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This module provides lazy stream encoding/decoding facilities for UTF-8, the Unicode Transformation Format with 8-bit words. 2002-09-02 Sven Moritz Hallberg > module UTF8 > ( encode, decode, > encodeOne, decodeOne, > ) where > import Data.Char (ord, chr) > import Data.Word (Word8, Word16, Word32) > import Data.Bits (Bits, shiftL, shiftR, (.&.), (.|.)) ///- UTF-8 in General -/// Adapted from the Unicode standard, version 3.2, Table 3.1 "UTF-8 Bit Distribution" (excluded are UTF-16 encodings): Scalar 1st Byte 2nd Byte 3rd Byte 4th Byte 000000000xxxxxxx 0xxxxxxx 00000yyyyyxxxxxx 110yyyyy 10xxxxxx zzzzyyyyyyxxxxxx 1110zzzz 10yyyyyy 10xxxxxx 000uuuzzzzzzyyyyyyxxxxxx 11110uuu 10zzzzzz 10yyyyyy 10xxxxxx Also from the Unicode standard, version 3.2, Table 3.1B "Legal UTF-8 Byte Sequences": Code Points 1st Byte 2nd Byte 3rd Byte 4th Byte U+0000..U+007F 00..7F U+0080..U+07FF C2..DF 80..BF U+0800..U+0FFF E0 A0..BF 80..BF U+1000..U+CFFF E1..EC 80..BF 80..BF U+D000..U+D7FF ED 80..9F 80..BF U+D800..U+DFFF ill-formed U+E000..U+FFFF EE..EF 80..BF 80..BF U+10000..U+3FFFF F0 90..BF 80..BF 80..BF U+40000..U+FFFFF F1..F3 80..BF 80..BF 80..BF U+100000..U+10FFFF F4 80..8F 80..BF 80..BF ///- Encoding Functions -/// Must the encoder ensure that no illegal byte sequences are output or can we trust the Haskell system to supply only legal values? For now I include error case for the surrogate values U+D800..U+DFFF and out-of-range scalars. The function is pretty much a transscript of table 3.1B with error checks. It dispatches the actual encoding to functions specific to the number of required bytes. > encodeOne :: Char -> [Word8] > encodeOne c >-- The report guarantees in (6.1.2) that this won't happen: >-- | n < 0 = error "encodeUTF8: ord returned a negative value" > | n < 0x0080 = encodeOne_onebyte n8 > | n < 0x0800 = encodeOne_twobyte n16 > | n < 0xD800 = encodeOne_threebyte n16 > | n < 0xE000 = error "encodeUTF8: ord returned a surrogate value" > | n < 0x10000 = encodeOne_threebyte n16 >-- Haskell 98 only talks about 16 bit characters, but ghc handles 20.1. > | n < 0x10FFFF = encodeOne_fourbyte n32 > | otherwise = error "encodeUTF8: ord returned a value above 0x10FFFF" > where > n = ord c :: Int > n8 = fromIntegral n :: Word8 > n16 = fromIntegral n :: Word16 > n32 = fromIntegral n :: Word32 With the above, a stream decoder is trivial: > encode :: [Char] -> [Word8] > encode = concatMap encodeOne Now follow the individual encoders for certain numbers of bytes... _ / | __ ___ __ __ / ^| // /__/ // // /.==| \\ //_ // // It's // || // \_/_//_//_ and it's here to stay! > encodeOne_onebyte :: Word8 -> [Word8] > encodeOne_onebyte cp = [cp] 00000yyyyyxxxxxx -> 110yyyyy 10xxxxxx > encodeOne_twobyte :: Word16 -> [Word8] > encodeOne_twobyte cp = [(0xC0.|.ys), (0x80.|.xs)] > where > xs, ys :: Word8 > ys = fromIntegral (shiftR cp 6) > xs = (fromIntegral cp) .&. 0x3F zzzzyyyyyyxxxxxx -> 1110zzzz 10yyyyyy 10xxxxxx > encodeOne_threebyte :: Word16 -> [Word8] > encodeOne_threebyte cp = [(0xE0.|.zs), (0x80.|.ys), (0x80.|.xs)] > where > xs, ys, zs :: Word8 > xs = (fromIntegral cp) .&. 0x3F > ys = (fromIntegral (shiftR cp 6)) .&. 0x3F > zs = fromIntegral (shiftR cp 12) 000uuuzzzzzzyyyyyyxxxxxx -> 11110uuu 10zzzzzz 10yyyyyy 10xxxxxx > encodeOne_fourbyte :: Word32 -> [Word8] > encodeOne_fourbyte cp = [0xF0.|.us, 0x80.|.zs, 0x80.|.ys, 0x80.|.xs] > where > xs, ys, zs, us :: Word8 > xs = (fromIntegral cp) .&. 0x3F > ys = (fromIntegral (shiftR cp 6)) .&. 0x3F > zs = (fromIntegral (shiftR cp 12)) .&. 0x3F > us = fromIntegral (shiftR cp 18) ///- Decoding -/// The decoding is a bit more involved. The byte sequence could contain all sorts of corruptions. The user must be able to either notice or ignore these errors. I will first look at the decoding of a single character. The process consumes a certain number of bytes from the input. It returns the remaining input and either an error and the index of its occurance in the byte sequence or the decoded character. > data Error The first byte in a sequence starts with either zero, two, three, or four ones and one zero to indicate the length of the sequence. If it doesn't, it is invalid. It is dropped and the next byte interpreted as the start of a new sequence. > = InvalidFirstByte All bytes in the sequence except the first match the bit pattern 10xxxxxx. If one doesn't, it is invalid. The sequence up to that point is dropped and the "invalid" byte interpreted as the start of a new sequence. The error includes the length of the partial sequence and the number of expected bytes. > | InvalidLaterByte Int -- the byte at relative index n was invalid If a sequence ends prematurely, it has been truncated. It dropped and decoding stops. The error reports the actual and expected lengths of the sequence. > | Truncated Int Int -- only n of m expected bytes were present Some sequences would represent code points which would be encoded as a shorter sequence by a conformant encoder. Such non-shortest sequences are considered erroneous and dropped. The error reports the actual and expected number of bytes used. > | NonShortest Int Int -- n instead of m bytes were used Unicode code points are in the range of [0..0x10FFFF]. Any values outside of those bounds are simply invalid. > | ValueOutOfBounds There is no such thing as "surrogate pairs" any more in UTF-8. The corresponding code points now form illegal byte sequences. > | Surrogate > deriving (Show, Eq) Second, third, and fourth bytes share the common requirement to start with the bit sequence 10. So, here's the function to check that property. > first_bits_not_10 :: Word8 -> Bool > first_bits_not_10 b > | (b.&.0xC0) /= 0x80 = True > | otherwise = False Erm, OK, the single-character decoding function's return type is a bit longish. It is a tripel: - The first component contains the decoded character or an error if the byte sequence was erroneous. - The second component contains the number of bytes that were consumed from the input. - The third component contains the remaining bytes of input. > decodeOne :: [Word8] -> (Either Error Char, Int, [Word8]) > decodeOne bs@(b1:rest) > | b1 < 0x80 = decodeOne_onebyte bs > | b1 < 0xC0 = (Left InvalidFirstByte, 1, rest) > | b1 < 0xE0 = decodeOne_twobyte bs > | b1 < 0xEE = decodeOne_threebyte bs > | b1 < 0xF5 = decodeOne_fourbyte bs > | otherwise = (Left ValueOutOfBounds, 1, rest) > decodeOne [] = error "UTF8.decodeOne: No input" 0xxxxxxx -> 000000000xxxxxxx > decodeOne_onebyte :: [Word8] -> (Either Error Char, Int, [Word8]) > decodeOne_onebyte (b:bs) = (Right (cpToChar b), 1, bs) > decodeOne_onebyte[] = error "UTF8.decodeOne_onebyte: No input (can't happen)" > cpToChar :: Integral a => a -> Char > cpToChar = chr . fromIntegral 110yyyyy 10xxxxxx -> 00000yyyyyxxxxxx > decodeOne_twobyte :: [Word8] -> (Either Error Char, Int, [Word8]) > decodeOne_twobyte (_:[]) > = (Left (Truncated 1 2), 1, []) > decodeOne_twobyte (b1:b2:bs) > | b1 < 0xC2 = (Left (NonShortest 2 1), 2, bs) > | first_bits_not_10 b2 = (Left (InvalidLaterByte 1), 1, (b2:bs)) > | otherwise = (Right (cpToChar result), 2, bs) > where > xs, ys, result :: Word32 > xs = fromIntegral (b2.&.0x3F) > ys = fromIntegral (b1.&.0x1F) > result = shiftL ys 6 .|. xs > decodeOne_twobyte[] = error "UTF8.decodeOne_twobyte: No input (can't happen)" 1110zzzz 10yyyyyy 10xxxxxx -> zzzzyyyyyyxxxxxx > decodeOne_threebyte :: [Word8] -> (Either Error Char, Int, [Word8]) > decodeOne_threebyte (_:[]) = threebyte_truncated 1 > decodeOne_threebyte (_:_:[]) = threebyte_truncated 2 > decodeOne_threebyte bs@(b1:b2:b3:rest) > | first_bits_not_10 b2 > = (Left (InvalidLaterByte 1), 1, drop 1 bs) > | first_bits_not_10 b3 > = (Left (InvalidLaterByte 2), 2, drop 2 bs) > | result < 0x0080 > = (Left (NonShortest 3 1), 3, rest) > | result < 0x0800 > = (Left (NonShortest 3 2), 3, rest) > | result >= 0xD800 && result < 0xE000 > = (Left Surrogate, 3, rest) > | otherwise > = (Right (cpToChar result), 3, rest) > where > xs, ys, zs, result :: Word32 > xs = fromIntegral (b3.&.0x3F) > ys = fromIntegral (b2.&.0x3F) > zs = fromIntegral (b1.&.0x0F) > result = shiftL zs 12 .|. shiftL ys 6 .|. xs > decodeOne_threebyte[] > = error "UTF8.decodeOne_threebyte: No input (can't happen)" > threebyte_truncated :: Int -> (Either Error Char, Int, [Word8]) > threebyte_truncated n = (Left (Truncated n 3), n, []) 11110uuu 10zzzzzz 10yyyyyy 10xxxxxx -> 000uuuzzzzzzyyyyyyxxxxxx > decodeOne_fourbyte :: [Word8] -> (Either Error Char, Int, [Word8]) > decodeOne_fourbyte (_:[]) = fourbyte_truncated 1 > decodeOne_fourbyte (_:_:[]) = fourbyte_truncated 2 > decodeOne_fourbyte (_:_:_:[]) = fourbyte_truncated 3 > decodeOne_fourbyte bs@(b1:b2:b3:b4:rest) > | first_bits_not_10 b2 > = (Left (InvalidLaterByte 1), 1, drop 1 bs) > | first_bits_not_10 b3 > = (Left (InvalidLaterByte 2), 2, drop 2 bs) > | first_bits_not_10 b4 > = (Left (InvalidLaterByte 3), 3, drop 3 bs) > | result < 0x0080 > = (Left (NonShortest 4 1), 4, rest) > | result < 0x0800 > = (Left (NonShortest 4 2), 4, rest) > | result < 0x10000 > = (Left (NonShortest 4 3), 4, rest) > | result > 0x10FFFF > = (Left ValueOutOfBounds, 4, rest) > | otherwise > = (Right (cpToChar result), 4, rest) > where > xs, ys, zs, us, result :: Word32 > xs = fromIntegral (b4 .&. 0x3F) > ys = fromIntegral (b3 .&. 0x3F) > zs = fromIntegral (b2 .&. 0x3F) > us = fromIntegral (b1 .&. 0x07) > result = xs .|. shiftL ys 6 .|. shiftL zs 12 .|. shiftL us 18 > decodeOne_fourbyte[] > = error "UTF8.decodeOne_fourbyte: No input (can't happen)" > fourbyte_truncated :: Int -> (Either Error Char, Int, [Word8]) > fourbyte_truncated n = (Left (Truncated n 4), n, []) The decoder examines all input, recording decoded characters as well as error-index pairs along the way. > decode :: [Word8] -> ([Char], [(Error,Int)]) > decode bytes = iter 0 [] [] bytes > where > iter :: Int -> [Char] -> [(Error,Int)] -> [Word8] > -> ([Char], [(Error,Int)]) > iter _ cs es [] = (reverse cs, reverse es) > iter idx cs es bs > = case decodeOne bs of > (Left e, n, rest) -> iter (idx+n) cs ((e,idx):es) rest > (Right c, n, rest) -> iter (idx+n) (c:cs) es rest