| /* |
| * Copyright (c) 1999, 2007, Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved. |
| * DO NOT ALTER OR REMOVE COPYRIGHT NOTICES OR THIS FILE HEADER. |
| * |
| * This code is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it |
| * under the terms of the GNU General Public License version 2 only, as |
| * published by the Free Software Foundation. Oracle designates this |
| * particular file as subject to the "Classpath" exception as provided |
| * by Oracle in the LICENSE file that accompanied this code. |
| * |
| * This code 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 General Public License |
| * version 2 for more details (a copy is included in the LICENSE file that |
| * accompanied this code). |
| * |
| * You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License version |
| * 2 along with this work; if not, write to the Free Software Foundation, |
| * Inc., 51 Franklin St, Fifth Floor, Boston, MA 02110-1301 USA. |
| * |
| * Please contact Oracle, 500 Oracle Parkway, Redwood Shores, CA 94065 USA |
| * or visit www.oracle.com if you need additional information or have any |
| * questions. |
| */ |
| |
| /* |
| */ |
| |
| /* |
| * Licensed Materials - Property of IBM |
| * |
| * (C) Copyright IBM Corp. 1999 All Rights Reserved. |
| * (C) IBM Corp. 1997-1998. All Rights Reserved. |
| * |
| * The program is provided "as is" without any warranty express or |
| * implied, including the warranty of non-infringement and the implied |
| * warranties of merchantibility and fitness for a particular purpose. |
| * IBM will not be liable for any damages suffered by you as a result |
| * of using the Program. In no event will IBM be liable for any |
| * special, indirect or consequential damages or lost profits even if |
| * IBM has been advised of the possibility of their occurrence. IBM |
| * will not be liable for any third party claims against you. |
| */ |
| |
| package sun.text.resources; |
| |
| import java.util.ListResourceBundle; |
| |
| /** |
| * Default break-iterator rules. These rules are more or less general for |
| * all locales, although there are probably a few we're missing. The |
| * behavior currently mimics the behavior of BreakIterator in JDK 1.2. |
| * There are known deficiencies in this behavior, including the fact that |
| * the logic for handling CJK characters works for Japanese but not for |
| * Chinese, and that we don't currently have an appropriate locale for |
| * Thai. The resources will eventually be updated to fix these problems. |
| */ |
| |
| /* Modified for Hindi 3/1/99. */ |
| |
| /* |
| * Since JDK 1.5.0, this file no longer goes to runtime and is used at J2SE |
| * build phase in order to create [Character|Word|Line|Sentence]BreakIteratorData |
| * files which are used on runtime instead. |
| */ |
| |
| public class BreakIteratorRules extends ListResourceBundle { |
| protected final Object[][] getContents() { |
| return new Object[][] { |
| // rules describing how to break between logical characters |
| { "CharacterBreakRules", |
| |
| // ignore non-spacing marks and enclosing marks (since we never |
| // put a break before ignore characters, this keeps combining |
| // accents with the base characters they modify) |
| "<enclosing>=[:Mn::Me:];" |
| |
| // other category definitions |
| + "<choseong>=[\u1100-\u115f];" |
| + "<jungseong>=[\u1160-\u11a7];" |
| + "<jongseong>=[\u11a8-\u11ff];" |
| + "<surr-hi>=[\ud800-\udbff];" |
| + "<surr-lo>=[\udc00-\udfff];" |
| |
| // break after every character, except as follows: |
| + ".;" |
| |
| // keep base and combining characters togethers |
| + "<base>=[^<enclosing>^[:Cc::Cf::Zl::Zp:]];" |
| + "<base><enclosing><enclosing>*;" |
| |
| // keep CRLF sequences together |
| + "\r\n;" |
| |
| // keep surrogate pairs together |
| + "<surr-hi><surr-lo>;" |
| |
| // keep Hangul syllables spelled out using conjoining jamo together |
| + "<choseong>*<jungseong>*<jongseong>*;" |
| |
| // various additions for Hindi support |
| + "<nukta>=[\u093c];" |
| + "<danda>=[\u0964\u0965];" |
| + "<virama>=[\u094d];" |
| + "<devVowelSign>=[\u093e-\u094c\u0962\u0963];" |
| + "<devConsonant>=[\u0915-\u0939];" |
| + "<devNuktaConsonant>=[\u0958-\u095f];" |
| + "<devCharEnd>=[\u0902\u0903\u0951-\u0954];" |
| + "<devCAMN>=(<devConsonant>{<nukta>});" |
| + "<devConsonant1>=(<devNuktaConsonant>|<devCAMN>);" |
| + "<zwj>=[\u200d];" |
| + "<devConjunct>=({<devConsonant1><virama>{<zwj>}}<devConsonant1>);" |
| + "<devConjunct>{<devVowelSign>}{<devCharEnd>};" |
| + "<danda><nukta>;" |
| }, |
| |
| // default rules for finding word boundaries |
| { "WordBreakRules", |
| // ignore non-spacing marks, enclosing marks, and format characters, |
| // all of which should not influence the algorithm |
| //"<ignore>=[:Mn::Me::Cf:];" |
| "<ignore>=[:Cf:];" |
| |
| + "<enclosing>=[:Mn::Me:];" |
| |
| // Hindi phrase separator, kanji, katakana, hiragana, CJK diacriticals, |
| // other letters, and digits |
| + "<danda>=[\u0964\u0965];" |
| + "<kanji>=[\u3005\u4e00-\u9fa5\uf900-\ufa2d];" |
| + "<kata>=[\u30a1-\u30fa\u30fd\u30fe];" |
| + "<hira>=[\u3041-\u3094\u309d\u309e];" |
| + "<cjk-diacrit>=[\u3099-\u309c\u30fb\u30fc];" |
| + "<letter-base>=[:L::Mc:^[<kanji><kata><hira><cjk-diacrit>]];" |
| + "<let>=(<letter-base><enclosing>*);" |
| + "<digit-base>=[:N:];" |
| + "<dgt>=(<digit-base><enclosing>*);" |
| |
| // punctuation that can occur in the middle of a word: currently |
| // dashes, apostrophes, quotation marks, and periods |
| + "<mid-word>=[:Pd::Pc:\u00ad\u2027\\\"\\\'\\.];" |
| |
| // punctuation that can occur in the middle of a number: currently |
| // apostrophes, qoutation marks, periods, commas, and the Arabic |
| // decimal point |
| + "<mid-num>=[\\\"\\\'\\,\u066b\\.];" |
| |
| // punctuation that can occur at the beginning of a number: currently |
| // the period, the number sign, and all currency symbols except the cents sign |
| + "<pre-num>=[:Sc:\\#\\.^\u00a2];" |
| |
| // punctuation that can occur at the end of a number: currently |
| // the percent, per-thousand, per-ten-thousand, and Arabic percent |
| // signs, the cents sign, and the ampersand |
| + "<post-num>=[\\%\\&\u00a2\u066a\u2030\u2031];" |
| |
| // line separators: currently LF, FF, PS, and LS |
| + "<ls>=[\n\u000c\u2028\u2029];" |
| |
| // whitespace: all space separators and the tab character |
| + "<ws-base>=[:Zs:\t];" |
| + "<ws>=(<ws-base><enclosing>*);" |
| |
| // a word is a sequence of letters that may contain internal |
| // punctuation, as long as it begins and ends with a letter and |
| // never contains two punctuation marks in a row |
| + "<word>=((<let><let>*(<mid-word><let><let>*)*){<danda>});" |
| |
| // a number is a sequence of digits that may contain internal |
| // punctuation, as long as it begins and ends with a digit and |
| // never contains two punctuation marks in a row. |
| + "<number>=(<dgt><dgt>*(<mid-num><dgt><dgt>*)*);" |
| |
| // break after every character, with the following exceptions |
| // (this will cause punctuation marks that aren't considered |
| // part of words or numbers to be treated as words unto themselves) |
| + ".;" |
| |
| // keep together any sequence of contiguous words and numbers |
| // (including just one of either), plus an optional trailing |
| // number-suffix character |
| + "{<word>}(<number><word>)*{<number>{<post-num>}};" |
| |
| // keep together and sequence of contiguous words and numbers |
| // that starts with a number-prefix character and a number, |
| // and may end with a number-suffix character |
| + "<pre-num>(<number><word>)*{<number>{<post-num>}};" |
| |
| // keep together runs of whitespace (optionally with a single trailing |
| // line separator or CRLF sequence) |
| + "<ws>*{\r}{<ls>};" |
| |
| // keep together runs of Katakana and CJK diacritical marks |
| + "[<kata><cjk-diacrit>]*;" |
| |
| // keep together runs of Hiragana and CJK diacritical marks |
| + "[<hira><cjk-diacrit>]*;" |
| |
| // keep together runs of Kanji |
| + "<kanji>*;" |
| |
| // keep together anything else and an enclosing mark |
| + "<base>=[^<enclosing>^[:Cc::Cf::Zl::Zp:]];" |
| + "<base><enclosing><enclosing>*;" |
| }, |
| |
| // default rules for determining legal line-breaking positions |
| { "LineBreakRules", |
| // characters that always cause a break: ETX, tab, LF, FF, LS, and PS |
| "<break>=[\u0003\t\n\f\u2028\u2029];" |
| |
| // ignore format characters and control characters EXCEPT for breaking chars |
| + "<ignore>=[:Cf:[:Cc:^[<break>\r]]];" |
| |
| // enclosing marks |
| + "<enclosing>=[:Mn::Me:];" |
| |
| // Hindi phrase separators |
| + "<danda>=[\u0964\u0965];" |
| |
| // characters that always prevent a break: the non-breaking space |
| // and similar characters |
| + "<glue>=[\u00a0\u0f0c\u2007\u2011\u202f\ufeff];" |
| |
| // whitespace: space separators and control characters, except for |
| // CR and the other characters mentioned above |
| + "<space>=[:Zs::Cc:^[<glue><break>\r]];" |
| |
| // dashes: dash punctuation and the discretionary hyphen, except for |
| // non-breaking hyphens |
| + "<dash>=[:Pd:\u00ad^<glue>];" |
| |
| // characters that stick to a word if they precede it: currency symbols |
| // (except the cents sign) and starting punctuation |
| + "<pre-word>=[:Sc::Ps::Pi:^[\u00a2]\\\"\\\'];" |
| |
| // characters that stick to a word if they follow it: ending punctuation, |
| // other punctuation that usually occurs at the end of a sentence, |
| // small Kana characters, some CJK diacritics, etc. |
| + "<post-word>=[\\\":Pe::Pf:\\!\\%\\.\\,\\:\\;\\?\u00a2\u00b0\u066a\u2030-\u2034\u2103" |
| + "\u2105\u2109\u3001\u3002\u3005\u3041\u3043\u3045\u3047\u3049\u3063" |
| + "\u3083\u3085\u3087\u308e\u3099-\u309e\u30a1\u30a3\u30a5\u30a7\u30a9" |
| + "\u30c3\u30e3\u30e5\u30e7\u30ee\u30f5\u30f6\u30fc-\u30fe\uff01\uff05" |
| + "\uff0c\uff0e\uff1a\uff1b\uff1f];" |
| |
| // Kanji: actually includes Kanji,Kana and Hangul syllables, |
| // except for small Kana and CJK diacritics |
| + "<kanji>=[\u4e00-\u9fa5\uac00-\ud7a3\uf900-\ufa2d\ufa30-\ufa6a\u3041-\u3094\u30a1-\u30fa^[<post-word><ignore>]];" |
| |
| // digits |
| + "<digit>=[:Nd::No:];" |
| |
| // punctuation that can occur in the middle of a number: periods and commas |
| + "<mid-num>=[\\.\\,];" |
| |
| // everything not mentioned above |
| + "<char>=[^[<break><space><dash><kanji><glue><ignore><pre-word><post-word><mid-num>\r<danda>]];" |
| |
| // a "number" is a run of prefix characters and dashes, followed by one or |
| // more digits with isolated number-punctuation characters interspersed |
| + "<number>=([<pre-word><dash>]*<digit><digit>*(<mid-num><digit><digit>*)*);" |
| |
| // the basic core of a word can be either a "number" as defined above, a single |
| // "Kanji" character, or a run of any number of not-explicitly-mentioned |
| // characters (this includes Latin letters) |
| + "<word-core>=(<char>*|<kanji>|<number>);" |
| |
| // a word may end with an optional suffix that be either a run of one or |
| // more dashes or a run of word-suffix characters |
| + "<word-suffix>=((<dash><dash>*|<post-word>*));" |
| |
| // a word, thus, is an optional run of word-prefix characters, followed by |
| // a word core and a word suffix (the syntax of <word-core> and <word-suffix> |
| // actually allows either of them to match the empty string, putting a break |
| // between things like ")(" or "aaa(aaa" |
| + "<word>=(<pre-word>*<word-core><word-suffix>);" |
| |
| + "<hack1>=[\\(];" |
| + "<hack2>=[\\)];" |
| + "<hack3>=[\\$\\'];" |
| |
| // finally, the rule that does the work: Keep together any run of words that |
| // are joined by runs of one of more non-spacing mark. Also keep a trailing |
| // line-break character or CRLF combination with the word. (line separators |
| // "win" over nbsp's) |
| + "<word>(((<space>*<glue><glue>*{<space>})|<hack3>)<word>)*<space>*{<enclosing>*}{<hack1><hack2><post-word>*}{<enclosing>*}{\r}{<break>};" |
| + "\r<break>;" |
| }, |
| |
| // default rules for finding sentence boundaries |
| { "SentenceBreakRules", |
| // ignore non-spacing marks, enclosing marks, and format characters |
| "<ignore>=[:Mn::Me::Cf:];" |
| |
| // letters |
| + "<letter>=[:L:];" |
| |
| // lowercase letters |
| + "<lc>=[:Ll:];" |
| |
| // uppercase letters |
| + "<uc>=[:Lu:];" |
| |
| // NOT lowercase letters |
| + "<notlc>=[<letter>^<lc>];" |
| |
| // whitespace (line separators are treated as whitespace) |
| + "<space>=[\t\r\f\n\u2028:Zs:];" |
| |
| // punctuation which may occur at the beginning of a sentence: "starting |
| // punctuation" and quotation marks |
| + "<start-punctuation>=[:Ps::Pi:\\\"\\\'];" |
| |
| // punctuation with may occur at the end of a sentence: "ending punctuation" |
| // and quotation marks |
| + "<end>=[:Pe::Pf:\\\"\\\'];" |
| |
| // digits |
| + "<digit>=[:N:];" |
| |
| // characters that unambiguously signal the end of a sentence |
| + "<term>=[\\!\\?\u3002\uff01\uff1f];" |
| |
| // periods, which MAY signal the end of a sentence |
| + "<period>=[\\.\uff0e];" |
| |
| // characters that may occur at the beginning of a sentence: basically anything |
| // not mentioned above (letters and digits are specifically excluded) |
| + "<sent-start>=[^[:L:<space><start-punctuation><end><digit><term><period>\u2029<ignore>]];" |
| |
| // Hindi phrase separator |
| + "<danda>=[\u0964\u0965];" |
| |
| // always break sentences after paragraph separators |
| + ".*?{\u2029};" |
| |
| // always break after a danda, if it's followed by whitespace |
| + ".*?<danda><space>*;" |
| |
| // if you see a period, skip over additional periods and ending punctuation |
| // and if the next character is a paragraph separator, break after the |
| // paragraph separator |
| //+ ".*?<period>[<period><end>]*<space>*\u2029;" |
| //+ ".*?[<period><end>]*<space>*\u2029;" |
| |
| // if you see a period, skip over additional periods and ending punctuation, |
| // followed by optional whitespace, followed by optional starting punctuation, |
| // and if the next character is something that can start a sentence |
| // (basically, a capital letter), then put the sentence break between the |
| // whitespace and the opening punctuation |
| + ".*?<period>[<period><end>]*<space><space>*/<notlc>;" |
| + ".*?<period>[<period><end>]*<space>*/[<start-punctuation><sent-start>][<start-punctuation><sent-start>]*<letter>;" |
| |
| // if you see a sentence-terminating character, skip over any additional |
| // terminators, periods, or ending punctuation, followed by any whitespace, |
| // followed by a SINGLE optional paragraph separator, and put the break there |
| + ".*?<term>[<term><period><end>]*<space>*{\u2029};" |
| |
| // The following rules are here to aid in backwards iteration. The automatically |
| // generated backwards state table will rewind to the beginning of the |
| // paragraph all the time (or all the way to the beginning of the document |
| // if the document doesn't use the Unicode PS character) because the only |
| // unambiguous character pairs are those involving paragraph separators. |
| // These specify a few more unambiguous breaking situations. |
| |
| // if you see a sentence-starting character, followed by starting punctuation |
| // (remember, we're iterating backwards), followed by an optional run of |
| // whitespace, followed by an optional run of ending punctuation, followed |
| // by a period, this is a safe place to turn around |
| + "!<sent-start><start-punctuation>*<space>*<end>*<period>;" |
| |
| // if you see a letter or a digit, followed by an optional run of |
| // starting punctuation, followed by an optional run of whitespace, |
| // followed by an optional run of ending punctuation, followed by |
| // a sentence terminator, this is a safe place to turn around |
| + "![<sent-start><lc><digit>]<start-punctuation>*<space>*<end>*<term>;" |
| } |
| }; |
| } |
| } |