.org/str.php |
| */ |
| |
| /* Modified to obey rfc3629, which limits unicode to 0-0x10ffff */ |
| |
| #include <FL/fl_utf8.h> |
| #include <string.h> |
| #include <stdlib.h> |
| |
| /** \addtogroup fl_unicode |
| @{ |
| */ |
| |
| |
| #if 0 |
| /** |
| \defgroup fl_unichar Unicode Character Functions |
| Global Functions Handling Single Unicode Characters |
| @{ */ |
| |
| /** |
| Converts a Unicode character into a utf-8 sequence. |
| \param[in] uc Unicode character |
| \param[out] text utf-8 sequence will be written here; if this pointer is |
| \c NULL, only the length of the utf-8 sequence is calculated |
| \return length of the sequence in bytes |
| */ |
| /* FL_EXPORT int fl_unichar_to_utf8(unsigned int uc, char *text); */ |
| |
| /** @} */ |
| |
| /** |
| \defgroup fl_utf8 Unicode String Functions |
| Global Functions Handling Unicode Text |
| @{ */ |
| |
| /** |
| Calculate the size of a utf-8 sequence for a Unicode character. |
| \param[in] uc Unicode character |
| \return length of the sequence in bytes |
| */ |
| /* FL_EXPORT int fl_utf8_size(unsigned int uc); */ |
| |
| /** @} */ |
| #endif /* 0 */ |
| |
| /*!Set to 1 to turn bad UTF8 bytes into ISO-8859-1. If this is to zero |
| they are instead turned into the Unicode REPLACEMENT CHARACTER, of |
| value 0xfffd. |
| If this is on fl_utf8decode() will correctly map most (perhaps all) |
| human-readable text that is in ISO-8859-1. This may allow you |
| to completely ignore character sets in your code because virtually |
| everything is either ISO-8859-1 or UTF-8. |
| */ |
| #define ERRORS_TO_ISO8859_1 1 |
| |
| /*!Set to 1 to turn bad UTF8 bytes in the 0x80-0x9f range into the |
| Unicode index for Microsoft's CP1252 character set. You should |
| also set ERRORS_TO_ISO8859_1. With this a huge amount of more |
| available text (such as all web pages) are correctly converted |
| to Unicode. |
| */ |
| #define ERRORS_TO_CP1252 1 |
| |
| /*!A number of Unicode code points are in fact illegal and should not |
| be produced by a UTF-8 converter. Turn this on will replace the |
| bytes in those encodings with errors. If you do this then converting |
| arbitrary 16-bit data to UTF-8 and then back is not an identity, |
| which will probably break a lot of software. |
| */ |
| #define STRICT_RFC3629 0 |
| |
| #if ERRORS_TO_CP1252 |
| /* Codes 0x80..0x9f from the Microsoft CP1252 character set, translated |
| * to Unicode: |
| */ |
| static unsigned short cp1252[32] = { |
| 0x20ac, 0x0081, 0x201a, 0x0192, 0x201e, 0x2026, 0x2020, 0x2021, |
| 0x02c6, 0x2030, 0x0160, 0x2039, 0x0152, 0x008d, 0x017d, 0x008f, |
| 0x0090, 0x2018, 0x2019, 0x201c, 0x201d, 0x2022, 0x2013, 0x2014, |
| 0x02dc, 0x2122, 0x0161, 0x203a, 0x0153, 0x009d, 0x017e, 0x0178 |
| }; |
| #endif |
| |
| /*! Decode a single UTF-8 encoded character starting at \e p. The |
| resulting Unicode value (in the range 0-0x10ffff) is returned, |
| and \e len is set to the number of bytes in the UTF-8 encoding |
| (adding \e len to \e p will point at the next character). |
| |
| If \p p points at an illegal UTF-8 encoding, including one that |
| would go past \e end, or where a code is uses more bytes than |
| necessary, then *(unsigned char*)p is translated as though it is |
| in the Microsoft CP1252 character set and \e len is set to 1. |
| Treating errors this way allows this to decode almost any |
| ISO-8859-1 or CP1252 text that has been mistakenly placed where |
| UTF-8 is expected, and has proven very useful. |
| |
| If you want errors to be converted to error characters (as the |
| standards recommend), adding a test to see if the length is |
| unexpectedly 1 will work: |
| |
| \code |
| if (*p & 0x80) { // what should be a multibyte encoding |
| code = fl_utf8decode(p,end,&len); |
| if (len<2) code = 0xFFFD; // Turn errors into REPLACEMENT CHARACTER |
| } else { // handle the 1-byte utf8 encoding: |
| code = *p; |
| len = 1; |
| } |
| \endcode |
| |
| Direct testing for the 1-byte case (as shown above) will also |
| speed up the scanning of strings where the majority of characters |
| are ASCII. |
| */ |
| unsigned fl_utf8decode(const char* p, const char* end, int* len) |
| { |
| unsigned char c = *(unsigned char*)p; |
| if (c < 0x80) { |
| if (len) *len = 1; |
| return c; |
| #if ERRORS_TO_CP1252 |
| } else if (c < 0xa0) { |
| if (len) *len = 1; |
| return cp1252[c-0x80]; |
| #endif |
| } else if (c < 0xc2) { |
| goto FAIL; |
| } |
| if ( (end && p+1 >= end) || (p[1]&0xc0) != 0x80) goto FAIL; |
| if (c < 0xe0) { |
| if (len) *len = 2; |
| return |
| ((p[0] & 0x1f) << 6) + |
| ((p[1] & 0x3f)); |
| } else if (c == 0xe0) { |
| if (((unsigned char*)p)[1] < 0xa0) goto FAIL; |
| goto UTF8_3; |
| #if STRICT_RFC3629 |
| } else if (c == 0xed) { |
| /* RFC 3629 says surrogate chars are illegal. */ |
| if (((unsigned char*)p)[1] >= 0xa0) goto FAIL; |
| goto UTF8_3; |
| } else if (c == 0xef) { |
| /* 0xfffe and 0xffff are also illegal characters */ |
| if (((unsigned char*)p)[1]==0xbf && |
| ((unsigned char*)p)[2]>=0xbe) goto FAIL; |
| goto UTF8_3; |
| #endif |
| } else if (c < 0xf0) { |
| UTF8_3: |
| if ( (end && p+2 >= end) || (p[2]&0xc0) != 0x80) goto FAIL; |
| if (len) *len = 3; |
| return |
| ((p[0] & 0x0f) << 12) + |
| ((p[1] & 0x3f) << 6) + |
| ((p[2] & 0x3f)); |
| } else if (c == 0xf0) { |
| if (((unsigned char*)p)[1] < 0x90) goto FAIL; |
| goto UTF8_4; |
| } else if (c < 0xf4) { |
| UTF8_4: |
| if ( (end && p+3 >= end) || (p[2]&0xc0) != 0x80 || (p[3]&0xc0) != 0x80) goto FAIL; |
| if (len) *len = 4; |
| #if STRICT_RFC3629 |
| /* RFC 3629 says all codes ending in fffe or ffff are illegal: */ |
| if ((p[1]&0xf)==0xf && |
| ((unsigned char*)p)[2] == 0xbf && |
| ((unsigned char*)p)[3] >= 0xbe) goto FAIL; |
| #endif |
| return |
| ((p[0] & 0x07) << 18) + |
| ((p[1] & 0x3f) << 12) + |
| ((p[2] & 0x3f) << 6) + |
| ((p[3] & 0x3f)); |
| } else if (c == 0xf4) { |
| if (((unsigned char*)p)[1] > 0x8f) goto FAIL; /* after 0x10ffff */ |
| goto UTF8_4; |
| } else { |
| FAIL: |
| if (len) *len = 1; |
| #if ERRORS_TO_ISO8859_1 |
| return c; |
| #else |
| return 0xfffd; /* Unicode REPLACEMENT CHARACTER */ |
| #endif |
| } |
| } |
| |
| /*! Move \p p forward until it points to the start of a UTF-8 |
| character. If it already points at the start of one then it |
| is returned unchanged. Any UTF-8 errors are treated as though each |
| byte of the error is an individual character. |
| |
| \e start is the start of the string and is used to limit the |
| backwards search for the start of a utf8 character. |
| |
| \e end is the end of the string and is assumed to be a break |
| between characters. It is assumed to be greater than p. |
| |
| This function is for moving a pointer that was jumped to the |
| middle of a string, such as when doing a binary search for |
| a position. You should use either this or fl_utf8back() depending |
| on which direction your algorithim can handle the pointer |
| moving. Do not use this to scan strings, use fl_utf8decode() |
| instead. |
| */ |
| const char* fl_utf8fwd(const char* p, const char* start, const char* end) |
| { |
| const char* a; |
| int len; |
| /* if we are not pointing at a continuation character, we are done: */ |
| if ((*p&0xc0) != 0x80) return p; |
| /* search backwards for a 0xc0 starting the character: */ |
| for (a = p-1; ; --a) { |
| if (a < start) return p; |
| if (!(a[0]&0x80)) return p; |
| if ((a[0]&0x40)) break; |
| } |
| fl_utf8decode(a,end,&len); |
| a += len; |
| if (a > p) return a; |
| return p; |
| } |
| |
| /*! Move \p p backward until it points to the start of a UTF-8 |
| character. If it already points at the start of one then it |
| is returned unchanged. Any UTF-8 errors are treated as though each |
| byte of the error is an individual character. |
| |
| \e start is the start of the string and is used to limit the |
| backwards search for the start of a UTF-8 character. |
| |
| \e end is the end of the string and is assumed to be a break |
| between characters. It is assumed to be greater than p. |
| |
| If you wish to decrement a UTF-8 pointer, pass p-1 to this. |
| */ |
| const char* fl_utf8back(const char* p, const char* start, const char* end) |
| { |
| const char* a; |
| int len; |
| /* if we are not pointing at a continuation character, we are done: */ |
| if ((*p&0xc0) != 0x80) return p; |
| /* search backwards for a 0xc0 starting the character: */ |
| for (a = p-1; ; --a) { |
| if (a < start) return p; |
| if (!(a[0]&0x80)) return p; |
| if ((a[0]&0x40)) break; |
| } |
| fl_utf8decode(a,end,&len); |
| if (a+len > p) return a; |
| return p; |
| } |
| |
| /*! Returns number of bytes that utf8encode() will use to encode the |
| character \p ucs. */ |
| int fl_utf8bytes(unsigned ucs) { |
| if (ucs < 0x000080U) { |
| return 1; |
| } else if (ucs < 0x000800U) { |
| return 2; |
| } else if (ucs < 0x010000U) { |
| return 3; |
| } else if (ucs <= 0x10ffffU) { |
| return 4; |
| } else { |
| return 3; /* length of the illegal character encoding */ |
| } |
| } |
| |
| /*! Write the UTF-8 encoding of \e ucs into \e buf and return the |
| number of bytes written. Up to 4 bytes may be written. If you know |
| that \p ucs is less than 0x10000 then at most 3 bytes will be written. |
| If you wish to speed this up, remember that anything less than 0x80 |
| is written as a single byte. |
| |
| If ucs is greater than 0x10ffff this is an illegal character |
| according to RFC 3629. These are converted as though they are |
| 0xFFFD (REPLACEMENT CHARACTER). |
| |
| RFC 3629 also says many other values for \p ucs are illegal (in |
| the range 0xd800 to 0xdfff, or ending with 0xfffe or |
| 0xffff). However I encode these as though they are legal, so that |
| utf8encode/fl_utf8decode will be the identity for all codes between 0 |
| and 0x10ffff. |
| */ |
| int fl_utf8encode(unsigned ucs, char* buf) { |
| if (ucs < 0x000080U) { |
| buf[0] = ucs; |
| return 1; |
| } else if (ucs < 0x000800U) { |
| buf[0] = 0xc0 | (ucs >> 6); |
| buf[1] = 0x80 | (ucs & 0x3F); |
| return 2; |
| } else if (ucs < 0x010000U) { |
| buf[0] = 0xe0 | (ucs >> 12); |
| buf[1] = 0x80 | ((ucs >> 6) & 0x3F); |
| buf[2] = 0x80 | (ucs & 0x3F); |
| return 3; |
| } else if (ucs <= 0x0010ffffU) { |
| buf[0] = 0xf0 | (ucs >> 18); |
| buf[1] = 0x80 | ((ucs >> 12) & 0x3F); |
| buf[2] = 0x80 | ((ucs >> 6) & 0x3F); |
| buf[3] = 0x80 | (ucs & 0x3F); |
| return 4; |
| } else { |
| /* encode 0xfffd: */ |
| buf[0] = 0xefU; |
| buf[1] = 0xbfU; |
| buf[2] = 0xbdU; |
| return 3; |
| } |
| } |
| |
| /*! Convert a single 32-bit Unicode codepoint into an array of 16-bit |
| characters. These are used by some system calls, especially on Windows. |
| |
| \p ucs is the value to convert. |
| |
| \p dst points at an array to write, and \p dstlen is the number of |
| locations in this array. At most \p dstlen words will be |
| written, and a 0 terminating word will be added if \p dstlen is |
| large enough. Thus this function will never overwrite the buffer |
| and will attempt return a zero-terminated string if space permits. |
| If \p dstlen is zero then \p dst can be set to NULL and no data |
| is written, but the length is returned. |
| |
| The return value is the number of 16-bit words that \e would be written |
| to \p dst if it is large enough, not counting any terminating |
| zero. |
| |
| If the return value is greater than \p dstlen it indicates truncation, |
| you should then allocate a new array of size return+1 and call this again. |
| |
| Unicode characters in the range 0x10000 to 0x10ffff are converted to |
| "surrogate pairs" which take two words each (in UTF-16 encoding). |
| Typically, setting \p dstlen to 2 will ensure that any valid Unicode |
| value can be converted, and setting \p dstlen to 3 or more will allow |
| a NULL terminated sequence to be returned. |
| */ |
| unsigned fl_ucs_to_Utf16(const unsigned ucs, unsigned short *dst, const unsigned dstlen) |
| { |
| /* The rule for direct conversion from UCS to UTF16 is: |
| * - if UCS > 0x0010FFFF then UCS is invalid |
| * - if UCS >= 0xD800 && UCS <= 0xDFFF UCS is invalid |
| * - if UCS <= 0x0000FFFF then U16 = UCS, len = 1 |
| * - else |
| * -- U16[0] = ((UCS - 0x00010000) >> 10) & 0x3FF + 0xD800 |
| * -- U16[1] = (UCS & 0x3FF) + 0xDC00 |
| * -- len = 2; |
| */ |
| unsigned count; /* Count of converted UTF16 cells */ |
| unsigned short u16[4]; /* Alternate buffer if dst is not set */ |
| unsigned short *out; /* points to the active buffer */ |
| /* Ensure we have a valid buffer to write to */ |
| if((!dstlen) || (!dst)) { |
| out = u16; |
| } else { |
| out = dst; |
| } |
| /* Convert from UCS to UTF16 */ |
| if((ucs > 0x0010FFFF) || /* UCS is too large */ |
| ((ucs > 0xD7FF) && (ucs < 0xE000))) { /* UCS in invalid range */ |
| out[0] = 0xFFFD; /* REPLACEMENT CHARACTER */ |
| count = 1; |
| } else if(ucs < 0x00010000) { |
| out[0] = (unsigned short)ucs; |
| count = 1; |
| } else if(dstlen < 2) { /* dst is too small for the result */ |
| out[0] = 0xFFFD; /* REPLACEMENT CHARACTER */ |
| count = 2; |
| } else { |
| out[0] = (((ucs - 0x00010000) >> 10) & 0x3FF) + 0xD800; |
| out[1] = (ucs & 0x3FF) + 0xDC00; |
| count = 2; |
| } |
| /* NULL terminate the output, if there is space */ |
| if(count < dstlen) { out[count] = 0; } |
| return count; |
| } /* fl_ucs_to_Utf16 */ |
| |
| /*! Convert a UTF-8 sequence into an array of 16-bit characters. These |
| are used by some system calls, especially on Windows. |
| |
| \p src points at the UTF-8, and \p srclen is the number of bytes to |
| convert. |
| |
| \p dst points at an array to write, and \p dstlen is the number of |
| locations in this array. At most \p dstlen-1 words will be |
| written there, plus a 0 terminating word. Thus this function |
| will never overwrite the buffer and will always return a |
| zero-terminated string. If \p dstlen is zero then \p dst can be |
| null and no data is written, but the length is returned. |
| |
| The return value is the number of 16-bit words that \e would be written |
| to \p dst if it were long enough, not counting the terminating |
| zero. If the return value is greater or equal to \p dstlen it |
| indicates truncation, you can then allocate a new array of size |
| return+1 and call this again. |
| |
| Errors in the UTF-8 are converted as though each byte in the |
| erroneous string is in the Microsoft CP1252 encoding. This allows |
| ISO-8859-1 text mistakenly identified as UTF-8 to be printed |
| correctly. |
| |
| Unicode characters in the range 0x10000 to 0x10ffff are converted to |
| "surrogate pairs" which take two words each (this is called UTF-16 |
| encoding). |
| */ |
| unsigned fl_utf8toUtf16(const char* src, unsigned srclen, |
| unsigned short* dst, unsigned dstlen) |
| { |
| const char* p = src; |
| const char* e = src+srclen; |
| unsigned count = 0; |
| if (dstlen) for (;;) { |
| if (p >= e) {dst[count] = 0; return count;} |
| if (!(*p & 0x80)) { /* ascii */ |
| dst[count] = *p++; |
| } else { |
| int len; unsigned ucs = fl_utf8decode(p,e,&len); |
| p += len; |
| if (ucs < 0x10000) { |
| dst[count] = ucs; |
| } else { |
| /* make a surrogate pair: */ |
| if (count+2 >= dstlen) {dst[count] = 0; count += 2; break;} |
| dst[count] = (((ucs-0x10000u)>>10)&0x3ff) | 0xd800; |
| dst[++count] = (ucs&0x3ff) | 0xdc00; |
| } |
| } |
| if (++count == dstlen) {dst[count-1] = 0; break;} |
| } |
| /* we filled dst, measure the rest: */ |
| while (p < e) { |
| if (!(*p & 0x80)) p++; |
| else { |
| int len; unsigned ucs = fl_utf8decode(p,e,&len); |
| p += len; |
| if (ucs >= 0x10000) ++count; |
| } |
| ++count; |
| } |
| return count; |
| } |
| |
| |
| /** |
| Converts a UTF-8 string into a wide character string. |
| |
| This function generates 32-bit wchar_t (e.g. "ucs4" as it were) except |
| on Windows where it is equivalent to fl_utf8toUtf16 and returns |
| UTF-16. |
| |
| \p src points at the UTF-8, and \p srclen is the number of bytes to |
| convert. |
| |
| \p dst points at an array to write, and \p dstlen is the number of |
| locations in this array. At most \p dstlen-1 wchar_t will be |
| written there, plus a 0 terminating wchar_t. |
| |
| The return value is the number of wchar_t that \e would be written |
| to \p dst if it were long enough, not counting the terminating |
| zero. If the return value is greater or equal to \p dstlen it |
| indicates truncation, you can then allocate a new array of size |
| return+1 and call this again. |
| |
| Notice that sizeof(wchar_t) is 2 on Windows and is 4 on Linux |
| and most other systems. Where wchar_t is 16 bits, Unicode |
| characters in the range 0x10000 to 0x10ffff are converted to |
| "surrogate pairs" which take two words each (this is called UTF-16 |
| encoding). If wchar_t is 32 bits this rather nasty problem is |
| avoided. |
| |
| Note that Windows includes Cygwin, i.e. compiled with Cygwin's POSIX |
| layer (cygwin1.dll, --enable-cygwin), either native (GDI) or X11. |
| */ |
| unsigned fl_utf8towc(const char* src, unsigned srclen, |
| wchar_t* dst, unsigned dstlen) |
| { |
| #if defined(WIN32) || defined(__CYGWIN__) |
| return fl_utf8toUtf16(src, srclen, (unsigned short*)dst, dstlen); |
| #else |
| const char* p = src; |
| const char* e = src+srclen; |
| unsigned count = 0; |
| if (dstlen) for (;;) { |
| if (p >= e) { |
| dst[count] = 0; |
| return count; |
| } |
| if (!(*p & 0x80)) { /* ascii */ |
| dst[count] = *p++; |
| } else { |
| int len; unsigned ucs = fl_utf8decode(p,e,&len); |
| p += len; |
| dst[count] = (wchar_t)ucs; |
| } |
| if (++count == dstlen) {dst[count-1] = 0; break;} |
| } |
| /* we filled dst, measure the rest: */ |
| while (p < e) { |
| if (!(*p & 0x80)) p++; |
| else { |
| int len; fl_utf8decode(p,e,&len); |
| p += len; |
| } |
| ++count; |
| } |
| return count; |
| #endif |
| } |
| |
| /*! Convert a UTF-8 sequence into an array of 1-byte characters. |
| |
| If the UTF-8 decodes to a character greater than 0xff then it is |
| replaced with '?'. |
| |
| Errors in the UTF-8 are converted as individual bytes, same as |
| fl_utf8decode() does. This allows ISO-8859-1 text mistakenly identified |
| as UTF-8 to be printed correctly (and possibly CP1512 on Windows). |
| |
| \p src points at the UTF-8, and \p srclen is the number of bytes to |
| convert. |
| |
| Up to \p dstlen bytes are written to \p dst, including a null |
| terminator. The return value is the number of bytes that would be |
| written, not counting the null terminator. If greater or equal to |
| \p dstlen then if you malloc a new array of size n+1 you will have |
| the space needed for the entire string. If \p dstlen is zero then |
| nothing is written and this call just measures the storage space |
| needed. |
| */ |
| unsigned fl_utf8toa(const char* src, unsigned srclen, |
| char* dst, unsigned dstlen) |
| { |
| const char* p = src; |
| const char* e = src+srclen; |
| unsigned count = 0; |
| if (dstlen) for (;;) { |
| unsigned char c; |
| if (p >= e) {dst[count] = 0; return count;} |
| c = *(unsigned char*)p; |
| if (c < 0xC2) { /* ascii or bad code */ |
| dst[count] = c; |
| p++; |
| } else { |
| int len; unsigned ucs = fl_utf8decode(p,e,&len); |
| p += len; |
| if (ucs < 0x100) dst[count] = ucs; |
| else dst[count] = '?'; |
| } |
| if (++count >= dstlen) {dst[count-1] = 0; break;} |
| } |
| /* we filled dst, measure the rest: */ |
| while (p < e) { |
| if (!(*p & 0x80)) p++; |
| else { |
| int len; |
| fl_utf8decode(p,e,&len); |
| p += len; |
| } |
| ++count; |
| } |
| return count; |
| } |
| |
| /*! Turn "wide characters" as returned by some system calls |
| (especially on Windows) into UTF-8. |
| |
| Up to \p dstlen bytes are written to \p dst, including a null |
| terminator. The return value is the number of bytes that would be |
| written, not counting the null terminator. If greater or equal to |
| \p dstlen then if you malloc a new array of size n+1 you will have |
| the space needed for the entire string. If \p dstlen is zero then |
| nothing is written and this call just measures the storage space |
| needed. |
| |
| \p srclen is the number of words in \p src to convert. On Windows |
| this is not necessarily the number of characters, due to there |
| possibly being "surrogate pairs" in the UTF-16 encoding used. |
| On Unix wchar_t is 32 bits and each location is a character. |
| |
| On Unix if a \p src word is greater than 0x10ffff then this is an |
| illegal character according to RFC 3629. These are converted as |
| though they are 0xFFFD (REPLACEMENT CHARACTER). Characters in the |
| range 0xd800 to 0xdfff, or ending with 0xfffe or 0xffff are also |
| illegal according to RFC 3629. However I encode these as though |
| they are legal, so that fl_utf8towc will return the original data. |
| |
| On Windows "surrogate pairs" are converted to a single character |
| and UTF-8 encoded (as 4 bytes). Mismatched halves of surrogate |
| pairs are converted as though they are individual characters. |
| */ |
| unsigned fl_utf8fromwc(char* dst, unsigned dstlen, |
| const wchar_t* src, unsigned srclen) { |
| unsigned i = 0; |
| unsigned count = 0; |
| if (dstlen) for (;;) { |
| unsigned ucs; |
| if (i >= srclen) {dst[count] = 0; return count;} |
| ucs = src[i++]; |
| if (ucs < 0x80U) { |
| dst[count++] = ucs; |
| if (count >= dstlen) {dst[count-1] = 0; break;} |
| } else if (ucs < 0x800U) { /* 2 bytes */ |
| if (count+2 >= dstlen) {dst[count] = 0; count += 2; break;} |
| dst[count++] = 0xc0 | (ucs >> 6); |
| dst[count++] = 0x80 | (ucs & 0x3F); |
| #if defined(WIN32) || defined(__CYGWIN__) |
| } else if (ucs >= 0xd800 && ucs <= 0xdbff && i < srclen && |
| src[i] >= 0xdc00 && src[i] <= 0xdfff) { |
| /* surrogate pair */ |
| unsigned ucs2 = src[i++]; |
| ucs = 0x10000U + ((ucs&0x3ff)<<10) + (ucs2&0x3ff); |
| /* all surrogate pairs turn into 4-byte utf8 */ |
| #else |
| } else if (ucs >= 0x10000) { |
| if (ucs > 0x10ffff) { |
| ucs = 0xfffd; |
| goto J1; |
| } |
| #endif |
| if (count+4 >= dstlen) {dst[count] = 0; count += 4; break;} |
| dst[count++] = 0xf0 | (ucs >> 18); |
| dst[count++] = 0x80 | ((ucs >> 12) & 0x3F); |
| dst[count++] = 0x80 | ((ucs >> 6) & 0x3F); |
| dst[count++] = 0x80 | (ucs & 0x3F); |
| } else { |
| #if !(defined(WIN32) || defined(__CYGWIN__)) |
| J1: |
| #endif |
| /* all others are 3 bytes: */ |
| if (count+3 >= dstlen) {dst[count] = 0; count += 3; break;} |
| dst[count++] = 0xe0 | (ucs >> 12); |
| dst[count++] = 0x80 | ((ucs >> 6) & 0x3F); |
| dst[count++] = 0x80 | (ucs & 0x3F); |
| } |
| } |
| /* we filled dst, measure the rest: */ |
| while (i < srclen) { |
| unsigned ucs = src[i++]; |
| if (ucs < 0x80U) { |
| count++; |
| } else if (ucs < 0x800U) { /* 2 bytes */ |
| count += 2; |
| #if defined(WIN32) || defined(__CYGWIN__) |
| } else if (ucs >= 0xd800 && ucs <= 0xdbff && i < srclen-1 && |
| src[i+1] >= 0xdc00 && src[i+1] <= 0xdfff) { |
| /* surrogate pair */ |
| ++i; |
| #else |
| } else if (ucs >= 0x10000 && ucs <= 0x10ffff) { |
| #endif |
| count += 4; |
| } else { |
| count += 3; |
| } |
| } |
| return count; |
| } |
| |
| /*! Convert an ISO-8859-1 (ie normal c-string) byte stream to UTF-8. |
| |
| It is possible this should convert Microsoft's CP1252 to UTF-8 |
| instead. This would translate the codes in the range 0x80-0x9f |
| to different characters. Currently it does not do this. |
| |
| Up to \p dstlen bytes are written to \p dst, including a null |
| terminator. The return value is the number of bytes that would be |
| written, not counting the null terminator. If greater or equal to |
| \p dstlen then if you malloc a new array of size n+1 you will have |
| the space needed for the entire string. If \p dstlen is zero then |
| nothing is written and this call just measures the storage space |
| needed. |
| |
| \p srclen is the number of bytes in \p src to convert. |
| |
| If the return value equals \p srclen then this indicates that |
| no conversion is necessary, as only ASCII characters are in the |
| string. |
| */ |
| unsigned fl_utf8froma(char* dst, unsigned dstlen, |
| const char* src, unsigned srclen) { |
| const char* p = src; |
| const char* e = src+srclen; |
| unsigned count = 0; |
| if (dstlen) for (;;) { |
| unsigned char ucs; |
| if (p >= e) {dst[count] = 0; return count;} |
| ucs = *(unsigned char*)p++; |
| if (ucs < 0x80U) { |
| dst[count++] = ucs; |
| if (count >= dstlen) {dst[count-1] = 0; break;} |
| } else { /* 2 bytes (note that CP1252 translate could make 3 bytes!) */ |
| if (count+2 >= dstlen) {dst[count] = 0; count += 2; break;} |
| dst[count++] = 0xc0 | (ucs >> 6); |
| dst[count++] = 0x80 | (ucs & 0x3F); |
| } |
| } |
| /* we filled dst, measure the rest: */ |
| while (p < e) { |
| unsigned char ucs = *(unsigned char*)p++; |
| if (ucs < 0x80U) { |
| count++; |
| } else { |
| count += 2; |
| } |
| } |
| return count; |
| } |
| |
| #ifdef WIN32 |
| # include <windows.h> |
| #endif |
| |
| /*! Return true if the "locale" seems to indicate that UTF-8 encoding |
| is used. If true the fl_utf8to_mb and fl_utf8from_mb don't do anything |
| useful. |
| |
| <i>It is highly recommended that you change your system so this |
| does return true.</i> On Windows this is done by setting the |
| "codepage" to CP_UTF8. On Unix this is done by setting $LC_CTYPE |
| to a string containing the letters "utf" or "UTF" in it, or by |
| deleting all $LC* and $LANG environment variables. In the future |
| it is likely that all non-Asian Unix systems will return true, |
| due to the compatibility of UTF-8 with ISO-8859-1. |
| */ |
| int fl_utf8locale(void) { |
| static int ret = 2; |
| if (ret == 2) { |
| #ifdef WIN32 |
| ret = GetACP() == CP_UTF8; |
| #else |
| char* s; |
| ret = 1; /* assume UTF-8 if no locale */ |
| if (((s = getenv("LC_CTYPE")) && *s) || |
| ((s = getenv("LC_ALL")) && *s) || |
| ((s = getenv("LANG")) && *s)) { |
| ret = (strstr(s,"utf") || strstr(s,"UTF")); |
| } |
| #endif |
| } |
| return ret; |
| } |
| |
| /*! Convert the UTF-8 used by FLTK to the locale-specific encoding |
| used for filenames (and sometimes used for data in files). |
| Unfortunately due to stupid design you will have to do this as |
| needed for filenames. This is a bug on both Unix and Windows. |
| |
| Up to \p dstlen bytes are written to \p dst, including a null |
| terminator. The return value is the number of bytes that would be |
| written, not counting the null terminator. If greater or equal to |
| \p dstlen then if you malloc a new array of size n+1 you will have |
| the space needed for the entire string. If \p dstlen is zero then |
| nothing is written and this call just measures the storage space |
| needed. |
| |
| If fl_utf8locale() returns true then this does not change the data. |
| */ |
| unsigned fl_utf8to_mb(const char* src, unsigned srclen, |
| char* dst, unsigned dstlen) |
| { |
| if (!fl_utf8locale()) { |
| #ifdef WIN32 |
| wchar_t lbuf[1024]; |
| wchar_t* buf = lbuf; |
| unsigned length = fl_utf8towc(src, srclen, buf, 1024); |
| unsigned ret; |
| if (length >= 1024) { |
| buf = (wchar_t*)(malloc((length+1)*sizeof(wchar_t))); |
| fl_utf8towc(src, srclen, buf, length+1); |
| } |
| if (dstlen) { |
| /* apparently this does not null-terminate, even though msdn |
| * documentation claims it does: |
| */ |
| ret = |
| WideCharToMultiByte(GetACP(), 0, buf, length, dst, dstlen, 0, 0); |
| dst[ret] = 0; |
| } |
| /* if it overflows or measuring length, get the actual length: */ |
| if (dstlen==0 || ret >= dstlen-1) |
| ret = |
| WideCharToMultiByte(GetACP(), 0, buf, length, 0, 0, 0, 0); |
| if (buf != lbuf) free((void*)buf); |
| return ret; |
| #else |
| wchar_t lbuf[1024]; |
| wchar_t* buf = lbuf; |
| unsigned length = fl_utf8towc(src, srclen, buf, 1024); |
| int ret; |
| if (length >= 1024) { |
| buf = (wchar_t*)(malloc((length+1)*sizeof(wchar_t))); |
| fl_utf8towc(src, srclen, buf, length+1); |
| } |
| if (dstlen) { |
| ret = wcstombs(dst, buf, dstlen); |
| if (ret >= dstlen-1) ret = wcstombs(0,buf,0); |
| } else { |
| ret = wcstombs(0,buf,0); |
| } |
| if (buf != lbuf) free((void*)buf); |
| if (ret >= 0) return (unsigned)ret; |
| /* on any errors we return the UTF-8 as raw text...*/ |
| #endif |
| } |
| /* identity transform: */ |
| if (srclen < dstlen) { |
| memcpy(dst, src, srclen); |
| dst[srclen] = 0; |
| } else { |
| /* Buffer insufficent or buffer query */ |
| } |
| return srclen; |
| } |
| |
| /*! Convert a filename from the locale-specific multibyte encoding |
| used by Windows to UTF-8 as used by FLTK. |
| |
| Up to \p dstlen bytes are written to \p dst, including a null |
| terminator. The return value is the number of bytes that would be |
| written, not counting the null terminator. If greater or equal to |
| \p dstlen then if you malloc a new array of size n+1 you will have |
| the space needed for the entire string. If \p dstlen is zero then |
| nothing is written and this call just measures the storage space |
| needed. |
| |
| On Unix or on Windows when a UTF-8 locale is in effect, this |
| does not change the data. |
| You may also want to check if fl_utf8test() returns non-zero, so that |
| the filesystem can store filenames in UTF-8 encoding regardless of |
| the locale. |
| */ |
| unsigned fl_utf8from_mb(char* dst, unsigned dstlen, |
| const char* src, unsigned srclen) |
| { |
| if (!fl_utf8locale()) { |
| #ifdef WIN32 |
| wchar_t lbuf[1024]; |
| wchar_t* buf = lbuf; |
| unsigned length; |
| unsigned ret; |
| length = MultiByteToWideChar(GetACP(), 0, src, srclen, buf, 1024); |
| if ((length == 0)&&(GetLastError()==ERROR_INSUFFICIENT_BUFFER)) { |
| length = MultiByteToWideChar(GetACP(), 0, src, srclen, 0, 0); |
| buf = (wchar_t*)(malloc(length*sizeof(wchar_t))); |
| MultiByteToWideChar(GetACP(), 0, src, srclen, buf, length); |
| } |
| ret = fl_utf8fromwc(dst, dstlen, buf, length); |
| if (buf != lbuf) free((void*)buf); |
| return ret; |
| #else |
| wchar_t lbuf[1024]; |
| wchar_t* buf = lbuf; |
| int length; |
| unsigned ret; |
| length = mbstowcs(buf, src, 1024); |
| if (length >= 1024) { |
| length = mbstowcs(0, src, 0)+1; |
| buf = (wchar_t*)(malloc(length*sizeof(wchar_t))); |
| mbstowcs(buf, src, length); |
| } |
| if (length >= 0) { |
| ret = fl_utf8fromwc(dst, dstlen, buf, length); |
| if (buf != lbuf) free((void*)buf); |
| return ret; |
| } |
| /* errors in conversion return the UTF-8 unchanged */ |
| #endif |
| } |
| /* identity transform: */ |
| if (srclen < dstlen) { |
| memcpy(dst, src, srclen); |
| dst[srclen] = 0; |
| } else { |
| /* Buffer insufficent or buffer query */ |
| } |
| return srclen; |
| } |
| |
| /*! Examines the first \p srclen bytes in \p src and returns a verdict |
| on whether it is UTF-8 or not. |
| - Returns 0 if there is any illegal UTF-8 sequences, using the |
| same rules as fl_utf8decode(). Note that some UCS values considered |
| illegal by RFC 3629, such as 0xffff, are considered legal by this. |
| - Returns 1 if there are only single-byte characters (ie no bytes |
| have the high bit set). This is legal UTF-8, but also indicates |
| plain ASCII. It also returns 1 if \p srclen is zero. |
| - Returns 2 if there are only characters less than 0x800. |
| - Returns 3 if there are only characters less than 0x10000. |
| - Returns 4 if there are characters in the 0x10000 to 0x10ffff range. |
| |
| Because there are many illegal sequences in UTF-8, it is almost |
| impossible for a string in another encoding to be confused with |
| UTF-8. This is very useful for transitioning Unix to UTF-8 |
| filenames, you can simply test each filename with this to decide |
| if it is UTF-8 or in the locale encoding. My hope is that if |
| this is done we will be able to cleanly transition to a locale-less |
| encoding. |
| */ |
| int fl_utf8test(const char* src, unsigned srclen) { |
| int ret = 1; |
| const char* p = src; |
| const char* e = src+srclen; |
| while (p < e) { |
| if (*p & 0x80) { |
| int len; fl_utf8decode(p,e,&len); |
| if (len < 2) return 0; |
| if (len > ret) ret = len; |
| p += len; |
| } else { |
| p++; |
| } |
| } |
| return ret; |
| } |
| |
| /* forward declare mk_wcwidth() as static so the name is not visible. |
| */ |
| static int mk_wcwidth(unsigned int ucs); |
| |
| /* include the c source directly so it's contents are only visible here |
| */ |
| #include "xutf8/mk_wcwidth.c" |
| |
| /** wrapper to adapt Markus Kuhn's implementation of wcwidth() for FLTK |
| \param [in] ucs Unicode character value |
| \returns width of character in columns |
| |
| See http://www.cl.cam.ac.uk/~mgk25/ucs/wcwidth.c for Markus Kuhn's |
| original implementation of wcwidth() and wcswidth() |
| (defined in IEEE Std 1002.1-2001) for Unicode. |
| |
| \b WARNING: this function returns widths for "raw" Unicode characters. |
| It does not even try to map C1 control characters (0x80 to 0x9F) to |
| CP1252, and C0/C1 control characters and DEL will return -1. |
| You are advised to use fl_width(const char* src) instead. |
| */ |
| int fl_wcwidth_(unsigned int ucs) { |
| return mk_wcwidth(ucs); |
| } |
| |
| /** extended wrapper around fl_wcwidth_(unsigned int ucs) function. |
| \param[in] src pointer to start of UTF-8 byte sequence |
| \returns width of character in columns |
| |
| Depending on build options, this function may map C1 control |
| characters (0x80 to 0x9f) to CP1252, and return the width of |
| that character instead. This is not the same behaviour as |
| fl_wcwidth_(unsigned int ucs) . |
| |
| Note that other control characters and DEL will still return -1, |
| so if you want different behaviour, you need to test for those |
| characters before calling fl_wcwidth(), and handle them separately. |
| */ |
| int fl_wcwidth(const char* src) { |
| int len = fl_utf8len(*src); |
| int ret = 0; |
| unsigned int ucs = fl_utf8decode(src, src+len, &ret); |
| int width = fl_wcwidth_(ucs); |
| return width; |
| } |
| |
| /** @} */ |
| |
| /* |
| * End of "$Id: fl_utf.c 8585 2011-04-13 15:43:22Z ianmacarthur $". |
| */ |