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2003-05-19 Michael Koch <konqueror@gmx.de> * java/text/CollationKey.java: Merged copyright and dat from classpath. * java/text/RuleBasedCollator.java: Merged class documentation from classpath. From-SVN: r66955
487 lines
14 KiB
Java
487 lines
14 KiB
Java
/* RuleBasedCollator.java -- Concrete Collator Class
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Copyright (C) 1998, 1999, 2000, 2001, 2003 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
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This file is part of GNU Classpath.
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GNU Classpath is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
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it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
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the Free Software Foundation; either version 2, or (at your option)
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any later version.
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GNU Classpath is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but
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WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
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MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU
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General Public License for more details.
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You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
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along with GNU Classpath; see the file COPYING. If not, write to the
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Free Software Foundation, Inc., 59 Temple Place, Suite 330, Boston, MA
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02111-1307 USA.
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Linking this library statically or dynamically with other modules is
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making a combined work based on this library. Thus, the terms and
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conditions of the GNU General Public License cover the whole
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combination.
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As a special exception, the copyright holders of this library give you
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permission to link this library with independent modules to produce an
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executable, regardless of the license terms of these independent
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modules, and to copy and distribute the resulting executable under
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terms of your choice, provided that you also meet, for each linked
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independent module, the terms and conditions of the license of that
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module. An independent module is a module which is not derived from
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or based on this library. If you modify this library, you may extend
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this exception to your version of the library, but you are not
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obligated to do so. If you do not wish to do so, delete this
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exception statement from your version. */
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package java.text;
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import java.util.Enumeration;
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import java.util.Hashtable;
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import java.util.Vector;
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/* Written using "Java Class Libraries", 2nd edition, plus online
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* API docs for JDK 1.2 from http://www.javasoft.com.
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* Status: Believed complete and correct
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*/
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/**
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* This class is a concrete subclass of <code>Collator</code> suitable
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* for string collation in a wide variety of languages. An instance of
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* this class is normally returned by the <code>getInstance</code> method
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* of <code>Collator</code> with rules predefined for the requested
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* locale. However, an instance of this class can be created manually
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* with any desired rules.
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* <p>
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* Rules take the form of a <code>String</code> with the following syntax
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* <ul>
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* <li> Modifier: '@'
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* <li> Relation: '<' | ';' | ',' | '=' : <text>
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* <li> Reset: '&' : <text>
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* </ul>
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* The modifier character indicates that accents sort backward as is the
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* case with French. The relational operators specify how the text
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* argument relates to the previous term. The relation characters have
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* the following meanings:
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* <ul>
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* <li>'<' - The text argument is greater than the prior term at the primary
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* difference level.
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* <li>';' - The text argument is greater than the prior term at the secondary
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* difference level.
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* <li>',' - The text argument is greater than the prior term at the tertiary
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* difference level.
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* <li>'=' - The text argument is equal to the prior term
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* </ul>
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* <p>
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* As for the text argument itself, this is any sequence of Unicode
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* characters not in the following ranges: 0x0009-0x000D, 0x0020-0x002F,
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* 0x003A-0x0040, 0x005B-0x0060, and 0x007B-0x007E. If these characters are
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* desired, they must be enclosed in single quotes. If any whitespace is
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* encountered, it is ignored. (For example, "a b" is equal to "ab").
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* <p>
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* The reset operation inserts the following rule at the point where the
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* text argument to it exists in the previously declared rule string. This
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* makes it easy to add new rules to an existing string by simply including
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* them in a reset sequence at the end. Note that the text argument, or
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* at least the first character of it, must be present somewhere in the
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* previously declared rules in order to be inserted properly. If this
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* is not satisfied, a <code>ParseException</code> will be thrown.
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* <p>
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* This system of configuring <code>RuleBasedCollator</code> is needlessly
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* complex and the people at Taligent who developed it (along with the folks
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* at Sun who accepted it into the Java standard library) deserve a slow
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* and agonizing death.
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* <p>
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* Here are a couple of example of rule strings:
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* <p>
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* "< a < b < c" - This string says that a is greater than b which is
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* greater than c, with all differences being primary differences.
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* <p>
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* "< a,A < b,B < c,C" - This string says that 'A' is greater than 'a' with
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* a tertiary strength comparison. Both 'b' and 'B' are greater than 'a' and
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* 'A' during a primary strength comparison. But 'B' is greater than 'b'
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* under a tertiary strength comparison.
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* <p>
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* "< a < c & a < b " - This sequence is identical in function to the
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* "< a < b < c" rule string above. The '&' reset symbol indicates that
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* the rule "< b" is to be inserted after the text argument "a" in the
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* previous rule string segment.
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* <p>
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* "< a < b & y < z" - This is an error. The character 'y' does not appear
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* anywhere in the previous rule string segment so the rule following the
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* reset rule cannot be inserted.
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* <p>
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* For a description of the various comparison strength types, see the
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* documentation for the <code>Collator</code> class.
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* <p>
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* As an additional complication to this already overly complex rule scheme,
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* if any characters precede the first rule, these characters are considered
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* ignorable. They will be treated as if they did not exist during
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* comparisons. For example, "- < a < b ..." would make '-' an ignorable
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* character such that the strings "high-tech" and "hightech" would
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* be considered identical.
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* <p>
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* A <code>ParseException</code> will be thrown for any of the following
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* conditions:
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* <ul>
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* <li>Unquoted punctuation characters in a text argument.
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* <li>A relational or reset operator not followed by a text argument
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* <li>A reset operator where the text argument is not present in
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* the previous rule string section.
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* </ul>
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*
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* @author Aaron M. Renn <arenn@urbanophile.com>
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* @author Tom Tromey <tromey@cygnus.com>
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* @date March 25, 1999
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*/
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final class RBCElement
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{
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String key;
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char relation;
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RBCElement (String key, char relation)
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{
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this.key = key;
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this.relation = relation;
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}
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}
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public class RuleBasedCollator extends Collator
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{
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// True if we are using French-style accent ordering.
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private boolean frenchAccents;
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/**
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* This the the original rule string.
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*/
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private String rules;
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// This maps strings onto collation values.
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private Hashtable map;
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// An entry in this hash means that more lookahead is required for
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// the prefix string.
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private Hashtable prefixes;
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public Object clone ()
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{
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RuleBasedCollator c = (RuleBasedCollator) super.clone ();
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c.map = (Hashtable) map.clone ();
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c.prefixes = (Hashtable) map.clone ();
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return c;
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}
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// A helper for CollationElementIterator.next().
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int ceiNext (CollationElementIterator cei)
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{
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if (cei.lookahead_set)
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{
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cei.lookahead_set = false;
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return cei.lookahead;
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}
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int save = cei.index;
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int max = cei.text.length();
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String s = null;
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// It is possible to have a case where `abc' has a mapping, but
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// neither `ab' nor `abd' do. In this case we must treat `abd' as
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// nothing special.
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boolean found = false;
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int i;
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for (i = save + 1; i <= max; ++i)
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{
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s = cei.text.substring(save, i);
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if (prefixes.get(s) == null)
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break;
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found = true;
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}
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// Assume s != null.
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Object obj = map.get(s);
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// The special case.
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while (found && obj == null && s.length() > 1)
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{
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--i;
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s = cei.text.substring(save, i);
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obj = map.get(s);
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}
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// Update state.
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cei.index = i;
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if (obj == null)
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{
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// This idea, and the values, come from JDK.
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// assert (s.length() == 1)
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cei.lookahead_set = true;
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cei.lookahead = s.charAt(0) << 8;
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return 0x7fff << 16;
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}
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return ((Integer) obj).intValue();
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}
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// A helper for compareTo() that returns the next character that has
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// a nonzero ordering at the indicated strength. This is also used
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// in CollationKey.
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static final int next (CollationElementIterator iter, int strength)
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{
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while (true)
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{
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int os = iter.next();
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if (os == CollationElementIterator.NULLORDER)
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return os;
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int c = 0;
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switch (strength)
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{
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case PRIMARY:
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c = os & ~0xffff;
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break;
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case SECONDARY:
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c = os & ~0x00ff;
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break;
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case TERTIARY:
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case IDENTICAL:
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c = os;
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break;
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}
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if (c != 0)
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return c;
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}
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}
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public int compare (String source, String target)
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{
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CollationElementIterator cs, ct;
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cs = new CollationElementIterator (source, this);
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ct = new CollationElementIterator (target, this);
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while (true)
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{
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int os = next (cs, strength);
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int ot = next (ct, strength);
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if (os == CollationElementIterator.NULLORDER
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&& ot == CollationElementIterator.NULLORDER)
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break;
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else if (os == CollationElementIterator.NULLORDER)
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{
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// Source string is shorter, so return "less than".
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return -1;
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}
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else if (ot == CollationElementIterator.NULLORDER)
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{
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// Target string is shorter, so return "greater than".
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return 1;
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}
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if (os != ot)
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return os - ot;
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}
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return 0;
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}
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public boolean equals (Object obj)
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{
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if (! (obj instanceof RuleBasedCollator) || ! super.equals(obj))
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return false;
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RuleBasedCollator rbc = (RuleBasedCollator) obj;
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// FIXME: this is probably wrong. Instead we should compare maps
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// directly.
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return (frenchAccents == rbc.frenchAccents
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&& rules.equals(rbc.rules));
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}
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public CollationElementIterator getCollationElementIterator (String source)
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{
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StringBuffer expand = new StringBuffer (source.length());
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int max = source.length();
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for (int i = 0; i < max; ++i)
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decomposeCharacter (source.charAt(i), expand);
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return new CollationElementIterator (expand.toString(), this);
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}
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public CollationElementIterator getCollationElementIterator (CharacterIterator source)
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{
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StringBuffer expand = new StringBuffer ();
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for (char c = source.first ();
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c != CharacterIterator.DONE;
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c = source.next ())
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decomposeCharacter (c, expand);
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return new CollationElementIterator (expand.toString(), this);
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}
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public CollationKey getCollationKey (String source)
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{
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return new CollationKey (getCollationElementIterator (source), source,
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strength);
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}
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public String getRules ()
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{
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return rules;
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}
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public int hashCode ()
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{
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return (frenchAccents ? 1231 : 1237
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^ rules.hashCode()
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^ map.hashCode()
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^ prefixes.hashCode());
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}
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private final boolean is_special (char c)
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{
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// Rules from JCL book.
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return ((c >= 0x0009 && c <= 0x000d)
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|| (c >= 0x0020 && c <= 0x002f)
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|| (c >= 0x003a && c <= 0x0040)
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|| (c >= 0x005b && c <= 0x0060)
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|| (c >= 0x007b && c <= 0x007e));
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}
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private final int text_argument (String rules, int index,
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StringBuffer result)
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{
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result.setLength(0);
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int len = rules.length();
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while (index < len)
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{
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char c = rules.charAt(index);
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if (c == '\'' && index + 2 < len
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&& rules.charAt(index + 2) == '\''
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&& is_special (rules.charAt(index + 1)))
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index += 2;
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else if (is_special (c) || Character.isWhitespace(c))
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return index;
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result.append(c);
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++index;
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}
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return index;
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}
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public RuleBasedCollator (String rules) throws ParseException
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{
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this.rules = rules;
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this.frenchAccents = false;
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// We keep each rule in order in a vector. At the end we traverse
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// the vector and compute collation values from it.
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int insertion_index = 0;
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Vector vec = new Vector ();
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StringBuffer argument = new StringBuffer ();
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int len = rules.length();
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for (int index = 0; index < len; ++index)
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{
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char c = rules.charAt(index);
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// Just skip whitespace.
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if (Character.isWhitespace(c))
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continue;
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// Modifier.
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if (c == '@')
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{
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frenchAccents = true;
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continue;
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}
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// Check for relation or reset operator.
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if (! (c == '<' || c == ';' || c == ',' || c == '=' || c == '&'))
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throw new ParseException ("invalid character", index);
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++index;
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while (index < len)
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{
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if (! Character.isWhitespace(rules.charAt(index)))
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break;
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++index;
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}
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if (index == len)
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throw new ParseException ("missing argument", index);
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int save = index;
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index = text_argument (rules, index, argument);
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if (argument.length() == 0)
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throw new ParseException ("invalid character", save);
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String arg = argument.toString();
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int item_index = vec.indexOf(arg);
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if (c != '&')
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{
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// If the argument already appears in the vector, then we
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// must remove it in order to re-order.
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if (item_index != -1)
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{
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vec.removeElementAt(item_index);
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if (insertion_index >= item_index)
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--insertion_index;
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}
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RBCElement r = new RBCElement (arg, c);
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vec.insertElementAt(r, insertion_index);
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++insertion_index;
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}
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else
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{
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// Reset.
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if (item_index == -1)
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throw
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new ParseException ("argument to reset not previously seen",
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save);
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insertion_index = item_index + 1;
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}
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// Ugly: in this case the resulting INDEX comes from
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// text_argument, which returns the index of the next
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// character we should examine.
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--index;
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}
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// Now construct a hash table that maps strings onto their
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// collation values.
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int primary = 0;
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int secondary = 0;
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int tertiary = 0;
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this.map = new Hashtable ();
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this.prefixes = new Hashtable ();
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Enumeration e = vec.elements();
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while (e.hasMoreElements())
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{
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RBCElement r = (RBCElement) e.nextElement();
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switch (r.relation)
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{
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case '<':
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++primary;
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secondary = 0;
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tertiary = 0;
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break;
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case ';':
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++secondary;
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tertiary = 0;
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break;
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case ',':
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++tertiary;
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break;
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case '=':
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break;
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}
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// This must match CollationElementIterator.
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map.put(r.key, new Integer (primary << 16
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| secondary << 8 | tertiary));
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// Make a map of all lookaheads we might need.
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for (int i = r.key.length() - 1; i >= 1; --i)
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prefixes.put(r.key.substring(0, i), Boolean.TRUE);
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}
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}
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}
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