/*
* This file is part of lanterna (http://code.google.com/p/lanterna/).
*
* lanterna is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify
* it under the terms of the GNU Lesser General Public License as published by
* the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or
* (at your option) any later version.
*
* This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
* but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
* MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
* GNU Lesser General Public License for more details.
*
* You should have received a copy of the GNU Lesser General Public License
* along with this program. If not, see .
*
* Copyright (C) 2010-2015 Martin
*/
package com.googlecode.lanterna;
/**
* Utilities class for analyzing and working with CJK (Chinese, Japanese, Korean) characters. The main purpose of this
* class is to assist in figuring out how many terminal columns a character (and in extension, a String) takes up. The
* main issue is that while most latin (and latin-related) character can be trusted to consume one column in the
* terminal, CJK characters tends to take two, partly due to the square nature of the characters but mostly due to the
* fact that they require most space to distinguish.
*
* @author Martin
* @see TerminalTextUtils
* @deprecated Use {@code TerminalTextUtils} instead
*/
public class CJKUtils {
private CJKUtils() {
}
/**
* Given a character, is this character considered to be a CJK character?
* Shamelessly stolen from
* StackOverflow
* where it was contributed by user Rakesh N
* @param c Character to test
* @return {@code true} if the character is a CJK character
* @deprecated Use {@code TerminalTextUtils.isCharJCK(c)} instead
* @see TerminalTextUtils#isCharCJK(char)
*/
@Deprecated
public static boolean isCharCJK(final char c) {
return TerminalTextUtils.isCharCJK(c);
}
/**
* @deprecated Call {@code getColumnWidth(s)} instead
*/
@Deprecated
public static int getTrueWidth(String s) {
return TerminalTextUtils.getColumnWidth(s);
}
/**
* Given a string, returns how many columns this string would need to occupy in a terminal, taking into account that
* CJK characters takes up two columns.
* @param s String to check length
* @return Number of actual terminal columns the string would occupy
* @deprecated Use {@code TerminalTextUtils.getColumnWidth(s)} instead
* @see TerminalTextUtils#getColumnWidth(String)
*/
@Deprecated
public static int getColumnWidth(String s) {
return TerminalTextUtils.getColumnIndex(s, s.length());
}
/**
* Given a string and a character index inside that string, find out what the column index of that character would
* be if printed in a terminal. If the string only contains non-CJK characters then the returned value will be same
* as {@code stringCharacterIndex}, but if there are CJK characters the value will be different due to CJK
* characters taking up two columns in width. If the character at the index in the string is a CJK character itself,
* the returned value will be the index of the left-side of character.
* @param s String to translate the index from
* @param stringCharacterIndex Index within the string to get the terminal column index of
* @return Index of the character inside the String at {@code stringCharacterIndex} when it has been writted to a
* terminal
* @throws StringIndexOutOfBoundsException if the index given is outside the String length or negative
* @deprecated Use {@code TerminalTextUtils.getColumnIndex(s, stringCharacterIndex)} instead
* @see TerminalTextUtils#getColumnIndex(String, int)
*/
@Deprecated
public static int getColumnIndex(String s, int stringCharacterIndex) throws StringIndexOutOfBoundsException {
return TerminalTextUtils.getColumnIndex(s, stringCharacterIndex);
}
/**
* This method does the reverse of getColumnIndex, given a String and imagining it has been printed out to the
* top-left corner of a terminal, in the column specified by {@code columnIndex}, what is the index of that
* character in the string. If the string contains no CJK characters, this will always be the same as
* {@code columnIndex}. If the index specified is the right column of a CJK character, the index is the same as if
* the column was the left column. So calling {@code getStringCharacterIndex("英", 0)} and
* {@code getStringCharacterIndex("英", 1)} will both return 0.
* @param s String to translate the index to
* @param columnIndex Column index of the string written to a terminal
* @return The index in the string of the character in terminal column {@code columnIndex}
* @deprecated Use {@code TerminalTextUtils.getStringCharacterIndex(s, columnIndex} instead
* @see TerminalTextUtils#getStringCharacterIndex(String, int)
*/
@Deprecated
public static int getStringCharacterIndex(String s, int columnIndex) {
return TerminalTextUtils.getStringCharacterIndex(s, columnIndex);
}
/**
* Given a string that may or may not contain CJK characters, returns the substring which will fit inside
* availableColumnSpace
columns. This method does not handle special cases like tab or new-line.
*
* Calling this method is the same as calling {@code fitString(string, 0, availableColumnSpace)}.
* @param string The string to fit inside the availableColumnSpace
* @param availableColumnSpace Number of columns to fit the string inside
* @return The whole or part of the input string which will fit inside the supplied availableColumnSpace
* @deprecated Use {@code TerminalTextUtils.fitString(string, availableColumnSpace)} instead
* @see TerminalTextUtils#fitString(String, int)
*/
@Deprecated
public static String fitString(String string, int availableColumnSpace) {
return TerminalTextUtils.fitString(string, availableColumnSpace);
}
/**
* Given a string that may or may not contain CJK characters, returns the substring which will fit inside
* availableColumnSpace
columns. This method does not handle special cases like tab or new-line.
*
* This overload has a {@code fromColumn} parameter that specified where inside the string to start fitting. Please
* notice that {@code fromColumn} is not a character index inside the string, but a column index as if the string
* has been printed from the left-most side of the terminal. So if the string is "日本語", fromColumn set to 1 will
* not starting counting from the second character ("本") in the string but from the CJK filler character belonging
* to "日". If you want to count from a particular character index inside the string, please pass in a substring
* and use fromColumn set to 0.
* @param string The string to fit inside the availableColumnSpace
* @param fromColumn From what column of the input string to start fitting (see description above!)
* @param availableColumnSpace Number of columns to fit the string inside
* @return The whole or part of the input string which will fit inside the supplied availableColumnSpace
* @deprecated Use {@code TerminalTextUtils.fitString(string, fromColumn, availableColumnSpace)} instead
* @see TerminalTextUtils#fitString(String, int, int)
*/
@Deprecated
public static String fitString(String string, int fromColumn, int availableColumnSpace) {
return TerminalTextUtils.fitString(string, fromColumn, availableColumnSpace);
}
}