# # Copyright (C) 2002, 2003, International Business Machines Corporation and others. # All Rights Reserved. # # file: word.txt # # ICU Word Break Rules # See Unicode Standard Annex #29. # These rules are based on the proposed draft dated 2003-03-31 # #################################################################################### # # Character class definitions from TR 29 # #################################################################################### $Katakana = [[:Script = KATAKANA:] [:name = KATAKANA-HIRAGANA PROLONGED SOUND MARK:] [:name = HALFWIDTH KATAKANA-HIRAGANA PROLONGED SOUND MARK:] [:name = HALFWIDTH KATAKANA VOICED SOUND MARK:] [:name = HALFWIDTH KATAKANA SEMI-VOICED SOUND MARK:]]; $ALetter = [[:Alphabetic:] [:name= HEBREW PUNCTUATION GERESH:] - [:Ideographic:] - [:Katakana:] - [:Script = Thai:] - [:Script = Lao:] - [:Script = Hiragana:]]; $MidLetter = [[:name = APOSTROPHE:] [:name = MIDDLE DOT:] [:name = HEBREW PUNCTUATION GERSHAYIM:] [:name = RIGHT SINGLE QUOTATION MARK:] [:name = HYPHENATION POINT:]]; $MidNumLet = [[:name = FULL STOP:] [:name = COLON:]]; $MidNum = [[:LineBreak = Infix_Numeric:] - $MidNumLet]; $Numeric = [:LineBreak = Numeric:]; # # Character Class Definitions. # The names are those from TR29. # $Control = [[:Zl:] [:Zp:] [:Cc:] [:Cf:]]; $Extend = [[:Grapheme_Extend = TRUE:]]; #################################################################################### # # Word Break Rules. Definitions and Rules specific to word break begin Here. # #################################################################################### $Format = [[:Cf:]]; # Rule 3: Treat a grapheme cluster as if it were a single character. # Hangul Syllables are easier to deal with here than they are in Grapheme Clusters # because we don't need to find the boundaries between adjacent syllables - # they won't be word boundaries. # # # "Extended" definitions. Grapheme Cluster + Format Chars, treated like the base char. # $ALetterEx = $ALetter $Extend* $Format*; $NumericEx = $Numeric $Extend* $Format*; $MidNumEx = $MidNum $Extend* $Format*; $MidNumLetEx = $MidNumLet $Extend* $Format*; $MidLetterEx = $MidLetter $Extend* $Format*; $KatakanaEx = $Katakana $Extend* $Format*; # # Numbers. Rules 8, 11, 12 form the TR. # $NumberSequence = $NumericEx (($MidNumEx | $MidNumLetEx)? $NumericEx)*; $NumberSequence {100}; # # Words. Alpha-numerics. Rule 5, 6, 7, 9, 10 # - must include at least one letter. # - may include both letters and numbers. # - may include MideLetter, MidNumber punctuation. # $LetterSequence = $ALetterEx (($MidLetterEx | $MidNumLetEx)? $ALetterEx)*; # rules #6, #7 $NumberSequence? $LetterSequence ($NumberSequence | $LetterSequence)* {200}; # # Do not break between Katakana. Rule #13. # $KatakanaEx+ {300}; [:Hiragana:] $Extend* {300}; # # Ideographic Characters. Stand by themselves as words. # Separated from the "Everything Else" rule, below, only so that they # can be tagged with a return value. TODO: is this what we want? # [:IDEOGRAPHIC:] $Extend* {400}; # # Everything Else, with no tag. # Non-Control chars combine with $Extend (combining) chars. # Controls are do not. # [^$Control [:Ideographic:]] $Extend*; [\u000d][\u000a]; # # Reverse Rules. Back up over any of the chars that can group together. # (Reverse rules do not need to be exact; they can back up too far, # but must back up at least enough, and must stop on a boundary.) # # NonStarters are the set of all characters that can appear at the 2nd - nth position of # a word. (They may also be the first.) The reverse rule skips over these, until it # reaches something that can only be the start (and probably only) char in a "word". # A space or punctuation meets the test. # $NonStarters = [$Numeric $ALetter $Katakana $MidLetter $MidNum $MidNumLet $Extend $Format]; !.*; #! ($NonStarters* | \n \r) .;