/usr/include/codeblocks/nsHebrewProber.h is in codeblocks-dev 13.12+dfsg-4.
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1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 88 89 90 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 100 101 102 103 104 105 106 107 108 109 110 111 112 113 114 115 116 117 118 119 120 121 122 123 124 125 126 127 128 129 130 131 132 133 134 135 136 137 138 139 140 141 142 143 | /* -*- Mode: C; tab-width: 4; indent-tabs-mode: nil; c-basic-offset: 2 -*- */
/* This Source Code Form is subject to the terms of the Mozilla Public
* License, v. 2.0. If a copy of the MPL was not distributed with this
* file, You can obtain one at http://mozilla.org/MPL/2.0/. */
#ifndef nsHebrewProber_h__
#define nsHebrewProber_h__
#include "nsSBCharSetProber.h"
// This prober doesn't actually recognize a language or a charset.
// It is a helper prober for the use of the Hebrew model probers
class nsHebrewProber: public nsCharSetProber
{
public:
nsHebrewProber(void) :mLogicalProb(0), mVisualProb(0) { Reset(); }
virtual ~nsHebrewProber(void) {}
virtual nsProbingState HandleData(const char* aBuf, uint32_t aLen);
virtual const char* GetCharSetName();
virtual void Reset(void);
virtual nsProbingState GetState(void);
virtual float GetConfidence(void) { return (float)0.0; }
void SetModelProbers(nsCharSetProber *logicalPrb, nsCharSetProber *visualPrb)
{ mLogicalProb = logicalPrb; mVisualProb = visualPrb; }
#ifdef DEBUG_chardet
virtual void DumpStatus();
#endif
protected:
static bool isFinal(char c);
static bool isNonFinal(char c);
int32_t mFinalCharLogicalScore, mFinalCharVisualScore;
// The two last characters seen in the previous buffer.
char mPrev, mBeforePrev;
// These probers are owned by the group prober.
nsCharSetProber *mLogicalProb, *mVisualProb;
};
/**
* ** General ideas of the Hebrew charset recognition **
*
* Four main charsets exist in Hebrew:
* "ISO-8859-8" - Visual Hebrew
* "windows-1255" - Logical Hebrew
* "ISO-8859-8-I" - Logical Hebrew
* "x-mac-hebrew" - ?? Logical Hebrew ??
*
* Both "ISO" charsets use a completely identical set of code points, whereas
* "windows-1255" and "x-mac-hebrew" are two different proper supersets of
* these code points. windows-1255 defines additional characters in the range
* 0x80-0x9F as some misc punctuation marks as well as some Hebrew-specific
* diacritics and additional 'Yiddish' ligature letters in the range 0xc0-0xd6.
* x-mac-hebrew defines similar additional code points but with a different
* mapping.
*
* As far as an average Hebrew text with no diacritics is concerned, all four
* charsets are identical with respect to code points. Meaning that for the
* main Hebrew alphabet, all four map the same values to all 27 Hebrew letters
* (including final letters).
*
* The dominant difference between these charsets is their directionality.
* "Visual" directionality means that the text is ordered as if the renderer is
* not aware of a BIDI rendering algorithm. The renderer sees the text and
* draws it from left to right. The text itself when ordered naturally is read
* backwards. A buffer of Visual Hebrew generally looks like so:
* "[last word of first line spelled backwards] [whole line ordered backwards
* and spelled backwards] [first word of first line spelled backwards]
* [end of line] [last word of second line] ... etc' "
* adding punctuation marks, numbers and English text to visual text is
* naturally also "visual" and from left to right.
*
* "Logical" directionality means the text is ordered "naturally" according to
* the order it is read. It is the responsibility of the renderer to display
* the text from right to left. A BIDI algorithm is used to place general
* punctuation marks, numbers and English text in the text.
*
* Texts in x-mac-hebrew are almost impossible to find on the Internet. From
* what little evidence I could find, it seems that its general directionality
* is Logical.
*
* To sum up all of the above, the Hebrew probing mechanism knows about two
* charsets:
* Visual Hebrew - "ISO-8859-8" - backwards text - Words and sentences are
* backwards while line order is natural. For charset recognition purposes
* the line order is unimportant (In fact, for this implementation, even
* word order is unimportant).
* Logical Hebrew - "windows-1255" - normal, naturally ordered text.
*
* "ISO-8859-8-I" is a subset of windows-1255 and doesn't need to be
* specifically identified.
* "x-mac-hebrew" is also identified as windows-1255. A text in x-mac-hebrew
* that contain special punctuation marks or diacritics is displayed with
* some unconverted characters showing as question marks. This problem might
* be corrected using another model prober for x-mac-hebrew. Due to the fact
* that x-mac-hebrew texts are so rare, writing another model prober isn't
* worth the effort and performance hit.
*
* *** The Prober ***
*
* The prober is divided between two nsSBCharSetProbers and an nsHebrewProber,
* all of which are managed, created, fed data, inquired and deleted by the
* nsSBCSGroupProber. The two nsSBCharSetProbers identify that the text is in
* fact some kind of Hebrew, Logical or Visual. The final decision about which
* one is it is made by the nsHebrewProber by combining final-letter scores
* with the scores of the two nsSBCharSetProbers to produce a final answer.
*
* The nsSBCSGroupProber is responsible for stripping the original text of HTML
* tags, English characters, numbers, low-ASCII punctuation characters, spaces
* and new lines. It reduces any sequence of such characters to a single space.
* The buffer fed to each prober in the SBCS group prober is pure text in
* high-ASCII.
* The two nsSBCharSetProbers (model probers) share the same language model:
* Win1255Model.
* The first nsSBCharSetProber uses the model normally as any other
* nsSBCharSetProber does, to recognize windows-1255, upon which this model was
* built. The second nsSBCharSetProber is told to make the pair-of-letter
* lookup in the language model backwards. This in practice exactly simulates
* a visual Hebrew model using the windows-1255 logical Hebrew model.
*
* The nsHebrewProber is not using any language model. All it does is look for
* final-letter evidence suggesting the text is either logical Hebrew or visual
* Hebrew. Disjointed from the model probers, the results of the nsHebrewProber
* alone are meaningless. nsHebrewProber always returns 0.00 as confidence
* since it never identifies a charset by itself. Instead, the pointer to the
* nsHebrewProber is passed to the model probers as a helper "Name Prober".
* When the Group prober receives a positive identification from any prober,
* it asks for the name of the charset identified. If the prober queried is a
* Hebrew model prober, the model prober forwards the call to the
* nsHebrewProber to make the final decision. In the nsHebrewProber, the
* decision is made according to the final-letters scores maintained and Both
* model probers scores. The answer is returned in the form of the name of the
* charset identified, either "windows-1255" or "ISO-8859-8".
*
*/
#endif /* nsHebrewProber_h__ */
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