Unicode guide

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Revision as of 12:56, 4 September 2022 by Jookia (talk | contribs) (Re-organize)

This is a WIP page, take nothing here as final.

Unicode refresher

As a general overview, Unicode defines the following:

  • A large multilingual set of encoded characters (known just as 'characters')
  • Properties for each character
  • How to encode characters for storage
  • How to normalize characters in to a canonical format
  • How to segment text in to words, sentences, lines, and paragraphs
  • How to map text between different cases
  • How to order text for sorting
  • How to match text for searching
  • How to incorporate Unicode in to regular expressions

Many of these can be further tailored by locale-dependant rules and custom algorithms. The Unicode Common Locale Data Repository provides locale-specific information that aids in this tailoring.

I highly recommend reading the following resources in this order to get a decent mental model of Unicode:

  1. The Unicode Standard, Version 14.0 chapters 1, 2, 3, 4, 5 and 23
  2. Unicode Technical Reports
  3. Unicode Frequently Asked Questions

You might also find the following tools helpful:

The problem

- languages add support for unicode to some extent

While writing this page I researched and documented Unicode support in various programming languages. You can see my notes here: Unicode strings/Implementations.

- how to think about unicode

- levels of abstraction

- indexing

- sort

- match

- search

- normalize

- serialize

- case map

- properties

- breaking/segmentation

- reversing

Level 1: Bytes

level 1: bytes. you can compare, search, splitting, sorting. your basic unit is the byte

filesystem/unix/C

Level 2: Code units

level 2: code units. your basic unit is the smallest unit of your unicode encoding: a byte for utf-8, a 16-bit int for UTF-16, a 32-bit int for UTF-32. you can compare, search, splitting, sort. to get to this point you have to handle endianness

windows

Level 3: Unicode scalars

level 3: unicode scalars. your basic unit is a number between 0x0 and 0x1fffff inclusive, with some ranges for surrogates not allowed. to get tho this point you have to decode utf-8, utf-16 or utf-32. you can compare, search, split, etc but it's important to note that these are just numbers. there's no meaning attached to them

python

Level 4: Unicode characters

level 4: unicode characters: your basic unit is a code point that your runtime recognizes and is willing to interpret using a copy of the unicode database. results vary according to the supported unicode version. you can normalize, compare, match, search, and splitting, case map strings. locale specific operations may be provided. to get these the runtime needs to check if the characters are supported.

???

Level 5: Segmented text

level 5: unicode texts: your basic unit is a string of unicode characters of some amount, such as a word, paragraph, grapheme cluster. to get these you need to convert from a string of unicode characters with breaking/segmentation rules

swift/raku

TODO:

languages/locales

Non-Unicode compatibility

- preserving data