[Code] file_found?(path) and to_ascii+to_unicode.rb
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@tig said:
I at last see your explanation now... It's Ruby that's wrong NOT SUp... The more modern coding of SUp means that it returns text that is out of step with Ruby, which is a bit old and clunky when it comes to Unicode ?
Yes. That is seen if you type
"å".length
in the ruby console. the console also uses Unicode (I think SU uses UTF-8 encoding.) The return value is2
- which shows that ruby doesn't deal with multi-byte characters.I had the very same problem with PHP when I was making websites. It also assumes 8bit per character. I thought PHP was the only dinosaur and I'm very surprised that this new Ruby language doesn't deal with Unicode strings.
@tig said:
Whatever it's called it still works !!! ... Perhaps we [I] should have given it another 'neutral' name - however, I have simply swapped over the names and issued an updated version here... viewtopic.php?p=169274#p169274
Might be good to find some names that relates best to what is actually returned. It's not really ACSII ruby uses either - as mentioned ASCII only uses the first 128 values of a byte. It might be ANSI - which extends ACSII to full 256. But it might be an ISO-8859-x encoding (in which case it's most likely ISO-8859-1 Latin-1 Western European).
When I look at Norepad++ and Notepad they are both set to encode in ANSI - so my current best guess is ANSI.I'll have to have a closer look to what the methods actually do to determine what it actually returns.
Character encodings are a nightmare. And with SU being UTF-8 and Ruby ANSI(?) - this is just begging for problems. I think there's some UTF-8 libraries which we can use without breaking existing code. Some scripts might rely on Ruby treating multi-byte characters as multiple characters so we can't really modify the existing methods.
But maybe some of the libraries offer some good conversions tool. Maybe a custom Unicode string class which people can use if they need to deal with unicode characters and string manipulations. Converting from unicode to ANSI and back is so prone to errors. (I spent ages struggling with this when I was making a parser in PHP for my UTF-8 encoded website.)I've been meaning to write up a gotcha-thread for ruby scripting - character encoding is one of the important points I need to include.
Considering the widespread usage of SU in various languages I'm surprised this problem hasn't been mentioned more in the forums.
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Ok. I'm pretty sure that Ruby uses ANSI. "ANSI" isn't really the name either (character encoding is a topic that will hurt your brain) but actually Windows-1252. It's not really an ANSI stanrad. Windows-1252 is a superset of ISO-8859-1.
UTF-8 which SU uses (I'm pretty sure of this. I was reverse engineering the .skp format and that used an mix of ANSI and UTF-8) is backwards compatible with ASCII - all ASCII characters (the first 128 of UTF-8) are mapped the same in UTF-8. Characters outside the 128 ASCII set is mapped with at least two bytes.
However, Ruby uses Windows-1252 (ANSI), which also maps the ASCII set to it's first 128 characters, but it has extra characters for it's remaining 128. This means for western european languages we can map back UTF-8 strings back to ANSI with a fair success. This is that the two methods TIG got does.
I don't know what happens if you try to map UTF-8 characters that doesn't exist in the Windows-1252 set.
TIG: my suggestion for the method names:
.to_ansi
.to_utf8
This will correctly describe what they do. Unicode can be many things, it could have more bytes per characters in different byte order, so utf8 will give the correct assumption of what will happen.
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Ok, digging deeper into this, Ruby 1.8 doesn't have an encoding type at all. It simply treats String as a series of bytes (8-bits) http://blog.grayproductions.net/articles/bytes_and_characters_in_ruby_18
Since ASCII, Windows-1252 and ISO-8859-? works within the 8bit range they can be handled in Ruby without further processing of the string.
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# ! Could lead to corrupt string if the UTF-8 string can't fit into 8bit encoding. def self.to_ansi(str_utf8) return str_utf8.unpack('U*').pack('C*') end # Safe to use. def to_utf8(str_ansi) return str_ansi.unpack('C*').pack('U*') end
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http://blog.grayproductions.net/categories/character_encodings <- looks like some interesting reading.
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Not sure if .to_ansi is correct name any more since Ruby have no encoding. Maybe it's an co-incidence that it works on my system (Windows) which uses the Windows-1252 encoding. I expect that
return str_utf8.unpack('U*').pack('C*')
returns correct ASCII for the first 128 byte set, but it's the rest that has me puzzled. On my system it maps fine to ANSI, but maybe a different system might behave differently when it comes to the accented characters.... -
http://redmine.ruby-lang.org/issues/show/877
@unknownuser said:
I noticed issues with other things, like puts, print and such.
**Most of the File and IO functions for Windows are ANSI, not Wide, which limits the options to process properly paths, filenames and even output of strings using UTF/Unicode characters.
Also, the console page affects ruby. By default is 437, but 1252 is needed to get accented strings to work.**
Further review of the used Windows API is needed to find these issues.
@unknownuser said:
There are no plan to resolve the original problem on 1.8.
You must pass the path with Win32 file API's encoding to ruby.I know it's VERY inconvenient for users in Europe, but we cannot break compatibility of commandline/path handling in 1.8 branch.
This is in the lines of what I thought. The file / OI classes under windows appear to demand ANSI (1252) to operate. Question is; what happens on Mac systems? I need to poke around on my Mac when I get home.
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This is also interesting comment:
@unknownuser said:
...
This method applies to output routines only, and it is useless here.
Actually problem is in the Windows-specific implementation of some Ruby
libraries. Ruby reads the environment variable in awful wrong encoding, and
works with file system objects in awful wrong encoding, too.
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Ok, I know I'm going back and forth here, but at the moment
.to_ansi
might be wrong..to_ascii
might not be complete indication of what's returned, but we know that we get the ASCII characters..to_single_byte_characters
or.to_unsigned_chars
is more accurate, but a bit long names. -
Why don't we call the script "friendlytext.rb" and call them
ruby_friendly(text)
and
sup_friendly(text)
That way
FileTest.exist?(ruby_friendly(model.path))
returnstrue
and you can turn Ruby made text back to suit SUp using the other form ? ...
This also doesn't enter into this ansi/ascii/unicode/utf8 territory which looks like a quicksand... It also doesn't apportion blame !!!
thomthom, you seem to be spending more time on this than me... why don't you take it over and decide what to call the methods ? I'd be happy to hand it over...
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@tig said:
Why don't we call the script "friendlytext.rb" and call them
ruby_friendly(text)
and
sup_friendly(text)That's a very pragmatic solution to it. I like it!
@tig said:
thomthom, you seem to be spending more time on this than me... why don't you take it over and decide what to call the methods ?
Since I use Norwegian characters that fall into this encoding trap it's rather important to me to know what's going on. I might look into some extra set of helper functions that I'll add to the SKX project. But I'd need some time to work out what's really going on.
For now these snippets will provide enough functionalities for most western languages. -
thomthom
She's all yours...
If you want me to remove any early stuff let me know [PM etc]...
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I think it can stick with the friendly names you suggested.
I'm doing more research. Just signed up for a Ruby forum to work out how Ruby behaves. Once I've gathered the info I need I'll make a thread describing the findings. -
FYI, for anyone that (most unlikely) might be following on my ramblings - I've initiated a new thread over at a Ruby forum for further investigations: http://www.ruby-forum.com/topic/191016#833043
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I'm fairly confident that it's ISO 8859-1 which
.pack('C*')
generates. As long as the characters fits into ISO 8859-1 the UTF-8 can be converted with the pack/unpack methods. If they fall outside, other solutions are needed.One annoying finding with this is that the Euro symbol seem to be impossible to use. When ruby comes across this in a UTF-8 string it chokes and throws an error.
I'll begin writing up this to something more readable than today's ramblings.
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sigh
Euro can be used - just not typed into the Console. You might get it passed via SU's ruby method if it's used in a material name or component name. though .unpack('U') will return 8364 for it. Way outside the code point for ISO 8859-1. However, if you type in the octal value "\200" you get the Euro in a 1byte length string. So it should be mappable. But pack and unpack doesn't map the Unicode points between 128-160 well. So I'll be looking for a better conversion.I've heard of Iconv, but that's an Win API call I think - not a solution for Mac.
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I am glad you have taken such a complicated thing over ....
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@tig said:
I am glad you have taken such a complicated thing over ....
I'm not... This makes my head hurt.
But I need to know.But at least it beats sudoko puzzles...
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