This Go package implements Unicode Text Segmentation according to Unicode Standard Annex #29 (Unicode version 12.0.0).
At this point, only the determination of grapheme cluster boundaries is implemented.
In Go, strings are read-only slices of bytes. They can be turned into Unicode code points using the for
loop or by casting: []rune(str)
. However, multiple code points may be combined into one user-perceived character or what the Unicode specification calls "grapheme cluster". Here are some examples:
String | Bytes (UTF-8) | Code points (runes) | Grapheme clusters |
---|---|---|---|
Käse | 6 bytes: 4b 61 cc 88 73 65 |
5 code points: 4b 61 308 73 65 |
4 clusters: [4b],[61 308],[73],[65] |
🏳️🌈 | 14 bytes: f0 9f 8f b3 ef b8 8f e2 80 8d f0 9f 8c 88 |
4 code points: 1f3f3 fe0f 200d 1f308 |
1 cluster: [1f3f3 fe0f 200d 1f308] |
🇩🇪 | 8 bytes: f0 9f 87 a9 f0 9f 87 aa |
2 code points: 1f1e9 1f1ea |
1 cluster: [1f1e9 1f1ea] |
This package provides a tool to iterate over these grapheme clusters. This may be used to determine the number of user-perceived characters, to split strings in their intended places, or to extract individual characters which form a unit.
go get github.com/rivo/uniseg
package uniseg
import (
"fmt"
"github.com/rivo/uniseg"
)
func main() {
gr := uniseg.NewGraphemes("👍🏼!")
for gr.Next() {
fmt.Printf("%x ", gr.Runes())
}
// Output: [1f44d 1f3fc] [21]
}
Refer to https://godoc.org/github.com/rivo/uniseg for the package's documentation.
This package does not depend on any packages outside the standard library.
Add your issue here on GitHub. Feel free to get in touch if you have any questions.
Version tags will be introduced once Golang modules are official. Consider this version 0.1.