commit | 3ab9517db750d1a17f1d6b3f83dabeea9bd96e72 | [log] [tgz] |
---|---|---|
author | Jeff Vander Stoep <[email protected]> | Tue Feb 21 22:45:39 2023 +0000 |
committer | Automerger Merge Worker <[email protected]> | Tue Feb 21 22:45:39 2023 +0000 |
tree | fb9d5538736d1dc8e521d57d80211eb91f95f8cd | |
parent | 84d24275bdccd022929eea40bd56b6308e6114d0 [diff] | |
parent | b53e9a1bb0e2447e7ddffa786b436dbc43bd83d0 [diff] |
Upgrade unicode-segmentation to 1.10.1 am: af4da18ee6 am: a3413ee32f am: b53e9a1bb0 Original change: https://android-review.googlesource.com/c/platform/external/rust/crates/unicode-segmentation/+/2441309 Change-Id: Ic56fc793456ef34dde977c7d190e488de0a7ca3b Signed-off-by: Automerger Merge Worker <[email protected]>
Iterators which split strings on Grapheme Cluster or Word boundaries, according to the Unicode Standard Annex #29 rules.
use unicode_segmentation::UnicodeSegmentation; fn main() { let s = "a̐éö̲\r\n"; let g = s.graphemes(true).collect::<Vec<&str>>(); let b: &[_] = &["a̐", "é", "ö̲", "\r\n"]; assert_eq!(g, b); let s = "The quick (\"brown\") fox can't jump 32.3 feet, right?"; let w = s.unicode_words().collect::<Vec<&str>>(); let b: &[_] = &["The", "quick", "brown", "fox", "can't", "jump", "32.3", "feet", "right"]; assert_eq!(w, b); let s = "The quick (\"brown\") fox"; let w = s.split_word_bounds().collect::<Vec<&str>>(); let b: &[_] = &["The", " ", "quick", " ", "(", "\"", "brown", "\"", ")", " ", " ", "fox"]; assert_eq!(w, b); }
unicode-segmentation does not depend on libstd, so it can be used in crates with the #![no_std]
attribute.
You can use this package in your project by adding the following to your Cargo.toml
:
[dependencies] unicode-segmentation = "1.10.1"
GraphemeCursor
API allows random access and bidirectional iteration.as_str
methods to the iterator types.