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Clean up imports.
[Dictionary.git] / jars / icu4j-52_1 / main / tests / core / src / com / ibm / icu / dev / test / rbbi / BreakIteratorRules_en_US_TEST.java
1 /*
2  *******************************************************************************
3  * Copyright (C) 1996-2004, International Business Machines Corporation and    *
4  * others. All Rights Reserved.                                                *
5  *******************************************************************************
6  */
7 package com.ibm.icu.dev.test.rbbi;
8
9 import java.util.ListResourceBundle;
10
11 /**
12  * This resource bundle is included for testing and demonstration purposes only.
13  * It applies the dictionary-based algorithm to English text that has had all the
14  * spaces removed.  Once we have good test cases for Thai, we will replace this
15  * with good resource data (and a good dictionary file) for Thai
16  */
17 public class BreakIteratorRules_en_US_TEST extends ListResourceBundle {
18     private static final String DATA_NAME = "/com/ibm/icu/dev/data/rbbi/english.dict";
19
20     // calling code will handle case where dictionary does not exist
21
22     public Object[][] getContents() {
23         return new Object[][] {
24             // names of classes to instantiate for the different kinds of break
25             // iterator.  Notice we're now using DictionaryBasedBreakIterator
26             // for word and line breaking.
27             {   "BreakIteratorClasses",
28                 new String[] {
29                     "RuleBasedBreakIterator",
30                     // character-break iterator class
31                     "DictionaryBasedBreakIterator",
32                     // word-break iterator class
33                     "DictionaryBasedBreakIterator",
34                     // line-break iterator class
35                     "RuleBasedBreakIterator" } // sentence-break iterator class
36             },
37
38             // These are the same word-breaking rules as are specified in the default
39             // resource, except that the Latin letters, apostrophe, and hyphen are
40             // specified as dictionary characters
41             {
42                 "WordBreakRules",
43                 // ignore non-spacing marks, enclosing marks, and format characters,
44                 // all of which should not influence the algorithm
45                 "$_ignore_=[[:Mn:][:Me:][:Cf:]];"
46
47                 // lower and upper case Roman letters, apostrophy and dash are
48                 // in the English dictionary
49                 +"$_dictionary_=[a-zA-Z\\'\\-];"
50
51                 // Hindi phrase separator, kanji, katakana, hiragana, CJK diacriticals,
52                 // other letters, and digits
53                 +"$danda=[\u0964\u0965];"
54                     + "$kanji=[\u3005\u4e00-\u9fa5\uf900-\ufa2d];"
55                     + "$kata=[\u3099-\u309c\u30a1-\u30fe];"
56                     + "$hira=[\u3041-\u309e\u30fc];"
57                     + "$let=[[[:L:][:Mc:]]-[$kanji$kata$hira]];"
58                     + "$dgt=[:N:];"
59
60                 // punctuation that can occur in the middle of a word: currently
61                 // dashes, apostrophes, and quotation marks
62                 +"$mid_word=[[:Pd:]\u00ad\u2027\\\"\\\'];"
63
64                 // punctuation that can occur in the middle of a number: currently
65                 // apostrophes, qoutation marks, periods, commas, and the Arabic
66                 // decimal point
67                 +"$mid_num=[\\\"\\\'\\,\u066b\\.];"
68
69                 // punctuation that can occur at the beginning of a number: currently
70                 // the period, the number sign, and all currency symbols except the cents sign
71                 +"$pre_num=[[[:Sc:]-[\u00a2]]\\#\\.];"
72
73                 // punctuation that can occur at the end of a number: currently
74                 // the percent, per-thousand, per-ten-thousand, and Arabic percent
75                 // signs, the cents sign, and the ampersand
76                 +"$post_num=[\\%\\&\u00a2\u066a\u2030\u2031];"
77
78                 // line separators: currently LF, FF, PS, and LS
79                 +"$ls=[\n\u000c\u2028\u2029];"
80
81                 // whitespace: all space separators and the tab character
82                 +"$ws=[[:Zs:]\t];"
83
84                 // a word is a sequence of letters that may contain internal
85                 // punctuation, as long as it begins and ends with a letter and
86                 // never contains two punctuation marks in a row
87                 +"$word=($let+($mid_word$let+)*$danda?);"
88
89                 // a number is a sequence of digits that may contain internal
90                 // punctuation, as long as it begins and ends with a digit and
91                 // never contains two punctuation marks in a row.
92                 +"$number=($dgt+($mid_num$dgt+)*);"
93
94                 // break after every character, with the following exceptions
95                 // (this will cause punctuation marks that aren't considered
96                 // part of words or numbers to be treated as words unto themselves)
97                 +".;"
98
99                 // keep together any sequence of contiguous words and numbers
100                 // (including just one of either), plus an optional trailing
101                 // number-suffix character
102                 +"$word?($number$word)*($number$post_num?)?;"
103
104                 // keep together and sequence of contiguous words and numbers
105                 // that starts with a number-prefix character and a number,
106                 // and may end with a number-suffix character
107                 +"$pre_num($number$word)*($number$post_num?)?;"
108
109                 // keep together runs of whitespace (optionally with a single trailing
110                 // line separator or CRLF sequence)
111                 +"$ws*\r?$ls?;"
112
113                 // keep together runs of Katakana
114                 +"$kata*;"
115
116                 // keep together runs of Hiragana
117                 +"$hira*;"
118
119                 // keep together runs of Kanji
120                 +"$kanji*;" },
121
122             // These are the same line-breaking rules as are specified in the default
123             // resource, except that the Latin letters, apostrophe, and hyphen are
124             // specified as dictionary characters
125             {   "LineBreakRules",
126                 // ignore non-spacing marks, enclosing marks, and format characters
127                 "$_ignore_=[[:Mn:][:Me:][:Cf:]];"
128
129                 // lower and upper case Roman letters, apostrophy and dash
130                 // are in the English dictionary
131                 +"$_dictionary_=[a-zA-Z\\'\\-];"
132
133                 // Hindi phrase separators
134                 +"$danda=[\u0964\u0965];"
135
136                 // characters that always cause a break: ETX, tab, LF, FF, LS, and PS
137                 +"$break=[\u0003\t\n\f\u2028\u2029];"
138
139                 // characters that always prevent a break: the non-breaking space
140                 // and similar characters
141                 +"$nbsp=[\u00a0\u2007\u2011\ufeff];"
142
143                 // whitespace: space separators and control characters, except for
144                 // CR and the other characters mentioned above
145                 +"$space=[[[:Zs:][:Cc:]]-[$nbsp$break\r]];"
146
147                 // dashes: dash punctuation and the discretionary hyphen, except for
148                 // non-breaking hyphens
149                 +"$dash=[[[:Pd:]\u00ad]-[$nbsp]];"
150
151                 // characters that stick to a word if they precede it: currency symbols
152                 // (except the cents sign) and starting punctuation
153                 +"$pre_word=[[[:Sc:]-[\u00a2]][:Ps:]\\\"\\\'];"
154
155                 // characters that stick to a word if they follow it: ending punctuation,
156                 // other punctuation that usually occurs at the end of a sentence,
157                 // small Kana characters, some CJK diacritics, etc.
158                 +"$post_word=[[:Pe:]\\!\\\"\\\'\\%\\.\\,\\:\\;\\?\u00a2\u00b0\u066a\u2030-\u2034"
159                     + "\u2103\u2105\u2109\u3001\u3002\u3005\u3041\u3043\u3045\u3047\u3049\u3063"
160                     + "\u3083\u3085\u3087\u308e\u3099-\u309e\u30a1\u30a3\u30a5\u30a7\u30a9"
161                     + "\u30c3\u30e3\u30e5\u30e7\u30ee\u30f5\u30f6\u30fc-\u30fe\uff01\uff0c"
162                     + "\uff0e\uff1f];"
163
164                 // Kanji: actually includes both Kanji and Kana, except for small Kana and
165                 // CJK diacritics
166                 +"$kanji=[[\u4e00-\u9fa5\uf900-\ufa2d\u3041-\u3094\u30a1-\u30fa]-[$post_word$_ignore_]];"
167
168                 // digits
169                 +"$digit=[[:Nd:][:No:]];"
170
171                 // punctuation that can occur in the middle of a number: periods and commas
172                 +"$mid_num=[\\.\\,];"
173
174                 // everything not mentioned above, plus the quote marks (which are both
175                 // <pre-word>, <post-word>, and <char>)
176                 +"$char=[^$break$space$dash$kanji$nbsp$_ignore_$pre_word$post_word$mid_num$danda\r\\\"\\\'];"
177
178                 // a "number" is a run of prefix characters and dashes, followed by one or
179                 // more digits with isolated number-punctuation characters interspersed
180                 +"$number=([$pre_word$dash]*$digit+($mid_num$digit+)*);"
181
182                 // the basic core of a word can be either a "number" as defined above, a single
183                 // "Kanji" character, or a run of any number of not-explicitly-mentioned
184                 // characters (this includes Latin letters)
185                 +"$word_core=([$pre_word$char]*|$kanji|$number);"
186
187                 // a word may end with an optional suffix that be either a run of one or
188                 // more dashes or a run of word-suffix characters, followed by an optional
189                 // run of whitespace
190                 +"$word_suffix=(($dash+|$post_word*)$space*);"
191
192                 // a word, thus, is an optional run of word-prefix characters, followed by
193                 // a word core and a word suffix (the syntax of <word-core> and <word-suffix>
194                 // actually allows either of them to match the empty string, putting a break
195                 // between things like ")(" or "aaa(aaa"
196                 +"$word=($pre_word*$word_core$word_suffix);"
197
198                 // finally, the rule that does the work: Keep together any run of words that
199                 // are joined by runs of one of more non-spacing mark.  Also keep a trailing
200                 // line-break character or CRLF combination with the word.  (line separators
201                 // "win" over nbsp's)
202                 +"$word($nbsp+$word)*\r?$break?;" },
203
204             // these two resources specify the pathnames of the dictionary files to
205             // use for word breaking and line breaking.  Both currently refer to
206             // a file called english.dict placed in com.ibm.icu.impl.data
207             // somewhere in the class path.  It's important to note that
208             // english.dict was created for testing purposes only, and doesn't
209             // come anywhere close to being an exhaustive dictionary of English
210             // words (basically, it contains all the words in the Declaration of
211             // Independence, and the Revised Standard Version of the book of Genesis,
212             // plus a few other words thrown in to show more interesting cases).
213             // { "WordBreakDictionary", "com\\ibm\\text\\resources\\english.dict" },
214             // { "LineBreakDictionary", "com\\ibm\\text\\resources\\english.dict" }
215             {   "WordBreakDictionary", DATA_NAME }, 
216             {   "LineBreakDictionary", DATA_NAME }
217         };
218     }
219 }