1/* 2******************************************************************************* 3* Copyright (c) 1996-2004, International Business Machines Corporation 4* and others. All Rights Reserved. 5******************************************************************************* 6* File unorm.h 7* 8* Created by: Vladimir Weinstein 12052000 9* 10* Modification history : 11* 12* Date Name Description 13* 02/01/01 synwee Added normalization quickcheck enum and method. 14*/ 15#ifndef UNORM_H 16#define UNORM_H 17 18#include "unicode/utypes.h" 19 20#if !UCONFIG_NO_NORMALIZATION 21 22#include "unicode/uiter.h" 23 24/** 25 * \file 26 * \brief C API: Unicode Normalization 27 * 28 * <h2>Unicode normalization API</h2> 29 * 30 * <code>unorm_normalize</code> transforms Unicode text into an equivalent composed or 31 * decomposed form, allowing for easier sorting and searching of text. 32 * <code>unorm_normalize</code> supports the standard normalization forms described in 33 * <a href="http://www.unicode.org/unicode/reports/tr15/" target="unicode"> 34 * Unicode Standard Annex #15 — Unicode Normalization Forms</a>. 35 * 36 * Characters with accents or other adornments can be encoded in 37 * several different ways in Unicode. For example, take the character A-acute. 38 * In Unicode, this can be encoded as a single character (the 39 * "composed" form): 40 * 41 * \code 42 * 00C1 LATIN CAPITAL LETTER A WITH ACUTE 43 * \endcode 44 * 45 * or as two separate characters (the "decomposed" form): 46 * 47 * \code 48 * 0041 LATIN CAPITAL LETTER A 49 * 0301 COMBINING ACUTE ACCENT 50 * \endcode 51 * 52 * To a user of your program, however, both of these sequences should be 53 * treated as the same "user-level" character "A with acute accent". When you are searching or 54 * comparing text, you must ensure that these two sequences are treated 55 * equivalently. In addition, you must handle characters with more than one 56 * accent. Sometimes the order of a character's combining accents is 57 * significant, while in other cases accent sequences in different orders are 58 * really equivalent. 59 * 60 * Similarly, the string "ffi" can be encoded as three separate letters: 61 * 62 * \code 63 * 0066 LATIN SMALL LETTER F 64 * 0066 LATIN SMALL LETTER F 65 * 0069 LATIN SMALL LETTER I 66 * \endcode 67 * 68 * or as the single character 69 * 70 * \code 71 * FB03 LATIN SMALL LIGATURE FFI 72 * \endcode 73 * 74 * The ffi ligature is not a distinct semantic character, and strictly speaking 75 * it shouldn't be in Unicode at all, but it was included for compatibility 76 * with existing character sets that already provided it. The Unicode standard 77 * identifies such characters by giving them "compatibility" decompositions 78 * into the corresponding semantic characters. When sorting and searching, you 79 * will often want to use these mappings. 80 * 81 * <code>unorm_normalize</code> helps solve these problems by transforming text into the 82 * canonical composed and decomposed forms as shown in the first example above. 83 * In addition, you can have it perform compatibility decompositions so that 84 * you can treat compatibility characters the same as their equivalents. 85 * Finally, <code>unorm_normalize</code> rearranges accents into the proper canonical 86 * order, so that you do not have to worry about accent rearrangement on your 87 * own. 88 * 89 * Form FCD, "Fast C or D", is also designed for collation. 90 * It allows to work on strings that are not necessarily normalized 91 * with an algorithm (like in collation) that works under "canonical closure", i.e., it treats precomposed 92 * characters and their decomposed equivalents the same. 93 * 94 * It is not a normalization form because it does not provide for uniqueness of representation. Multiple strings 95 * may be canonically equivalent (their NFDs are identical) and may all conform to FCD without being identical 96 * themselves. 97 * 98 * The form is defined such that the "raw decomposition", the recursive canonical decomposition of each character, 99 * results in a string that is canonically ordered. This means that precomposed characters are allowed for as long 100 * as their decompositions do not need canonical reordering. 101 * 102 * Its advantage for a process like collation is that all NFD and most NFC texts - and many unnormalized texts - 103 * already conform to FCD and do not need to be normalized (NFD) for such a process. The FCD quick check will 104 * return UNORM_YES for most strings in practice. 105 * 106 * unorm_normalize(UNORM_FCD) may be implemented with UNORM_NFD. 107 * 108 * For more details on FCD see the collation design document: 109 * http://oss.software.ibm.com/cvs/icu/~checkout~/icuhtml/design/collation/ICU_collation_design.htm 110 * 111 * ICU collation performs either NFD or FCD normalization automatically if normalization 112 * is turned on for the collator object. 113 * Beyond collation and string search, normalized strings may be useful for string equivalence comparisons, 114 * transliteration/transcription, unique representations, etc. 115 * 116 * The W3C generally recommends to exchange texts in NFC. 117 * Note also that most legacy character encodings use only precomposed forms and often do not 118 * encode any combining marks by themselves. For conversion to such character encodings the 119 * Unicode text needs to be normalized to NFC. 120 * For more usage examples, see the Unicode Standard Annex. 121 */ 122 123/** 124 * Constants for normalization modes. 125 * @stable ICU 2.0 126 */ 127typedef enum { 128 /** No decomposition/composition. @stable ICU 2.0 */ 129 UNORM_NONE = 1, 130 /** Canonical decomposition. @stable ICU 2.0 */ 131 UNORM_NFD = 2, 132 /** Compatibility decomposition. @stable ICU 2.0 */ 133 UNORM_NFKD = 3, 134 /** Canonical decomposition followed by canonical composition. @stable ICU 2.0 */ 135 UNORM_NFC = 4, 136 /** Default normalization. @stable ICU 2.0 */ 137 UNORM_DEFAULT = UNORM_NFC, 138 /** Compatibility decomposition followed by canonical composition. @stable ICU 2.0 */ 139 UNORM_NFKC =5, 140 /** "Fast C or D" form. @stable ICU 2.0 */ 141 UNORM_FCD = 6, 142 143 /** One more than the highest normalization mode constant. @stable ICU 2.0 */ 144 UNORM_MODE_COUNT 145} UNormalizationMode; 146 147/** 148 * Constants for options flags for normalization. 149 * Use 0 for default options, 150 * including normalization according to the Unicode version 151 * that is currently supported by ICU (see u_getUnicodeVersion). 152 * @stable ICU 2.6 153 */ 154enum { 155 /** 156 * Options bit set value to select Unicode 3.2 normalization 157 * (except NormalizationCorrections). 158 * At most one Unicode version can be selected at a time. 159 * @stable ICU 2.6 160 */ 161 UNORM_UNICODE_3_2=0x20 162}; 163 164/** 165 * Lowest-order bit number of unorm_compare() options bits corresponding to 166 * normalization options bits. 167 * 168 * The options parameter for unorm_compare() uses most bits for 169 * itself and for various comparison and folding flags. 170 * The most significant bits, however, are shifted down and passed on 171 * to the normalization implementation. 172 * (That is, from unorm_compare(..., options, ...), 173 * options>>UNORM_COMPARE_NORM_OPTIONS_SHIFT will be passed on to the 174 * internal normalization functions.) 175 * 176 * @see unorm_compare 177 * @stable ICU 2.6 178 */ 179#define UNORM_COMPARE_NORM_OPTIONS_SHIFT 20 180 181/** 182 * Normalize a string. 183 * The string will be normalized according the specified normalization mode 184 * and options. 185 * 186 * @param source The string to normalize. 187 * @param sourceLength The length of source, or -1 if NUL-terminated. 188 * @param mode The normalization mode; one of UNORM_NONE, 189 * UNORM_NFD, UNORM_NFC, UNORM_NFKC, UNORM_NFKD, UNORM_DEFAULT. 190 * @param options The normalization options, ORed together (0 for no options). 191 * @param result A pointer to a buffer to receive the result string. 192 * The result string is NUL-terminated if possible. 193 * @param resultLength The maximum size of result. 194 * @param status A pointer to a UErrorCode to receive any errors. 195 * @return The total buffer size needed; if greater than resultLength, 196 * the output was truncated, and the error code is set to U_BUFFER_OVERFLOW_ERROR. 197 * @stable ICU 2.0 198 */ 199U_STABLE int32_t U_EXPORT2 200unorm_normalize(const UChar *source, int32_t sourceLength, 201 UNormalizationMode mode, int32_t options, 202 UChar *result, int32_t resultLength, 203 UErrorCode *status); 204#endif 205/** 206 * Result values for unorm_quickCheck(). 207 * For details see Unicode Technical Report 15. 208 * @stable ICU 2.0 209 */ 210typedef enum UNormalizationCheckResult { 211 /** 212 * Indicates that string is not in the normalized format 213 */ 214 UNORM_NO, 215 /** 216 * Indicates that string is in the normalized format 217 */ 218 UNORM_YES, 219 /** 220 * Indicates that string cannot be determined if it is in the normalized 221 * format without further thorough checks. 222 */ 223 UNORM_MAYBE 224} UNormalizationCheckResult; 225#if !UCONFIG_NO_NORMALIZATION 226/** 227 * Performing quick check on a string, to quickly determine if the string is 228 * in a particular normalization format. 229 * Three types of result can be returned UNORM_YES, UNORM_NO or 230 * UNORM_MAYBE. Result UNORM_YES indicates that the argument 231 * string is in the desired normalized format, UNORM_NO determines that 232 * argument string is not in the desired normalized format. A 233 * UNORM_MAYBE result indicates that a more thorough check is required, 234 * the user may have to put the string in its normalized form and compare the 235 * results. 236 * 237 * @param source string for determining if it is in a normalized format 238 * @param sourcelength length of source to test, or -1 if NUL-terminated 239 * @param mode which normalization form to test for 240 * @param status a pointer to a UErrorCode to receive any errors 241 * @return UNORM_YES, UNORM_NO or UNORM_MAYBE 242 * 243 * @see unorm_isNormalized 244 * @stable ICU 2.0 245 */ 246U_STABLE UNormalizationCheckResult U_EXPORT2 247unorm_quickCheck(const UChar *source, int32_t sourcelength, 248 UNormalizationMode mode, 249 UErrorCode *status); 250 251/** 252 * Performing quick check on a string; same as unorm_quickCheck but 253 * takes an extra options parameter like most normalization functions. 254 * 255 * @param src String that is to be tested if it is in a normalization format. 256 * @param srcLength Length of source to test, or -1 if NUL-terminated. 257 * @param mode Which normalization form to test for. 258 * @param options The normalization options, ORed together (0 for no options). 259 * @param pErrorCode ICU error code in/out parameter. 260 * Must fulfill U_SUCCESS before the function call. 261 * @return UNORM_YES, UNORM_NO or UNORM_MAYBE 262 * 263 * @see unorm_quickCheck 264 * @see unorm_isNormalized 265 * @stable ICU 2.6 266 */ 267U_STABLE UNormalizationCheckResult U_EXPORT2 268unorm_quickCheckWithOptions(const UChar *src, int32_t srcLength, 269 UNormalizationMode mode, int32_t options, 270 UErrorCode *pErrorCode); 271 272/** 273 * Test if a string is in a given normalization form. 274 * This is semantically equivalent to source.equals(normalize(source, mode)) . 275 * 276 * Unlike unorm_quickCheck(), this function returns a definitive result, 277 * never a "maybe". 278 * For NFD, NFKD, and FCD, both functions work exactly the same. 279 * For NFC and NFKC where quickCheck may return "maybe", this function will 280 * perform further tests to arrive at a TRUE/FALSE result. 281 * 282 * @param src String that is to be tested if it is in a normalization format. 283 * @param srcLength Length of source to test, or -1 if NUL-terminated. 284 * @param mode Which normalization form to test for. 285 * @param pErrorCode ICU error code in/out parameter. 286 * Must fulfill U_SUCCESS before the function call. 287 * @return Boolean value indicating whether the source string is in the 288 * "mode" normalization form. 289 * 290 * @see unorm_quickCheck 291 * @stable ICU 2.2 292 */ 293U_STABLE UBool U_EXPORT2 294unorm_isNormalized(const UChar *src, int32_t srcLength, 295 UNormalizationMode mode, 296 UErrorCode *pErrorCode); 297 298/** 299 * Test if a string is in a given normalization form; same as unorm_isNormalized but 300 * takes an extra options parameter like most normalization functions. 301 * 302 * @param src String that is to be tested if it is in a normalization format. 303 * @param srcLength Length of source to test, or -1 if NUL-terminated. 304 * @param mode Which normalization form to test for. 305 * @param options The normalization options, ORed together (0 for no options). 306 * @param pErrorCode ICU error code in/out parameter. 307 * Must fulfill U_SUCCESS before the function call. 308 * @return Boolean value indicating whether the source string is in the 309 * "mode/options" normalization form. 310 * 311 * @see unorm_quickCheck 312 * @see unorm_isNormalized 313 * @stable ICU 2.6 314 */ 315U_STABLE UBool U_EXPORT2 316unorm_isNormalizedWithOptions(const UChar *src, int32_t srcLength, 317 UNormalizationMode mode, int32_t options, 318 UErrorCode *pErrorCode); 319 320/** 321 * Iterative normalization forward. 322 * This function (together with unorm_previous) is somewhat 323 * similar to the C++ Normalizer class (see its non-static functions). 324 * 325 * Iterative normalization is useful when only a small portion of a longer 326 * string/text needs to be processed. 327 * 328 * For example, the likelihood may be high that processing the first 10% of some 329 * text will be sufficient to find certain data. 330 * Another example: When one wants to concatenate two normalized strings and get a 331 * normalized result, it is much more efficient to normalize just a small part of 332 * the result around the concatenation place instead of re-normalizing everything. 333 * 334 * The input text is an instance of the C character iteration API UCharIterator. 335 * It may wrap around a simple string, a CharacterIterator, a Replaceable, or any 336 * other kind of text object. 337 * 338 * If a buffer overflow occurs, then the caller needs to reset the iterator to the 339 * old index and call the function again with a larger buffer - if the caller cares 340 * for the actual output. 341 * Regardless of the output buffer, the iterator will always be moved to the next 342 * normalization boundary. 343 * 344 * This function (like unorm_previous) serves two purposes: 345 * 346 * 1) To find the next boundary so that the normalization of the part of the text 347 * from the current position to that boundary does not affect and is not affected 348 * by the part of the text beyond that boundary. 349 * 350 * 2) To normalize the text up to the boundary. 351 * 352 * The second step is optional, per the doNormalize parameter. 353 * It is omitted for operations like string concatenation, where the two adjacent 354 * string ends need to be normalized together. 355 * In such a case, the output buffer will just contain a copy of the text up to the 356 * boundary. 357 * 358 * pNeededToNormalize is an output-only parameter. Its output value is only defined 359 * if normalization was requested (doNormalize) and successful (especially, no 360 * buffer overflow). 361 * It is useful for operations like a normalizing transliterator, where one would 362 * not want to replace a piece of text if it is not modified. 363 * 364 * If doNormalize==TRUE and pNeededToNormalize!=NULL then *pNeeded... is set TRUE 365 * if the normalization was necessary. 366 * 367 * If doNormalize==FALSE then *pNeededToNormalize will be set to FALSE. 368 * 369 * If the buffer overflows, then *pNeededToNormalize will be undefined; 370 * essentially, whenever U_FAILURE is true (like in buffer overflows), this result 371 * will be undefined. 372 * 373 * @param src The input text in the form of a C character iterator. 374 * @param dest The output buffer; can be NULL if destCapacity==0 for pure preflighting. 375 * @param destCapacity The number of UChars that fit into dest. 376 * @param mode The normalization mode. 377 * @param options The normalization options, ORed together (0 for no options). 378 * @param doNormalize Indicates if the source text up to the next boundary 379 * is to be normalized (TRUE) or just copied (FALSE). 380 * @param pNeededToNormalize Output flag indicating if the normalization resulted in 381 * different text from the input. 382 * Not defined if an error occurs including buffer overflow. 383 * Always FALSE if !doNormalize. 384 * @param pErrorCode ICU error code in/out parameter. 385 * Must fulfill U_SUCCESS before the function call. 386 * @return Length of output (number of UChars) when successful or buffer overflow. 387 * 388 * @see unorm_previous 389 * @see unorm_normalize 390 * 391 * @stable ICU 2.1 392 */ 393U_STABLE int32_t U_EXPORT2 394unorm_next(UCharIterator *src, 395 UChar *dest, int32_t destCapacity, 396 UNormalizationMode mode, int32_t options, 397 UBool doNormalize, UBool *pNeededToNormalize, 398 UErrorCode *pErrorCode); 399 400/** 401 * Iterative normalization backward. 402 * This function (together with unorm_next) is somewhat 403 * similar to the C++ Normalizer class (see its non-static functions). 404 * For all details see unorm_next. 405 * 406 * @param src The input text in the form of a C character iterator. 407 * @param dest The output buffer; can be NULL if destCapacity==0 for pure preflighting. 408 * @param destCapacity The number of UChars that fit into dest. 409 * @param mode The normalization mode. 410 * @param options The normalization options, ORed together (0 for no options). 411 * @param doNormalize Indicates if the source text up to the next boundary 412 * is to be normalized (TRUE) or just copied (FALSE). 413 * @param pNeededToNormalize Output flag indicating if the normalization resulted in 414 * different text from the input. 415 * Not defined if an error occurs including buffer overflow. 416 * Always FALSE if !doNormalize. 417 * @param pErrorCode ICU error code in/out parameter. 418 * Must fulfill U_SUCCESS before the function call. 419 * @return Length of output (number of UChars) when successful or buffer overflow. 420 * 421 * @see unorm_next 422 * @see unorm_normalize 423 * 424 * @stable ICU 2.1 425 */ 426U_STABLE int32_t U_EXPORT2 427unorm_previous(UCharIterator *src, 428 UChar *dest, int32_t destCapacity, 429 UNormalizationMode mode, int32_t options, 430 UBool doNormalize, UBool *pNeededToNormalize, 431 UErrorCode *pErrorCode); 432 433/** 434 * Concatenate normalized strings, making sure that the result is normalized as well. 435 * 436 * If both the left and the right strings are in 437 * the normalization form according to "mode/options", 438 * then the result will be 439 * 440 * \code 441 * dest=normalize(left+right, mode, options) 442 * \endcode 443 * 444 * With the input strings already being normalized, 445 * this function will use unorm_next() and unorm_previous() 446 * to find the adjacent end pieces of the input strings. 447 * Only the concatenation of these end pieces will be normalized and 448 * then concatenated with the remaining parts of the input strings. 449 * 450 * It is allowed to have dest==left to avoid copying the entire left string. 451 * 452 * @param left Left source string, may be same as dest. 453 * @param leftLength Length of left source string, or -1 if NUL-terminated. 454 * @param right Right source string. 455 * @param rightLength Length of right source string, or -1 if NUL-terminated. 456 * @param dest The output buffer; can be NULL if destCapacity==0 for pure preflighting. 457 * @param destCapacity The number of UChars that fit into dest. 458 * @param mode The normalization mode. 459 * @param options The normalization options, ORed together (0 for no options). 460 * @param pErrorCode ICU error code in/out parameter. 461 * Must fulfill U_SUCCESS before the function call. 462 * @return Length of output (number of UChars) when successful or buffer overflow. 463 * 464 * @see unorm_normalize 465 * @see unorm_next 466 * @see unorm_previous 467 * 468 * @stable ICU 2.1 469 */ 470U_STABLE int32_t U_EXPORT2 471unorm_concatenate(const UChar *left, int32_t leftLength, 472 const UChar *right, int32_t rightLength, 473 UChar *dest, int32_t destCapacity, 474 UNormalizationMode mode, int32_t options, 475 UErrorCode *pErrorCode); 476 477/** 478 * Option bit for unorm_compare: 479 * Both input strings are assumed to fulfill FCD conditions. 480 * @stable ICU 2.2 481 */ 482#define UNORM_INPUT_IS_FCD 0x20000 483 484/** 485 * Option bit for unorm_compare: 486 * Perform case-insensitive comparison. 487 * @stable ICU 2.2 488 */ 489#define U_COMPARE_IGNORE_CASE 0x10000 490 491#ifndef U_COMPARE_CODE_POINT_ORDER 492/* see also unistr.h and ustring.h */ 493/** 494 * Option bit for u_strCaseCompare, u_strcasecmp, unorm_compare, etc: 495 * Compare strings in code point order instead of code unit order. 496 * @stable ICU 2.2 497 */ 498#define U_COMPARE_CODE_POINT_ORDER 0x8000 499#endif 500 501/** 502 * Compare two strings for canonical equivalence. 503 * Further options include case-insensitive comparison and 504 * code point order (as opposed to code unit order). 505 * 506 * Canonical equivalence between two strings is defined as their normalized 507 * forms (NFD or NFC) being identical. 508 * This function compares strings incrementally instead of normalizing 509 * (and optionally case-folding) both strings entirely, 510 * improving performance significantly. 511 * 512 * Bulk normalization is only necessary if the strings do not fulfill the FCD 513 * conditions. Only in this case, and only if the strings are relatively long, 514 * is memory allocated temporarily. 515 * For FCD strings and short non-FCD strings there is no memory allocation. 516 * 517 * Semantically, this is equivalent to 518 * strcmp[CodePointOrder](NFD(foldCase(NFD(s1))), NFD(foldCase(NFD(s2)))) 519 * where code point order and foldCase are all optional. 520 * 521 * UAX 21 2.5 Caseless Matching specifies that for a canonical caseless match 522 * the case folding must be performed first, then the normalization. 523 * 524 * @param s1 First source string. 525 * @param length1 Length of first source string, or -1 if NUL-terminated. 526 * 527 * @param s2 Second source string. 528 * @param length2 Length of second source string, or -1 if NUL-terminated. 529 * 530 * @param options A bit set of options: 531 * - U_FOLD_CASE_DEFAULT or 0 is used for default options: 532 * Case-sensitive comparison in code unit order, and the input strings 533 * are quick-checked for FCD. 534 * 535 * - UNORM_INPUT_IS_FCD 536 * Set if the caller knows that both s1 and s2 fulfill the FCD conditions. 537 * If not set, the function will quickCheck for FCD 538 * and normalize if necessary. 539 * 540 * - U_COMPARE_CODE_POINT_ORDER 541 * Set to choose code point order instead of code unit order 542 * (see u_strCompare for details). 543 * 544 * - U_COMPARE_IGNORE_CASE 545 * Set to compare strings case-insensitively using case folding, 546 * instead of case-sensitively. 547 * If set, then the following case folding options are used. 548 * 549 * - Options as used with case-insensitive comparisons, currently: 550 * 551 * - U_FOLD_CASE_EXCLUDE_SPECIAL_I 552 * (see u_strCaseCompare for details) 553 * 554 * - regular normalization options shifted left by UNORM_COMPARE_NORM_OPTIONS_SHIFT 555 * 556 * @param pErrorCode ICU error code in/out parameter. 557 * Must fulfill U_SUCCESS before the function call. 558 * @return <0 or 0 or >0 as usual for string comparisons 559 * 560 * @see unorm_normalize 561 * @see UNORM_FCD 562 * @see u_strCompare 563 * @see u_strCaseCompare 564 * 565 * @stable ICU 2.2 566 */ 567U_STABLE int32_t U_EXPORT2 568unorm_compare(const UChar *s1, int32_t length1, 569 const UChar *s2, int32_t length2, 570 uint32_t options, 571 UErrorCode *pErrorCode); 572 573#endif /* #if !UCONFIG_NO_NORMALIZATION */ 574 575#endif 576