1# Copyright (c) 2002-2012 International Business Machines Corporation and 2# others. All Rights Reserved. 3# 4# file: line_fi.txt 5# 6# Line Breaking Rules 7# Implement default line breaking as defined by 8# Unicode Standard Annex #14 Revision 29 for Unicode 6.2 9# http://www.unicode.org/reports/tr14/ 10# 11# TODO: Rule LB 8 remains as it was in Unicode 5.2 12# This is only because of a limitation of ICU break engine implementation, 13# not because the older behavior is desirable. 14 15# 16# Character Classes defined by TR 14. 17# 18 19!!chain; 20!!LBCMNoChain; 21 22 23!!lookAheadHardBreak; 24# 25# !!lookAheadHardBreak Described here because it is (as yet) undocumented elsewhere 26# and only used for the line break rules. 27# 28# It is used in the implementation of rule LB 10 29# which says to treat any combining mark that is not attached to a base 30# character as if it were of class AL (alphabetic). 31# 32# The problem occurs in the reverse rules. 33# 34# Consider a sequence like, with correct breaks as shown 35# LF ID CM AL AL 36# ^ ^ ^ 37# Then consider the sequence without the initial ID (ideographic) 38# LF CM AL AL 39# ^ ^ 40# Our CM, which in the first example was attached to the ideograph, 41# is now unattached, becomes an alpha, and joins in with the other 42# alphas. 43# 44# When iterating forwards, these sequences do not present any problems 45# When iterating backwards, we need to look ahead when encountering 46# a CM to see whether it attaches to something further on or not. 47# (Look-ahead in a reverse rule is looking towards the start) 48# 49# If the CM is unattached, we need to force a break. 50# 51# !!lookAheadHardBreak forces the run time state machine to 52# stop immediately when a look ahead rule ( '/' operator) matches, 53# and set the match position to that of the look-ahead operator, 54# no matter what other rules may be in play at the time. 55# 56# See rule LB 19 for an example. 57# 58 59$AI = [:LineBreak = Ambiguous:]; 60$AL = [:LineBreak = Alphabetic:]; 61$BA = [[:LineBreak = Break_After:] - [\u2010]]; 62$HH = [\u2010]; 63$BB = [:LineBreak = Break_Before:]; 64$BK = [:LineBreak = Mandatory_Break:]; 65$B2 = [:LineBreak = Break_Both:]; 66$CB = [:LineBreak = Contingent_Break:]; 67$CJ = [:LineBreak = Conditional_Japanese_Starter:]; 68$CL = [:LineBreak = Close_Punctuation:]; 69$CM = [:LineBreak = Combining_Mark:]; 70$CP = [:LineBreak = Close_Parenthesis:]; 71$CR = [:LineBreak = Carriage_Return:]; 72$EX = [:LineBreak = Exclamation:]; 73$GL = [:LineBreak = Glue:]; 74$HL = [:LineBreak = Hebrew_Letter:]; 75$HY = [:LineBreak = Hyphen:]; 76$H2 = [:LineBreak = H2:]; 77$H3 = [:LineBreak = H3:]; 78$ID = [:LineBreak = Ideographic:]; 79$IN = [:LineBreak = Inseperable:]; 80$IS = [:LineBreak = Infix_Numeric:]; 81$JL = [:LineBreak = JL:]; 82$JV = [:LineBreak = JV:]; 83$JT = [:LineBreak = JT:]; 84$LF = [:LineBreak = Line_Feed:]; 85$NL = [:LineBreak = Next_Line:]; 86$NS = [[:LineBreak = Nonstarter:] $CJ]; 87$NU = [:LineBreak = Numeric:]; 88$OP = [:LineBreak = Open_Punctuation:]; 89$PO = [:LineBreak = Postfix_Numeric:]; 90$PR = [:LineBreak = Prefix_Numeric:]; 91$QU = [:LineBreak = Quotation:]; 92$RI = [:LineBreak = Regional_Indicator:]; 93$SA = [:LineBreak = Complex_Context:]; 94$SG = [:LineBreak = Surrogate:]; 95$SP = [:LineBreak = Space:]; 96$SY = [:LineBreak = Break_Symbols:]; 97$WJ = [:LineBreak = Word_Joiner:]; 98$XX = [:LineBreak = Unknown:]; 99$ZW = [:LineBreak = ZWSpace:]; 100 101# Dictionary character set, for triggering language-based break engines. Currently 102# limited to LineBreak=Complex_Context. Note that this set only works in Unicode 103# 5.0 or later as the definition of Complex_Context was corrected to include all 104# characters requiring dictionary break. 105 106$dictionary = [:LineBreak = Complex_Context:]; 107 108# 109# Rule LB1. By default, treat AI (characters with ambiguous east Asian width), 110# SA (South East Asian: Thai, Lao, Khmer) 111# SG (Unpaired Surrogates) 112# XX (Unknown, unassigned) 113# as $AL (Alphabetic) 114# 115$ALPlus = [$AL $AI $SA $SG $XX]; 116 117# 118# Combining Marks. X $CM* behaves as if it were X. Rule LB6. 119# 120$ALcm = $ALPlus $CM*; 121$BAcm = $BA $CM*; 122$HHcm = $HH $CM*; 123$BBcm = $BB $CM*; 124$B2cm = $B2 $CM*; 125$CLcm = $CL $CM*; 126$CPcm = $CP $CM*; 127$EXcm = $EX $CM*; 128$GLcm = $GL $CM*; 129$HLcm = $HL $CM*; 130$HYcm = $HY $CM*; 131$H2cm = $H2 $CM*; 132$H3cm = $H3 $CM*; 133$IDcm = $ID $CM*; 134$INcm = $IN $CM*; 135$IScm = $IS $CM*; 136$JLcm = $JL $CM*; 137$JVcm = $JV $CM*; 138$JTcm = $JT $CM*; 139$NScm = $NS $CM*; 140$NUcm = $NU $CM*; 141$OPcm = $OP $CM*; 142$POcm = $PO $CM*; 143$PRcm = $PR $CM*; 144$QUcm = $QU $CM*; 145$RIcm = $RI $CM*; 146$SYcm = $SY $CM*; 147$WJcm = $WJ $CM*; 148 149## ------------------------------------------------- 150 151!!forward; 152 153# 154# Each class of character can stand by itself as an unbroken token, with trailing combining stuff 155# 156$ALPlus $CM+; 157$BA $CM+; 158$HH $CM+; 159$BB $CM+; 160$B2 $CM+; 161$CL $CM+; 162$CP $CM+; 163$EX $CM+; 164$GL $CM+; 165$HL $CM+; 166$HY $CM+; 167$H2 $CM+; 168$H3 $CM+; 169$ID $CM+; 170$IN $CM+; 171$IS $CM+; 172$JL $CM+; 173$JV $CM+; 174$JT $CM+; 175$NS $CM+; 176$NU $CM+; 177$OP $CM+; 178$PO $CM+; 179$PR $CM+; 180$QU $CM+; 181$RI $CM+; 182$SY $CM+; 183$WJ $CM+; 184 185# 186# CAN_CM is the set of characters that may combine with CM combining chars. 187# Note that Linebreak UAX 14's concept of a combining char and the rules 188# for what they can combine with are _very_ different from the rest of Unicode. 189# 190# Note that $CM itself is left out of this set. If CM is needed as a base 191# it must be listed separately in the rule. 192# 193$CAN_CM = [^$SP $BK $CR $LF $NL $ZW $CM]; # Bases that can take CMs 194$CANT_CM = [ $SP $BK $CR $LF $NL $ZW $CM]; # Bases that can't take CMs 195 196# 197# AL_FOLLOW set of chars that can unconditionally follow an AL 198# Needed in rules where stand-alone $CM s are treated as AL. 199# Chaining is disabled with CM because it causes other failures, 200# so for this one case we need to manually list out longer sequences. 201# 202$AL_FOLLOW_NOCM = [$BK $CR $LF $NL $ZW $SP]; 203$AL_FOLLOW_CM = [$CL $CP $EX $HL $IS $SY $WJ $GL $OP $QU $BA $HH $HY $NS $IN $NU $ALPlus]; 204$AL_FOLLOW = [$AL_FOLLOW_NOCM $AL_FOLLOW_CM]; 205 206 207# 208# Rule LB 4, 5 Mandatory (Hard) breaks. 209# 210$LB4Breaks = [$BK $CR $LF $NL]; 211$LB4NonBreaks = [^$BK $CR $LF $NL]; 212$CR $LF {100}; 213 214# 215# LB 6 Do not break before hard line breaks. 216# 217$LB4NonBreaks? $LB4Breaks {100}; # LB 5 do not break before hard breaks. 218$CAN_CM $CM* $LB4Breaks {100}; 219$CM+ $LB4Breaks {100}; 220 221# LB 7 x SP 222# x ZW 223$LB4NonBreaks [$SP $ZW]; 224$CAN_CM $CM* [$SP $ZW]; 225$CM+ [$SP $ZW]; 226 227# 228# LB 8 Break after zero width space 229# TODO: ZW SP* <break> 230# An engine change is required to write the reverse rule for this. 231# For now, leave the Unicode 5.2 rule, ZW <break> 232# 233$LB8Breaks = [$LB4Breaks $ZW]; 234$LB8NonBreaks = [[$LB4NonBreaks] - [$ZW]]; 235 236 237# LB 9 Combining marks. X $CM needs to behave like X, where X is not $SP, $BK $CR $LF $NL 238# $CM not covered by the above needs to behave like $AL 239# See definition of $CAN_CM. 240 241$CAN_CM $CM+; # Stick together any combining sequences that don't match other rules. 242$CM+; 243 244# 245# LB 11 Do not break before or after WORD JOINER & related characters. 246# 247$CAN_CM $CM* $WJcm; 248$LB8NonBreaks $WJcm; 249$CM+ $WJcm; 250 251$WJcm $CANT_CM; 252$WJcm $CAN_CM $CM*; 253 254# 255# LB 12 Do not break after NBSP and related characters. 256# GL x 257# 258$GLcm $CAN_CM $CM*; 259$GLcm $CANT_CM; 260 261# 262# LB 12a Do not break before NBSP and related characters ... 263# [^SP BA HY] x GL 264# 265[[$LB8NonBreaks] - [$SP $BA $HH $HY]] $CM* $GLcm; 266$CM+ GLcm; 267 268 269 270# 271# LB 13 Don't break before ']' or '!' or ';' or '/', even after spaces. 272# 273$LB8NonBreaks $CL; 274$CAN_CM $CM* $CL; 275$CM+ $CL; # by rule 10, stand-alone CM behaves as AL 276 277$LB8NonBreaks $CP; 278$CAN_CM $CM* $CP; 279$CM+ $CP; # by rule 10, stand-alone CM behaves as AL 280 281$LB8NonBreaks $EX; 282$CAN_CM $CM* $EX; 283$CM+ $EX; # by rule 10, stand-alone CM behaves as AL 284 285$LB8NonBreaks $IS; 286$CAN_CM $CM* $IS; 287$CM+ $IS; # by rule 10, stand-alone CM behaves as AL 288 289$LB8NonBreaks $SY; 290$CAN_CM $CM* $SY; 291$CM+ $SY; # by rule 10, stand-alone CM behaves as AL 292 293 294# 295# LB 14 Do not break after OP, even after spaces 296# 297$OPcm $SP* $CAN_CM $CM*; 298$OPcm $SP* $CANT_CM; 299 300$OPcm $SP+ $CM+ $AL_FOLLOW?; # by rule 10, stand-alone CM behaves as AL 301 302# LB 15 303$QUcm $SP* $OPcm; 304 305# LB 16 306($CLcm | $CPcm) $SP* $NScm; 307 308# LB 17 309$B2cm $SP* $B2cm; 310 311# 312# LB 18 Break after spaces. 313# 314$LB18NonBreaks = [$LB8NonBreaks - [$SP]]; 315$LB18Breaks = [$LB8Breaks $SP]; 316 317 318# LB 19 319# x QU 320$LB18NonBreaks $CM* $QUcm; 321$CM+ $QUcm; 322 323# QU x 324$QUcm .?; 325$QUcm $LB18NonBreaks $CM*; # Don't let a combining mark go onto $CR, $BK, etc. 326 # TODO: I don't think this rule is needed. 327 328 329# LB 20 330# <break> $CB 331# $CB <break> 332 333$LB20NonBreaks = [$LB18NonBreaks - $CB]; 334 335# LB 20.09 added rule for Finnish tailoring 336# LB 21 x (BA | HY | NS) 337# BB x 338# 339$LB20NonBreaks $CM* ($BAcm | $HHcm | $HYcm | $NScm) / $AL; 340$LB20NonBreaks $CM* ($BAcm | $HHcm | $HYcm | $NScm); 341($HY | $HH) $AL; 342 343$BBcm [^$CB]; # $BB x 344$BBcm $LB20NonBreaks $CM*; 345 346# LB 21a Don't break after Hebrew + Hyphen 347# HL (HY | BA) x 348# 349$HLcm ($HYcm | $BAcm | $HHcm) [^$CB]?; 350 351# LB 22 352($ALcm | $HLcm) $INcm; 353$CM+ $INcm; # by rule 10, any otherwise unattached CM behaves as AL 354$IDcm $INcm; 355$INcm $INcm; 356$NUcm $INcm; 357 358 359# $LB 23 360$IDcm $POcm; 361$ALcm $NUcm; # includes $LB19 362$HLcm $NUcm; 363$CM+ $NUcm; # Rule 10, any otherwise unattached CM behaves as AL 364$NUcm $ALcm; 365$NUcm $HLcm; 366 367# 368# LB 24 369# 370$PRcm $IDcm; 371$PRcm ($ALcm | $HLcm); 372$POcm ($ALcm | $HLcm); 373 374# 375# LB 25 Numbers. 376# 377($PRcm | $POcm)? ($OPcm | $HYcm)? $NUcm ($NUcm | $SYcm | $IScm)* ($CLcm | $CPcm)? ($PRcm | $POcm)?; 378 379# LB 26 Do not break a Korean syllable 380# 381$JLcm ($JLcm | $JVcm | $H2cm | $H3cm); 382($JVcm | $H2cm) ($JVcm | $JTcm); 383($JTcm | $H3cm) $JTcm; 384 385# LB 27 Treat korean Syllable Block the same as ID (don't break it) 386($JLcm | $JVcm | $JTcm | $H2cm | $H3cm) $INcm; 387($JLcm | $JVcm | $JTcm | $H2cm | $H3cm) $POcm; 388$PRcm ($JLcm | $JVcm | $JTcm | $H2cm | $H3cm); 389 390 391# LB 28 Do not break between alphabetics 392# 393($ALcm | $HLcm) ($ALcm | $HLcm); 394$CM+ ($ALcm | $HLcm); # The $CM+ is from rule 10, an unattached CM is treated as AL 395 396# LB 29 397$IScm ($ALcm | $HLcm); 398 399# LB 30 400($ALcm | $HLcm | $NUcm) $OPcm; 401$CM+ $OPcm; # The $CM+ is from rule 10, an unattached CM is treated as AL. 402$CPcm ($ALcm | $HLcm | $NUcm); 403 404# LB 30a Do not break between regional indicators. 405$RIcm $RIcm; 406 407# 408# Reverse Rules. 409# 410## ------------------------------------------------- 411 412!!reverse; 413 414$CM+ $ALPlus; 415$CM+ $BA; 416$CM+ $HH; 417$CM+ $BB; 418$CM+ $B2; 419$CM+ $CL; 420$CM+ $CP; 421$CM+ $EX; 422$CM+ $GL; 423$CM+ $HL; 424$CM+ $HY; 425$CM+ $H2; 426$CM+ $H3; 427$CM+ $ID; 428$CM+ $IN; 429$CM+ $IS; 430$CM+ $JL; 431$CM+ $JV; 432$CM+ $JT; 433$CM+ $NS; 434$CM+ $NU; 435$CM+ $OP; 436$CM+ $PO; 437$CM+ $PR; 438$CM+ $QU; 439$CM+ $RI; 440$CM+ $SY; 441$CM+ $WJ; 442$CM+; 443 444 445# 446# Sequences of the form (shown forwards) 447# [CANT_CM] <break> [CM] [whatever] 448# The CM needs to behave as an AL 449# 450$AL_FOLLOW $CM+ / ( 451 [$BK $CR $LF $NL $ZW {eof}] | 452 $SP+ $CM+ $SP | 453 $SP+ $CM* ([^$OP $CM $SP] | [$AL {eof}])); # if LB 14 will match, need to surpress this break. 454 # LB14 says OP SP* x . 455 # becomes OP SP* x AL 456 # becomes OP SP* x CM+ AL_FOLLOW 457 # 458 # Further note: the $AL in [$AL {eof}] is only to work around 459 # a rule compiler bug which complains about 460 # empty sets otherwise. 461 462# 463# Sequences of the form (shown forwards) 464# [CANT_CM] <break> [CM] <break> [PR] 465# The CM needs to behave as an AL 466# This rule is concerned about getting the second of the two <breaks> in place. 467# 468 469[$PR ] / $CM+ [$BK $CR $LF $NL $ZW $SP {eof}]; 470 471 472 473# LB 4, 5, 5 474 475$LB4Breaks [$LB4NonBreaks-$CM]; 476$LB4Breaks $CM+ $CAN_CM; 477$LF $CR; 478 479 480# LB 7 x SP 481# x ZW 482[$SP $ZW] [$LB4NonBreaks-$CM]; 483[$SP $ZW] $CM+ $CAN_CM; 484 485# LB 8 ZW SP* <break> 486# TODO: to implement this, we need more than one look-ahead hard break in play at a time. 487# Requires an engine enhancement. 488# / $SP* $ZW 489 490# LB 9,10 Combining marks. 491# X $CM needs to behave like X, where X is not $SP or controls. 492# $CM not covered by the above needs to behave like $AL 493# Stick together any combining sequences that don't match other rules. 494$CM+ $CAN_CM; 495 496 497# LB 11 498$CM* $WJ $CM* $CAN_CM; 499$CM* $WJ [$LB8NonBreaks-$CM]; 500 501 $CANT_CM $CM* $WJ; 502$CM* $CAN_CM $CM* $WJ; 503 504# LB 12a 505# [^SP BA HY] x GL 506# 507$CM* $GL $CM* [$LB8NonBreaks-[$CM $SP $BA $HH $HY]]; 508 509# LB 12 510# GL x 511# 512$CANT_CM $CM* $GL; 513$CM* $CAN_CM $CM* $GL; 514 515 516# LB 13 517$CL $CM+ $CAN_CM; 518$CP $CM+ $CAN_CM; 519$EX $CM+ $CAN_CM; 520$IS $CM+ $CAN_CM; 521$SY $CM+ $CAN_CM; 522 523$CL [$LB8NonBreaks-$CM]; 524$CP [$LB8NonBreaks-$CM]; 525$EX [$LB8NonBreaks-$CM]; 526$IS [$LB8NonBreaks-$CM]; 527$SY [$LB8NonBreaks-$CM]; 528 529# Rule 13 & 14 taken together for an edge case. 530# Match this, shown forward 531# OP SP+ ($CM+ behaving as $AL) (CL | CP | EX | IS | IY) 532# This really wants to chain at the $CM+ (which is acting as an $AL) 533# except for $CM chaining being disabled. 534[$CL $CP $EX $IS $SY] $CM+ $SP+ $CM* $OP; 535 536# LB 14 OP SP* x 537# 538$CM* $CAN_CM $SP* $CM* $OP; 539 $CANT_CM $SP* $CM* $OP; 540$AL_FOLLOW? $CM+ $SP $SP* $CM* $OP; # by LB 10, behaves like $AL_FOLLOW? $AL $SP* $CM* $OP 541 542 $AL_FOLLOW_NOCM $CM+ $SP+ $CM* $OP; 543$CM* $AL_FOLLOW_CM $CM+ $SP+ $CM* $OP; 544$SY $CM $SP+ $OP; # TODO: Experiment. Remove. 545 546 547 548# LB 15 549$CM* $OP $SP* $CM* $QU; 550 551# LB 16 552$CM* $NS $SP* $CM* ($CL | $CP); 553 554# LB 17 555$CM* $B2 $SP* $CM* $B2; 556 557# LB 18 break after spaces 558# Nothing explicit needed here. 559 560 561# 562# LB 19 563# 564$CM* $QU $CM* $CAN_CM; # . x QU 565$CM* $QU $LB18NonBreaks; 566 567 568$CM* $CAN_CM $CM* $QU; # QU x . 569 $CANT_CM $CM* $QU; 570 571# 572# LB 20 Break before and after CB. 573# nothing needed here. 574# 575 576# LB 20.09 added rule for Finnish tailoring 577$AL ($HY | $HH) / $SP; 578 579# LB 21 580$CM* ($BA | $HH | $HY | $NS) $CM* [$LB20NonBreaks-$CM]; # . x (BA | HY | NS) 581 582$CM* [$LB20NonBreaks-$CM] $CM* $BB; # BB x . 583[^$CB] $CM* $BB; # 584 585# LB21a 586[^$CB] $CM* ($HY | $BA | $HH) $CM* $HL; 587 588 589# LB 22 590$CM* $IN $CM* ($ALPlus | $HL); 591$CM* $IN $CM* $ID; 592$CM* $IN $CM* $IN; 593$CM* $IN $CM* $NU; 594 595# LB 23 596$CM* $PO $CM* $ID; 597$CM* $NU $CM* ($ALPlus | $HL); 598$CM* ($ALPlus | $HL) $CM* $NU; 599 600# LB 24 601$CM* $ID $CM* $PR; 602$CM* ($ALPlus | $HL) $CM* $PR; 603$CM* ($ALPlus | $HL) $CM* $PO; 604 605 606# LB 25 607($CM* ($PR | $PO))? ($CM* ($CL | $CP))? ($CM* ($NU | $IS | $SY))* $CM* $NU ($CM* ($OP | $HY))? ($CM* ($PR | $PO))?; 608 609# LB 26 610$CM* ($H3 | $H2 | $JV | $JL) $CM* $JL; 611$CM* ($JT | $JV) $CM* ($H2 | $JV); 612$CM* $JT $CM* ($H3 | $JT); 613 614# LB 27 615$CM* $IN $CM* ($H3 | $H2 | $JT | $JV | $JL); 616$CM* $PO $CM* ($H3 | $H2 | $JT | $JV | $JL); 617$CM* ($H3 | $H2 | $JT | $JV | $JL) $CM* $PR; 618 619# LB 28 620$CM* ($ALPlus | $HL) $CM* ($ALPlus | $HL); 621 622 623# LB 29 624$CM* ($ALPlus | $HL) $CM* $IS; 625 626# LB 30 627$CM* $OP $CM* ($ALPlus | $HL | $NU); 628$CM* ($ALPlus | $HL | $NU) $CM* $CP; 629 630# LB 30a 631$CM* $RI $CM* $RI; 632 633## ------------------------------------------------- 634 635!!safe_reverse; 636 637# LB 9 638$CM+ [^$CM $BK $CR $LF $NL $ZW $SP]; 639$CM+ $SP / .; 640 641# LB 14 642$SP+ $CM* $OP; 643 644# LB 15 645$SP+ $CM* $QU; 646 647# LB 16 648$SP+ $CM* ($CL | $CP); 649 650# LB 17 651$SP+ $CM* $B2; 652 653# LB 21 654$CM* ($HY | $BA | $HH) $CM* $HL; 655 656# LB 25 657($CM* ($IS | $SY))+ $CM* $NU; 658($CL | $CP) $CM* ($NU | $IS | $SY); 659 660# For dictionary-based break 661$dictionary $dictionary; 662 663## ------------------------------------------------- 664 665!!safe_forward; 666 667# Skip forward over all character classes that are involved in 668# rules containing patterns with possibly more than one char 669# of context. 670# 671# It might be slightly more efficient to have specific rules 672# instead of one generic one, but only if we could 673# turn off rule chaining. We don't want to move more 674# than necessary. 675# 676[$CM $OP $QU $CL $CP $B2 $PR $HY $BA $SP $dictionary]+ [^$CM $OP $QU $CL $CP $B2 $PR $HY $BA $dictionary]; 677$dictionary $dictionary; 678 679