From 68578072bfaf6054a96bb6bcedfccb6e56a508fe Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Robin Haberkorn Date: Wed, 11 Sep 2024 12:21:42 +0200 Subject: the SciTECO parser is Unicode-based now (refs #5) MIME-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: text/plain; charset=UTF-8 Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8bit The following rules apply: * All SciTECO macros __must__ be in valid UTF-8, regardless of the the register's configured encoding. This is checked against before execution, so we can use glib's non-validating UTF-8 API afterwards. * Things will inevitably get slower as we have to validate all macros first and convert to gunichar for each and every character passed into the parser. As an optimization, it may make sense to have our own inlineable version of g_utf8_get_char() (TODO). Also, Unicode glyphs in syntactically significant positions may be case-folded - just like ASCII chars were. This is is of course slower than case folding ASCII. The impact of this should be measured and perhaps we should restrict case folding to a-z via teco_ascii_toupper(). * The language itself does not use any non-ANSI characters, so you don't have to use UTF-8 characters. * Wherever the parser expects a single character, it will now accept an arbitrary Unicode/UTF-8 glyph as well. In other words, you can call macros like M§ instead of having to write M[§]. You can also get the codepoint of any Unicode character with ^^x. Pressing an Unicode character in the start state or in Ex and Fx will now give a sane error message. * When pressing a key which produces a multi-byte UTF-8 sequence, the character gets translated back and forth multiple times: 1. It's converted to an UTF-8 string, either buffered or by IME methods (Gtk). On Curses we could directly get a wide char using wget_wch(), but it's not currently used, so we don't depend on widechar curses. 2. Parsed into gunichar for passing into the edit command callbacks. This also validates the codepoint - everything later on can assume valid codepoints and valid UTF-8 strings. 3. Once the edit command handling decides to insert the key into the command line, it is serialized back into an UTF-8 string as the command line macro has to be in UTF-8 (like all other macros). 4. The parser reads back gunichars without validation for passing into the parser callbacks. * Flickering in the Curses UI and Pango warnings in Gtk, due to incompletely inserted and displayed UTF-8 sequences, are now fixed. --- tests/testsuite.at | 7 +++---- 1 file changed, 3 insertions(+), 4 deletions(-) (limited to 'tests') diff --git a/tests/testsuite.at b/tests/testsuite.at index 4749b13..0733d2a 100644 --- a/tests/testsuite.at +++ b/tests/testsuite.at @@ -84,8 +84,6 @@ AT_CHECK([$SCITECO -e "0@I//J 0A\"N(0/0)' :@S/^@/\"F(0/0)'"], 0, ignore, ignore) AT_CHECK([$SCITECO -e "@EQa//0EE 1U*0EE 0:@EUa/f^@^@/ :Qa-4\"N(0/0)' Ga Z-4\"N(0/0)'"], 0, ignore, ignore) AT_CHECK([$SCITECO -e "0EE 129@I// -A-129\"N(0/0)' HXa @EQa// EE\"N(0/0)'"], 0, ignore, ignore) AT_CHECK([$SCITECO -8e "129@:^Ua// 0Qa-129\"N(0/0)'"], 0, ignore, ignore) -# FIXME: This will fail once we have an UTF-8-only parser. -AT_CHECK([$SCITECO -8e "@:^Ua/^^/ 129:@^Ua// Ma-129\"N(0/0)'"], 0, ignore, ignore) AT_CHECK([$SCITECO -e "1EE 167Ua @I/^EUa/ .-1\"N(0/0)'"], 0, ignore, ignore) AT_CLEANUP @@ -95,6 +93,8 @@ AT_CHECK([$SCITECO -e "8594@^Ua/Здравствуй, мир!/ :Qa-17\"N(0/0)' 0 AT_CHECK([$SCITECO -e "@I/Здравствуй, мир!/ JW .-10\"N(0/0)' ^E-20\"N(0/0)' 204:EE .-10\"N(0/0)'"], 0, ignore, ignore) AT_CHECK([$SCITECO -e "@I/TEST/ @EW/юникод.txt/"], 0, ignore, ignore) AT_CHECK([test -f юникод.txt], 0, ignore, ignore) +AT_CHECK([$SCITECO -e "^^ß-223\"N(0/0) 23Uъ Q[Ъ]-23\"N(0/0)'"], 0, ignore, ignore) +AT_CHECK([$SCITECO -e "@O/метка/ !метка!"], 0, ignore, ignore) AT_CLEANUP AT_SETUP([Automatic EOL normalization]) @@ -207,8 +207,7 @@ AT_CLEANUP AT_SETUP([Unicode glitches]) # While TECO code must always be UTF-8, strings after string building # can be in single-byte encodings as well. -# This might already work after introducing the Unicode-aware parser. -# If not, it should be fixed. +# It must be possible to search for single bytes in single-byte encodings. AT_CHECK([$SCITECO -8e "164Ua Ga@I//J :@S/^EUa/\"F(0/0)'"], 0, ignore, ignore) AT_XFAIL_IF(true) AT_CLEANUP -- cgit v1.2.3