/* RuleBasedCollator.java -- Concrete Collator Class
Copyright (C) 1998, 1999, 2000, 2001, 2003, 2004, 2005 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
This file is part of GNU Classpath.
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permission to link this library with independent modules to produce an
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package java.text;
import gnu.classpath.NotImplementedException;
import java.util.ArrayList;
import java.util.HashMap;
/* Written using "Java Class Libraries", 2nd edition, plus online
* API docs for JDK 1.2 from http://www.javasoft.com.
* Status: Believed complete and correct
*/
/**
* This class is a concrete subclass of Collator
suitable
* for string collation in a wide variety of languages. An instance of
* this class is normally returned by the getInstance
method
* of Collator
with rules predefined for the requested
* locale. However, an instance of this class can be created manually
* with any desired rules.
*
* Rules take the form of a String
with the following syntax
*
* As for the text argument itself, this is any sequence of Unicode * characters not in the following ranges: 0x0009-0x000D, 0x0020-0x002F, * 0x003A-0x0040, 0x005B-0x0060, and 0x007B-0x007E. If these characters are * desired, they must be enclosed in single quotes. If any whitespace is * encountered, it is ignored. (For example, "a b" is equal to "ab"). *
* The reset operation inserts the following rule at the point where the
* text argument to it exists in the previously declared rule string. This
* makes it easy to add new rules to an existing string by simply including
* them in a reset sequence at the end. Note that the text argument, or
* at least the first character of it, must be present somewhere in the
* previously declared rules in order to be inserted properly. If this
* is not satisfied, a ParseException
will be thrown.
*
* This system of configuring RuleBasedCollator
is needlessly
* complex and the people at Taligent who developed it (along with the folks
* at Sun who accepted it into the Java standard library) deserve a slow
* and agonizing death.
*
* Here are a couple of example of rule strings: *
* "< a < b < c" - This string says that a is greater than b which is * greater than c, with all differences being primary differences. *
* "< a,A < b,B < c,C" - This string says that 'A' is greater than 'a' with * a tertiary strength comparison. Both 'b' and 'B' are greater than 'a' and * 'A' during a primary strength comparison. But 'B' is greater than 'b' * under a tertiary strength comparison. *
* "< a < c & a < b " - This sequence is identical in function to the * "< a < b < c" rule string above. The '&' reset symbol indicates that * the rule "< b" is to be inserted after the text argument "a" in the * previous rule string segment. *
* "< a < b & y < z" - This is an error. The character 'y' does not appear * anywhere in the previous rule string segment so the rule following the * reset rule cannot be inserted. *
* "< a & A @ < e & E < f& F" - This sequence is equivalent to the following * "< a & A < E & e < f & F". *
* For a description of the various comparison strength types, see the
* documentation for the Collator
class.
*
* As an additional complication to this already overly complex rule scheme, * if any characters precede the first rule, these characters are considered * ignorable. They will be treated as if they did not exist during * comparisons. For example, "- < a < b ..." would make '-' an ignorable * character such that the strings "high-tech" and "hightech" would * be considered identical. *
* A ParseException
will be thrown for any of the following
* conditions:
*
ce_table
. It is used to compute the
* ordering value of unspecified character.
*/
private int last_primary_value;
/**
* This is the value of the last secondary sequence of the
* primary 0, entered into
* ce_table
. It is used to compute the
* ordering value of an unspecified accented character.
*/
private int last_tertiary_value;
/**
* This variable is true if accents need to be sorted
* in the other direction.
*/
private boolean inverseAccentComparison;
/**
* This collation element is special to unknown sequence.
* The JDK uses it to mark and sort the characters which has
* no collation rules.
*/
static final CollationElement SPECIAL_UNKNOWN_SEQ =
new CollationElement("", (short) 32767, (short) 0, (short) 0,
(short) 0, null, false);
/**
* This method initializes a new instance of RuleBasedCollator
* with the specified collation rules. Note that an application normally
* obtains an instance of RuleBasedCollator
by calling the
* getInstance
method of Collator
. That method
* automatically loads the proper set of rules for the desired locale.
*
* @param rules The collation rule string.
*
* @exception ParseException If the rule string contains syntax errors.
*/
public RuleBasedCollator(String rules) throws ParseException
{
if (rules.equals(""))
throw new ParseException("empty rule set", 0);
this.rules = rules;
buildCollationVector(parseString(rules));
buildPrefixAccess();
}
/**
* This method returns the number of common characters at the beginning
* of the string of the two parameters.
*
* @param prefix A string considered as a prefix to test against
* the other string.
* @param s A string to test the prefix against.
* @return The number of common characters.
*/
static int findPrefixLength(String prefix, String s)
{
int index;
int len = prefix.length();
for (index = 0; index < len && index < s.length(); ++index)
{
if (prefix.charAt(index) != s.charAt(index))
return index;
}
return index;
}
/**
* Here we are merging two sets of sorting instructions: 'patch' into 'main'. This methods
* checks whether it is possible to find an anchor point for the rules to be merged and
* then insert them at that precise point.
*
* @param offset Offset in the string containing rules of the beginning of the rules
* being merged in.
* @param starter Text of the rules being merged.
* @param main Repository of all already parsed rules.
* @param patch Rules to be merged into the repository.
* @throws ParseException if it is impossible to find an anchor point for the new rules.
*/
private void mergeRules(int offset, String starter, ArrayListString
is less than, greater than, or equal to
* the second. The value depends not only on the collation rules in
* effect, but also the strength and decomposition settings of this object.
*
* @param source The first String
to compare.
* @param target A second String
to compare to the first.
*
* @return A negative integer if source < target, a positive integer
* if source > target, or 0 if source == target.
*/
public int compare(String source, String target)
{
CollationElementIterator cs, ct;
CollationElement ord1block = null;
CollationElement ord2block = null;
boolean advance_block_1 = true;
boolean advance_block_2 = true;
cs = getCollationElementIterator(source);
ct = getCollationElementIterator(target);
for(;;)
{
int ord1;
int ord2;
/*
* We have to check whether the characters are ignorable.
* If it is the case then forget them.
*/
if (advance_block_1)
{
ord1block = cs.nextBlock();
if (ord1block != null && ord1block.ignore)
continue;
}
if (advance_block_2)
{
ord2block = ct.nextBlock();
if (ord2block != null && ord2block.ignore)
{
advance_block_1 = false;
continue;
}
}
else
advance_block_2 = true;
if (!advance_block_1)
advance_block_1 = true;
if (ord1block != null)
ord1 = ord1block.getValue();
else
{
if (ord2block == null)
return 0;
return -1;
}
if (ord2block == null)
return 1;
ord2 = ord2block.getValue();
// We know chars are totally equal, so skip
if (ord1 == ord2)
{
if (getStrength() == IDENTICAL)
if (!ord1block.key.equals(ord2block.key))
return ord1block.key.compareTo(ord2block.key);
continue;
}
// Check for primary strength differences
int prim1 = CollationElementIterator.primaryOrder(ord1);
int prim2 = CollationElementIterator.primaryOrder(ord2);
if (prim1 == 0 && getStrength() < TERTIARY)
{
advance_block_2 = false;
continue;
}
else if (prim2 == 0 && getStrength() < TERTIARY)
{
advance_block_1 = false;
continue;
}
if (prim1 < prim2)
return -1;
else if (prim1 > prim2)
return 1;
else if (getStrength() == PRIMARY)
continue;
// Check for secondary strength differences
int sec1 = CollationElementIterator.secondaryOrder(ord1);
int sec2 = CollationElementIterator.secondaryOrder(ord2);
if (sec1 < sec2)
return -1;
else if (sec1 > sec2)
return 1;
else if (getStrength() == SECONDARY)
continue;
// Check for tertiary differences
int tert1 = CollationElementIterator.tertiaryOrder(ord1);
int tert2 = CollationElementIterator.tertiaryOrder(ord2);
if (tert1 < tert2)
return -1;
else if (tert1 > tert2)
return 1;
else if (getStrength() == TERTIARY)
continue;
// Apparently JDK does this (at least for my test case).
return ord1block.key.compareTo(ord2block.key);
}
}
/**
* This method tests this object for equality against the specified
* object. This will be true if and only if the specified object is
* another reference to this object.
*
* @param obj The Object
to compare against this object.
*
* @return true
if the specified object is equal to this object,
* false
otherwise.
*/
public boolean equals(Object obj)
{
if (obj == this)
return true;
else
return false;
}
/**
* This method builds a default collation element without invoking
* the database created from the rules passed to the constructor.
*
* @param c Character which needs a collation element.
* @return A valid brand new CollationElement instance.
*/
CollationElement getDefaultElement(char c)
{
int v;
// Preliminary support for generic accent sorting inversion (I don't know if all
// characters in the range should be sorted backward). This is the place
// to fix this if needed.
if (inverseAccentComparison && (c >= 0x02B9 && c <= 0x0361))
v = 0x0361 - ((int) c - 0x02B9);
else
v = (short) c;
return new CollationElement("" + c, last_primary_value + v,
(short) 0, (short) 0, (short) 0, null, false);
}
/**
* This method builds a default collation element for an accented character
* without invoking the database created from the rules passed to the constructor.
*
* @param c Character which needs a collation element.
* @return A valid brand new CollationElement instance.
*/
CollationElement getDefaultAccentedElement(char c)
{
int v;
// Preliminary support for generic accent sorting inversion (I don't know if all
// characters in the range should be sorted backward). This is the place
// to fix this if needed.
if (inverseAccentComparison && (c >= 0x02B9 && c <= 0x0361))
v = 0x0361 - ((int) c - 0x02B9);
else
v = (short) c;
return new CollationElement("" + c, (short) 0,
(short) 0, (short) (last_tertiary_value + v), (short) 0, null, false);
}
/**
* This method returns an instance for CollationElementIterator
* for the specified String
under the collation rules for this
* object.
*
* @param source The String
to return the
* CollationElementIterator
instance for.
*
* @return A CollationElementIterator
for the specified
* String
.
*/
public CollationElementIterator getCollationElementIterator(String source)
{
return new CollationElementIterator(this, source);
}
/**
* This method returns an instance of CollationElementIterator
* for the String
represented by the specified
* CharacterIterator
.
*
* @param source The CharacterIterator
with the desired String
.
*
* @return A CollationElementIterator
for the specified String
.
*/
public CollationElementIterator getCollationElementIterator(CharacterIterator source)
{
return new CollationElementIterator(this, source);
}
/**
* This method returns an instance of CollationKey
for the
* specified String
. The object returned will have a
* more efficient mechanism for its comparison function that could
* provide speed benefits if multiple comparisons are performed, such
* as during a sort.
*
* @param source The String
to create a CollationKey
for.
*
* @return A CollationKey
for the specified String
.
*/
public CollationKey getCollationKey(String source)
{
CollationElementIterator cei = getCollationElementIterator(source);
ArrayListString
containing the collation rules
* for this object.
*
* @return The collation rules for this object.
*/
public String getRules()
{
return rules;
}
/**
* This method returns a hash value for this object.
*
* @return A hash value for this object.
*/
public int hashCode()
{
return System.identityHashCode(this);
}
}