/* * (C) Copyright IBM Corp. 1998-2005 - All Rights Reserved * * This file is a modification of the ICU file IndicReordering.h * by Jens Herden and Javier Sola for Khmer language * */ #ifndef __KHMERREORDERING_H #define __KHMERREORDERING_H /** * \file * \internal */ #include "LETypes.h" #include "OpenTypeTables.h" U_NAMESPACE_BEGIN class LEGlyphStorage; // Vocabulary // Base -> A consonant or an independent vowel in its full (not subscript) form. It is the // center of the syllable, it can be souranded by coeng (subscript) consonants, vowels, // split vowels, signs... but there is only one base in a syllable, it has to be coded as // the first character of the syllable. // split vowel --> vowel that has two parts placed separately (e.g. Before and after the consonant). // Khmer language has five of them. Khmer split vowels either have one part before the // base and one after the base or they have a part before the base and a part above the base. // The first part of all Khmer split vowels is the same character, identical to // the glyph of Khmer dependent vowel SRA EI // coeng --> modifier used in Khmer to construct coeng (subscript) consonants // Differently than indian languages, the coeng modifies the consonant that follows it, // not the one preceding it Each consonant has two forms, the base form and the subscript form // the base form is the normal one (using the consonants code-point), the subscript form is // displayed when the combination coeng + consonant is encountered. // Consonant of type 1 -> A consonant which has subscript for that only occupies space under a base consonant // Consonant of type 2.-> Its subscript form occupies space under and before the base (only one, RO) // Consonant of Type 3 -> Its subscript form occupies space under and after the base (KHO, CHHO, THHO, BA, YO, SA) // Consonant shifter -> Khmer has to series of consonants. The same dependent vowel has different sounds // if it is attached to a consonant of the first series or a consonant of the second series // Most consonants have an equivalent in the other series, but some of theme exist only in // one series (for example SA). If we want to use the consonant SA with a vowel sound that // can only be done with a vowel sound that corresponds to a vowel accompanying a consonant // of the other series, then we need to use a consonant shifter: TRIISAP or MUSIKATOAN // x17C9 y x17CA. TRIISAP changes a first series consonant to second series sound and // MUSIKATOAN a second series consonant to have a first series vowel sound. // Consonant shifter are both normally supercript marks, but, when they are followed by a // superscript, they change shape and take the form of subscript dependent vowel SRA U. // If they are in the same syllable as a coeng consonant, Unicode 3.0 says that they // should be typed before the coeng. Unicode 4.0 breaks the standard and says that it should // be placed after the coeng consonant. // Dependent vowel -> In khmer dependent vowels can be placed above, below, before or after the base // Each vowel has its own position. Only one vowel per syllable is allowed. // Signs -> Khmer has above signs and post signs. Only one above sign and/or one post sign are // Allowed in a syllable. // // struct KhmerClassTable // This list must include all types of components that can be used inside a syllable { enum CharClassValues // order is important here! This order must be the same that is found in each horizontal // line in the statetable for Khmer (file KhmerReordering.cpp). { CC_RESERVED = 0, CC_CONSONANT = 1, // consonant of type 1 or independent vowel CC_CONSONANT2 = 2, // Consonant of type 2 CC_CONSONANT3 = 3, // Consonant of type 3 CC_ZERO_WIDTH_NJ_MARK = 4, // Zero Width non joiner character (0x200C) CC_CONSONANT_SHIFTER = 5, CC_ROBAT = 6, // Khmer special diacritic accent -treated differently in state table CC_COENG = 7, // Subscript consonant combining character CC_DEPENDENT_VOWEL = 8, CC_SIGN_ABOVE = 9, CC_SIGN_AFTER = 10, CC_ZERO_WIDTH_J_MARK = 11, // Zero width joiner character CC_COUNT = 12 // This is the number of character classes }; enum CharClassFlags { CF_CLASS_MASK = 0x0000FFFF, CF_CONSONANT = 0x01000000, // flag to speed up comparing CF_SPLIT_VOWEL = 0x02000000, // flag for a split vowel -> the first part is added in front of the syllable CF_DOTTED_CIRCLE = 0x04000000, // add a dotted circle if a character with this flag is the first in a syllable CF_COENG = 0x08000000, // flag to speed up comparing CF_SHIFTER = 0x10000000, // flag to speed up comparing CF_ABOVE_VOWEL = 0x20000000, // flag to speed up comparing // position flags CF_POS_BEFORE = 0x00080000, CF_POS_BELOW = 0x00040000, CF_POS_ABOVE = 0x00020000, CF_POS_AFTER = 0x00010000, CF_POS_MASK = 0x000f0000 }; typedef le_uint32 CharClass; typedef le_int32 ScriptFlags; LEUnicode firstChar; // for Khmer this will become x1780 LEUnicode lastChar; // and this x17DF const CharClass *classTable; CharClass getCharClass(LEUnicode ch) const; static const KhmerClassTable *getKhmerClassTable(); }; class KhmerReordering /* not : public UObject because all methods are static */ { public: static le_int32 reorder(const LEUnicode *theChars, le_int32 charCount, le_int32 scriptCode, LEUnicode *outChars, LEGlyphStorage &glyphStorage); static const FeatureMap *getFeatureMap(le_int32 &count); private: // do not instantiate KhmerReordering(); static le_int32 findSyllable(const KhmerClassTable *classTable, const LEUnicode *chars, le_int32 prev, le_int32 charCount); }; U_NAMESPACE_END #endif