Active Support Multibyte Chars
Chars
enables you to work transparently with UTF-8 encoding in the Ruby String
class without having extensive knowledge about the encoding. A Chars
object accepts a string upon initialization and proxies String
methods in an encoding safe manner. All the normal String
methods are also implemented on the proxy.
String
methods are proxied through the Chars
object, and can be accessed through the mb_chars
method. Methods which would normally return a String
object now return a Chars
object so methods can be chained.
'The Perfect String '.mb_chars.downcase.strip
# => #<ActiveSupport::Multibyte::Chars:0x007fdc434ccc10 @wrapped_string="the perfect string">
Chars
objects are perfectly interchangeable with String
objects as long as no explicit class checks are made. If certain methods do explicitly check the class, call to_s
before you pass chars objects to them.
bad.explicit_checking_method 'T'.mb_chars.downcase.to_s
The default Chars
implementation assumes that the encoding of the string is UTF-8, if you want to handle different encodings you can write your own multibyte string handler and configure it through ActiveSupport::Multibyte.proxy_class
.
class CharsForUTF32
def size
@wrapped_string.size / 4
end
def self.accepts?(string)
string.length % 4 == 0
end
end
ActiveSupport::Multibyte.proxy_class = CharsForUTF32
Methods
- compose
- decompose
- grapheme_length
- limit
- method_missing
- new
- respond_to_missing?
- reverse
- slice!
- split
- tidy_bytes
- titlecase
- titleize
Included Modules
- Comparable
Attributes
[R] | to_s | |
[R] | to_str | |
[R] | wrapped_string |
Class Public methods
new(string)
Creates a new Chars
instance by wrapping string.
📝 Source code
# File activesupport/lib/active_support/multibyte/chars.rb, line 56
def initialize(string)
@wrapped_string = string
@wrapped_string.force_encoding(Encoding::UTF_8) unless @wrapped_string.frozen?
end
🔎 See on GitHub
Instance Public methods
compose()
Performs composition on all the characters.
'é'.length # => 1
'é'.mb_chars.compose.to_s.length # => 1
📝 Source code
# File activesupport/lib/active_support/multibyte/chars.rb, line 140
def compose
chars(Unicode.compose(@wrapped_string.codepoints.to_a).pack("U*"))
end
🔎 See on GitHub
decompose()
Performs canonical decomposition on all the characters.
'é'.length # => 1
'é'.mb_chars.decompose.to_s.length # => 2
📝 Source code
# File activesupport/lib/active_support/multibyte/chars.rb, line 132
def decompose
chars(Unicode.decompose(:canonical, @wrapped_string.codepoints.to_a).pack("U*"))
end
🔎 See on GitHub
grapheme_length()
Returns the number of grapheme clusters in the string.
'क्षि'.mb_chars.length # => 4
'क्षि'.mb_chars.grapheme_length # => 2
📝 Source code
# File activesupport/lib/active_support/multibyte/chars.rb, line 148
def grapheme_length
@wrapped_string.grapheme_clusters.length
end
🔎 See on GitHub
limit(limit)
Limits the byte size of the string to a number of bytes without breaking characters. Usable when the storage for a string is limited for some reason.
'こんにちは'.mb_chars.limit(7).to_s # => "こん"
📝 Source code
# File activesupport/lib/active_support/multibyte/chars.rb, line 115
def limit(limit)
chars(@wrapped_string.truncate_bytes(limit, omission: nil))
end
🔎 See on GitHub
method_missing(method, *args, &block)
Forward all undefined methods to the wrapped string.
📝 Source code
# File activesupport/lib/active_support/multibyte/chars.rb, line 62
def method_missing(method, *args, &block)
result = @wrapped_string.__send__(method, *args, &block)
if method.end_with?("!")
self if result
else
result.kind_of?(String) ? chars(result) : result
end
end
🔎 See on GitHub
respond_to_missing?(method, include_private)
Returns true
if obj responds to the given method. Private methods are included in the search only if the optional second parameter evaluates to true
.
📝 Source code
# File activesupport/lib/active_support/multibyte/chars.rb, line 74
def respond_to_missing?(method, include_private)
@wrapped_string.respond_to?(method, include_private)
end
🔎 See on GitHub
reverse()
Reverses all characters in the string.
'Café'.mb_chars.reverse.to_s # => 'éfaC'
📝 Source code
# File activesupport/lib/active_support/multibyte/chars.rb, line 106
def reverse
chars(@wrapped_string.grapheme_clusters.reverse.join)
end
🔎 See on GitHub
slice!(*args)
Works like String#slice!
, but returns an instance of Chars
, or nil
if the string was not modified. The string will not be modified if the range given is out of bounds
string = 'Welcome'
string.mb_chars.slice!(3) # => #<ActiveSupport::Multibyte::Chars:0x000000038109b8 @wrapped_string="c">
string # => 'Welome'
string.mb_chars.slice!(0..3) # => #<ActiveSupport::Multibyte::Chars:0x00000002eb80a0 @wrapped_string="Welo">
string # => 'me'
📝 Source code
# File activesupport/lib/active_support/multibyte/chars.rb, line 96
def slice!(*args)
string_sliced = @wrapped_string.slice!(*args)
if string_sliced
chars(string_sliced)
end
end
🔎 See on GitHub
split(*args)
Works just like String#split
, with the exception that the items in the resulting list are Chars
instances instead of String
. This makes chaining methods easier.
'Café périferôl'.mb_chars.split(/é/).map { |part| part.upcase.to_s } # => ["CAF", " P", "RIFERÔL"]
📝 Source code
# File activesupport/lib/active_support/multibyte/chars.rb, line 83
def split(*args)
@wrapped_string.split(*args).map { |i| self.class.new(i) }
end
🔎 See on GitHub
tidy_bytes(force = false)
Replaces all ISO-8859-1 or CP1252 characters by their UTF-8 equivalent resulting in a valid UTF-8 string.
Passing true
will forcibly tidy all bytes, assuming that the string’s encoding is entirely CP1252 or ISO-8859-1.
📝 Source code
# File activesupport/lib/active_support/multibyte/chars.rb, line 157
def tidy_bytes(force = false)
chars(Unicode.tidy_bytes(@wrapped_string, force))
end
🔎 See on GitHub
titleize()
Capitalizes the first letter of every word, when possible.
"ÉL QUE SE ENTERÓ".mb_chars.titleize.to_s # => "Él Que Se Enteró"
"日本語".mb_chars.titleize.to_s # => "日本語"
📝 Source code
# File activesupport/lib/active_support/multibyte/chars.rb, line 123
def titleize
chars(downcase.to_s.gsub(/\b('?\S)/u) { $1.upcase })
end
🔎 See on GitHub