$NFD_string = NFD($string); # Normalization Form D
$NFC_string = NFC($string); # Normalization Form C
$NFKD_string = NFKD($string); # Normalization Form KD
$NFKC_string = NFKC($string); # Normalization Form KC
$string is used as a string under character semantics
(see perlunicode).
$codepoint should be an unsigned integer representing a Unicode code point.
Note: Between XSUB and pure Perl, there is an incompatibility
about the interpretation of $codepoint as a decimal number.
XSUB converts $codepoint to an unsigned integer, but pure Perl does not.
Do not use a floating point nor a negative sign in $codepoint.
As $form_name, one of the following names must be given.
'C' or 'NFC' for Normalization Form C (UAX #15)
'D' or 'NFD' for Normalization Form D (UAX #15)
'KC' or 'NFKC' for Normalization Form KC (UAX #15)
'KD' or 'NFKD' for Normalization Form KD (UAX #15)
'FCD' for "Fast C or D" Form (UTN #5)
'FCC' for "Fast C Contiguous" (UTN #5)
Decomposes the specified string and returns the result.
If the second parameter (a boolean) is omitted or false, decomposes it
using the Canonical Decomposition Mapping.
If true, decomposes it using the Compatibility Decomposition Mapping.
The string returned is not always in NFD/NFKD.
Reordering may be required.
$NFD_string = reorder(decompose($string)); # eq. to NFD()
$NFKD_string = reorder(decompose($string, TRUE)); # eq. to NFKD()
As $form_name, one of the following names must be given.
'C' or 'NFC' for Normalization Form C (UAX #15)
'D' or 'NFD' for Normalization Form D (UAX #15)
'KC' or 'NFKC' for Normalization Form KC (UAX #15)
'KD' or 'NFKD' for Normalization Form KD (UAX #15)
'FCD' for "Fast C or D" Form (UTN #5)
'FCC' for "Fast C Contiguous" (UTN #5)
Note
In the cases of NFD, NFKD, and FCD, the answer must be
either YES or NO. The answer MAYBE may be returned
in the cases of NFC, NFKC, and FCC.
A MAYBE string should contain at least one combining character
or the like. For example, COMBINING ACUTE ACCENT has
the MAYBE_NFC/MAYBE_NFKC property.
These functions are interface of character data used internally.
If you want only to get Unicode normalization forms, you don't need
call them yourself.
If the character of the specified codepoint is canonically
decomposable (including Hangul Syllables),
returns the completely decomposed string canonically equivalent to it.
If the character of the specified codepoint is compatibility
decomposable (including Hangul Syllables),
returns the completely decomposed string compatibility equivalent to it.
If two characters here and next (as codepoints) are composable
(including Hangul Jamo/Syllables and Composition Exclusions),
returns the codepoint of the composite.
Returns a boolean whether the character of the specified codepoint
may be composed with the previous one in a certain composition
(including Hangul Compositions, but excluding
Composition Exclusions and Non-Starter Decompositions).
Since this module refers to perl core's Unicode database in the directory
/lib/unicore (or formerly /lib/unicode), the Unicode version of
normalization implemented by this module depends on your perl's version.
perl's version implemented Unicode version
5.6.1 3.0.1
5.7.2 3.1.0
5.7.3 3.1.1 (same normalized form as that of 3.1.0)
5.8.0 3.2.0
5.8.1-5.8.3 4.0.0
5.8.4-5.8.6 (latest) 4.0.1 (same normalized form as that of 4.0.0)
In older Unicode versions, a small number of characters (all of which are
CJK compatibility ideographs as far as they have been found) may have
an erroneous decomposition mapping (see NormalizationCorrections.txt).
Anyhow, this module will neither refer to NormalizationCorrections.txt
nor provide any specific version of normalization. Therefore this module
running on an older perl with an older Unicode database may use
the erroneous decomposition mapping blindly conforming to the Unicode database.
In Unicode 4.1.0, the definition D2 of canonical composition (which
affects NFC and NFKC) has been changed (see Public Review Issue #29
and recent UAX #15). This module has used the newer definition
since the version 0.07 (Oct 31, 2001).
This module does not support normalization according to the older
definition, even if the Unicode version implemented by perl is
lower than 4.1.0.