rustc/vendor/utf8-ranges
2019-04-29 16:16:11 -07:00
..
benches New upstream version 1.32.0~beta.2+dfsg1 2018-12-16 10:13:16 -08:00
src New upstream version 1.32.0~beta.2+dfsg1 2018-12-16 10:13:16 -08:00
.cargo-checksum.json New upstream version 1.33.0+dfsg1 2019-04-29 16:16:11 -07:00
Cargo.toml New upstream version 1.33.0+dfsg1 2019-04-29 16:16:11 -07:00
COPYING New upstream version 1.32.0~beta.2+dfsg1 2018-12-16 10:13:16 -08:00
LICENSE-MIT New upstream version 1.32.0~beta.2+dfsg1 2018-12-16 10:13:16 -08:00
README.md New upstream version 1.32.0~beta.2+dfsg1 2018-12-16 10:13:16 -08:00
UNLICENSE New upstream version 1.32.0~beta.2+dfsg1 2018-12-16 10:13:16 -08:00

utf8-ranges

This crate converts contiguous ranges of Unicode scalar values to UTF-8 byte ranges. This is useful when constructing byte based automata from Unicode. Stated differently, this lets one embed UTF-8 decoding as part of one's automaton.

Linux build status

Dual-licensed under MIT or the UNLICENSE.

Documentation

https://docs.rs/utf8-ranges

Example

This shows how to convert a scalar value range (e.g., the basic multilingual plane) to a sequence of byte based character classes.

extern crate utf8_ranges;

use utf8_ranges::Utf8Sequences;

fn main() {
    for range in Utf8Sequences::new('\u{0}', '\u{FFFF}') {
        println!("{:?}", range);
    }
}

The output:

[0-7F]
[C2-DF][80-BF]
[E0][A0-BF][80-BF]
[E1-EC][80-BF][80-BF]
[ED][80-9F][80-BF]
[EE-EF][80-BF][80-BF]

These ranges can then be used to build an automaton. Namely:

  1. Every arbitrary sequence of bytes matches exactly one of the sequences of ranges or none of them.
  2. Every match sequence of bytes is guaranteed to be valid UTF-8. (Erroneous encodings of surrogate codepoints in UTF-8 cannot match any of the byte ranges above.)