International Characters Support: Difference between revisions
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== Locales == | == Locales == | ||
Converting strings to numbers when the decimal separator is not '.' | Converting strings to numbers when the decimal separator is not '.' | ||
== The state of Octave == | |||
Octave "by accident" supports UTF-8, meaning that the vast majority of functions for text display and graph manipulations are using 8-bits chars, passing them unmodified to the underlying layers in charge of rendering. | |||
Functions like 'length' and size return the space required for string storage, which may be greater than the effective number of symbols. | |||
Tests like 'isalpha' are modelled as their lower-layers C counterpart and are not aware of UTF-8 nor locales | |||
String search should be OK provided the two arguments are UTF-8 | |||
Strings concatenation works with respect to UTF-8 | |||
Displaying strings works in most circumstances except help message (bug report and patch recently provided) |
Revision as of 11:34, 1 April 2014
ANSI
The first widely character set was the 7-bits ANSI, with values ranging from 0 to 127. Being developped for English, it uses latin character set, but without accents and other punctuation signs.
In the '80s, extensions were provided by using 8-bits character tables, whose characters 128 to 255 where used to encode the missing values. But there were so many that those 128 values were not enough. So a number of maps where defined. For instance, ISO-8859-1 for Western Europeans Languages, with letter for french: é, Nordic languages: Ø, a few symbols: ½, and so on. Typical computer support consisted in early loading the adequate character map, then glyphs were rendered correctly.
The first issue with this approach is about conversion. To view some text in Greek or Cyrillic language on a display configured for Western European requires to switch back and forth between codepages.
Unicode
Unicode is a standard and an effort to encode symbols from every language existing or having existed on Earth. There are actually 190000 signs from 93 languages. Unicode is equivalent to ISO/CEI 10646. Unicode consists of
- a table of symbols, each with an unique name, like "GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA" for α
- encoding norms: UTF-16, UTF-32, UTF-8
- glyphs: a screen representation for each symbol
Storage and binary representation
- UTF-32 stores each symbols on 4 bytes according to two schemes: Big Endian and Little Endian
- UTF-16 stores most of its symbols on 2 bytes; rarelly used values are stored using a sequence of "prefix-value". Two schemes: Big Endian and Little Endian
- UTF-8 was designed to be mostly compabile with ASCII; symbols storage is either 1, 2, 3, 4 bytes. This scheme is defined sequentially, there is no ambiguity linked to its endianess.
C and C++ support
There are three types of "char" in C and C++: plain (unqualified), signed and unsigned. The two latters were added to have similar behavior as 'int', as chars may be used to store small numbers. The standard says:
3.9.1 Fundamental types [basic.fundamental]
Objects declared as characters char) shall be large enough to store any member of the implementation's basic character set. If a character from this set is stored in a character object, the integral value of that character object is equal to the value of the single character literal form of that character. It is implementation-defined whether a char object can hold negative values. Characters can be explicitly declared unsigned or signed. Plain char, signed char, and unsigned char are three distinct types. A char, a signed char, and an unsigned char occupy the same amount of storage and have the same alignment requirements (basic.types); that is, they have the same object representation. For character types, all bits of the object representation participate in the value representation. For unsigned character types, all possible bit patterns of the value representation represent numbers. These requirements do not hold for other types. In any particular implementation, a plain char object can take on either the same values as a signed char or an unsigned char; which one is implementation-defined.
What is fundamental here is that usual characters should be declared as "chars" or "signed chars". "Unsigned char" means they MAY be submitted to truncation of the eighth bit, this is implementation-dependant.
In order to support wide-characters, the two-byte storage wchar_t was added to the C standard. Functions whose argument is wchar instead of char are generally prefixed by "w".
Characters functions
Some of the basic functions about characters strings are listed below:
- length: how many symbols ?
- tests: is this symbol a letter, a number, a punctuation sign, ... ?
- finding chars inside a string
- concatenating strings
- displaying strings
Here is a brief summary of the "features" of each encoding with respect to those functions:
Function | UTF-8 | UTF-16 | UTF-32 |
---|---|---|---|
length | number of symbols <= storage length | number of symbols <= storage length | number of symbols proportionnal to storage length |
tests | must be aware of UTF-8 and locales | must be aware of UTF-16, locales AND endianess | must be aware of UTF-32, locales AND endianess |
finding symbols | must implementent a sequential machine for prefix codes | must implementent a sequential machine for prefix codes; must be aware of endianess | must be aware of endianess |
concatenating strings | must be 8-bit compatible | must verify the endianess are the same | must verify the endianess are the same |
displaying strings | must pass it to external app without truncating the 8th bit | must ensure the external app is UTF-16; must check for endianess | must ensure the external app is UTF-32; must check for endianess |
Cons
- UTF-8: not all sequences are valid
- UTF-16: not all sequences are valid. When using standard ASCII, memory waste is 50%. While transmitting strings, around half of the chars are zeros.
- UTF-32: not all sequences are valid. When using standard ASCII, memory waste is 75%. While transmitting strings, around three-quarters of the chars are zeros.
Octave and international support
Graphs
Adding special symbols to graph title, graph labels and inside graphs
Locales
Converting strings to numbers when the decimal separator is not '.'
The state of Octave
Octave "by accident" supports UTF-8, meaning that the vast majority of functions for text display and graph manipulations are using 8-bits chars, passing them unmodified to the underlying layers in charge of rendering.
Functions like 'length' and size return the space required for string storage, which may be greater than the effective number of symbols.
Tests like 'isalpha' are modelled as their lower-layers C counterpart and are not aware of UTF-8 nor locales
String search should be OK provided the two arguments are UTF-8
Strings concatenation works with respect to UTF-8
Displaying strings works in most circumstances except help message (bug report and patch recently provided)