Skip to content

Shreeshrii/sanscript.php

 
 

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date

Latest commit

 

History

79 Commits
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Repository files navigation

Sanscript.php

Introduction

Sanscript.php is a transliteration library for Indian languages written in PHP. It supports the most popular Indian scripts and several different romanization schemes. Although Sanscript focuses on Sanskrit transliteration, it has partial support for other languages and is easy to extend.

Usage

Sanscript is simple to use:

$sanscript = new Sanscript();
$output = $sanscript->t($input, $from, $to);

Here, $from and $to are the names of different schemes. In Sanscript, the word "scheme" refers to both scripts and romanizations. These schemes are of two types:

  1. Brahmic schemes, which are abugidas. All Indian scripts are Brahmic schemes.
  2. Roman schemes, which are alphabets. All romanizations are Roman schemes.

By default, Sanscript supports the following Brahmic schemes:

  • bengali
  • devanagari
  • gujarati
  • gurmukhi
  • kannada
  • malayalam
  • oriya
  • tamil
  • telugu

and the following Roman schemes:

  • hk (Harvard-Kyoto)
  • iast (International Alphabet of Sanskrit Transliteration)
  • itrans (ITRANS)
  • itrans_dravidian (ITRANS with support for Dravidian short "e" and "o")
  • kolkata (National Library at Kolkata)
  • slp1 (Sanskrit Library Phonetic Basic)
  • velthuis (Velthuis)
  • wx (WX)

Disabling transliteration

When Sanscript sees the token ##, it toggles the transliteration state:

$sanscript->t('ga##Na##pa##te', 'hk', 'devanagari'); // गNaपte
$sanscript->t('ध##र्म##क्षेत्रे', 'devanagari', 'hk'); // dhaर्मkSetre

When Sanscript sees the token \, it disables transliteration on the character that immediately follows. \ is used for ITRANS compatibility; we recommend always using ## instead.

$sanscript->t('a \\a', 'itrans', 'devanagari'); // अ a
$sanscript->t('\\##aham', 'itrans', 'devanagari'); // ##अहम्

Transliterating to lossy schemes

A lossy scheme does not have the letters needed to support lossless translation. For example, Bengali is a lossy scheme because it uses for both ba and va. In future releases, Sanscript might let you choose how to handle lossiness. For the time being, it makes some fairly bad hard-coded assumptions. Corrections and advice are always welcome.

Transliteration options

You can tweak the transliteration function by passing an options array:

$output = $sanscript->t($input, $from, $to, $options);

$options maps options to values. Currently, these options are supported:

  • skip_sgml - If TRUE, transliterate SGML tags as if they were ordinary words (<b>iti</b><ब्>इति</ब्>). Defaults to FALSE.
  • syncope - If TRUE, use Hindi-style transliteration (ajayअजय). In linguistics, this behavior is known as schwa syncope. Defaults to FALSE.

Adding new schemes

Adding a new scheme is simple:

$sanscript->addBrahmicScheme($schemeName, $schemeData);
$sanscript->addRomanScheme($schemeName, $schemeData);

For help in creating $schemeData, see the comments on the addBrahmicScheme and addRomanScheme functions.

About

Transliteration package for Indian scripts

Resources

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Releases

No releases published

Packages

No packages published

Languages

  • PHP 99.9%
  • Shell 0.1%