I'm writing a delimiter for some Excel spreadsheet data and I need to read the rightward arrow symbol and pilcrow symbol in a large string.
The pilcrow symbol, for row ends, was fairly simply, using the Chr function and the AnsiChar code 182.
The rightward arrow has been more tricky to figure out. There isn't an AnsiChar code for it. The Unicode value for it is '2192'. I can't, however, figure out how to make this into a string or char type for me to use in my function.
Any easy ways to do this?
You can't use the 2192 character directly. But since a STRING variable can't contain this value either (as thus your TStringList can't either), that doesn't matter.
What character(s) are the 2192 character represented as in your StringList AFTER you have read it in? Probably by these three separate characters: 0xE2 0x86 0x92 (in UTF-8 format). The simple solution, therefore, is to start by replacing these three characters with a single, unique character that you can then assign to the Delimiter field of the TStringList.
Like this:
.
.
.
<Read file into a STRING variable, say S>
S := ReplaceStr(S,#$E2#$86#$92,'|');
SL := TStringList.Create;
SL.Text := S;
SL.Delimiter := '|';
.
.
.
You'll have to select a single-character representation of your 3-byte UTF-8 Unicode character that doesn't occur in your data elsewhere.
You need to represent that character as a UTF-16 character. In Unicode Delphi you would do it like this:
Chr(2192)
which is of type WideChar.
However, you are using Delphi 7 which is a pre-Unicode Delphi. So you have to do it like this:
var
wc: WideChar;
....
wc := WideChar(2192);
Now, this might all be to no avail for you since it sounds a little like your code is working with 8 bit ANSI text. In which case that character cannot be encoded in any 8 bit ANSI character set. If you really must use that character, you'll need to use Unicode text.
Related
I am making a program in Delphi 7, that is supposed to encode a unicode string into html entity string.
For example, "ABCģķī" would result in "ABCģķī"
Now 2 basic things:
Delphi 7 is non-Unicode, so I can't just write unicode chars directly in code to encode them.
Codepages consist of 255 entries, each holding a character, specific to that codepage, except first 127, that are same for all the codepages.
So - How do I get a value of a char, that is in 1-255 range?
I tried Ord(Integer), but it also returns values way past 255. Basically, everything is fine (A returns 65 an so on) until my string reaches non-Latin unicode.
Is there any other method for returning char value? Any help appreciated
I suggest you avoid codepages like the plague.
There are two approaches for Unicode that I'd consider: WideString, and UTF-8.
Widestrings have the advantage that it's 'native' to Windows, which helps if you need to use Windows API calls. Disadvantages are storage space, and that they (like UTF-8) can require multiple WideChars to encode the full Unicode space.
UTF-8 is generally preferable. Like WideStrings, this is a multi-byte encoding, so a particular unicode 'code point' may need several bytes in the string to encode it. This is only an issue if you're doing lots of character-by-character processing on your strings.
#DavidHeffernan comments (correctly) that WideStrings may be more compact in certain cases. However, I'd only recommend UTF-16 only if you are absolutely sure that your encoded text will really be more compact (don't forget markup!), and this compactness is highly important to you.
In HTML 4, numeric character references are relative to the charset used by the HTML. Whether that charset is specified in the HTML itself via a <meta> tag, or out-of-band via an HTTP/MIME Content-Type header or other means, it does not matter. As such, "ABCģķī" would be an accurate representation of "ABCģķī" only if the HTML were using UTF-16. If the HTML were using UTF-8, the correct representation would be either "ABCģķī" or "ABCģķī" instead. Most other charsets do no support those particular Unicode characters.
In HTML 5, numeric character references contain original Unicode codepoint values regardless of the charset used by the HTML. As such, "ABCģķī" would be represented as either "ABC#291;ķī" or "ABCģķī".
So, to answer your question, the first thing you have to do is decide whether you need to use HTML 4 or HTML 5 semantics for numeric character references. Then, you need to assign your Unicode data to a WideString (which is the only Unicode string type that Delphi 7 natively supports), which uses UTF-16, then:
if you need HTML 4:
A. if the HTML charset is not UTF-16, then use WideCharToMultiByte() (or equivalent) to convert the WideString to that charset, then loop through the resulting values outputting unreserved characters as-is and character references for reserved values, using IntToStr() for decimal notation or IntToHex() for hex notation.
B. if the HTML charset is UTF-16, then simply loop through each WideChar in the WideString, outputting unreserved characters as-is and character references for reserved values, using IntToStr() for decimal notation or IntToHex() for hex notation.
If you need HTML 5:
A. if the WideString does not contain any surrogate pairs, then simply loop through each WideChar in the WideString, outputting unreserved characters as-is and character references for reserved values, using IntToStr() for decimal notation or IntToHex() for hex notation.
B. otherwise, convert the WideString to UTF-32 using WideStringToUCS4String(), then loop through the resulting values outputting unreserved codepoints as-is and character references for reserved codepoints, using IntToStr() for decimal notation or IntToHex() for hex notation.
In case I understood the OP correctly, I'll just leave this here.
function Entitties(const S: WideString): string;
var
I: Integer;
begin
Result := '';
for I := 1 to Length(S) do
begin
if Word(S[I]) > Word(High(AnsiChar)) then
Result := Result + '#' + IntToStr(Word(S[I])) + ';'
else
Result := Result + S[I];
end;
end;
I have a text file which can come in different encodings (ASCII, UTF-8, UTF-16,UTF-32). The best part is that it is filled only with numbers, for example:
192848292732
My question is: will a function like the one bellow be able to display all the data correctly? If not why? (I have loaded the file as a string into the container string)
function output(container: AnsiString): AnsiString;
var
i: Integer;
begin
Result := '';
for i := 1 to Length(container) do
if (Ord(container[i]) <> 0) then
Result := Result + container[i];
end;
My logic is that if the encoding is different then ASCII and UTF-8 extra characters are all 0 ?
It passes all the tests just fine.
The ASCII character set uses codes 0-127. In Unicode, these characters map to code points with the same numeric value. So the question comes down to how each of the encodings represent code points 0-127.
UTF-8 encodes code points 0-127 in a single byte containing the code point value. In other words, if the payload is ASCII, then there is no difference between ASCII and UTF-8 encoding.
UTF-16 encodes code points 0-127 in two bytes, one of which is 0, and the other of which is the ASCII code.
UTF-32 encodes code points 0-127 in four bytes, three of which are 0, and the remaining byte is the ASCII code.
Your proposed algorithm will not be able to detect ASCII code 0 (NUL). But you state that character is not present in the file.
The only other problem that I can see with your proposed code is that it will not recognise a byte order mark (BOM). These may be present at the beginning of the file and I guess you should detect them and skip them.
Having said all of this, your implementation seems odd to me. You seem to state that the file only contains numeric characters. In which case your test could equally well be:
if container[i] in ['0'..'9'] then
.........
If you used this code then you would also happen to skip over a BOM, were it present.
I would like to read a UTF-8 text file byte by byte and get the ascii value representation of each byte in the file. Can this be done? If so, what is the best method?
My goal is to then replace 2 byte combinations that i find with one byte (these are set conditions that I have prepared)
for example, If I find a 197 followed by a 158 (decimal representations), i will replace it with a single byte 17
I don't want to use the standard delphi IO operations
AssignFile
ReSet
ReWrite(OutFile);
ReadLn
WriteLn
CloseFile
Is there a better method? Can this be done using TStream (Reader & Writer)?
Here is an example test I am using. I know there is a character (350) (two bytes) starting in column 84. When viewed in a hex editor, the character consists of 197 + 158 - so i am trying to find the 198 using my delphi code and can't seem to find it
FS1:= TFileStream.Create(ParamStr1, fmOpenRead);
try
FS1.Seek(0, soBeginning);
FS1.Position:= FS1.Position + 84;
FS1.Read(B, SizeOf(B));
if ord(B) = 197 then showMessage('True') else ShowMessage('False');
finally
FS1.Free;
end;
You can use TFileStream to read all data from file to, for isntance, array of bytes, and later check for utf8 sequence.
Also please note that utf8 sequence can contain more than 2 bytes.
And, in Delphi there is a function Utf8ToUnicode, which will convert utf8 data to usable unicode string.
My understanding is that you want to convert a text file from UTF-8 to ASCII. That's quite simple:
StringList.LoadFromFile(UTF8FileName, TEncoding.UTF8);
StringList.SaveToFile(ASCIIFileName, TEncoding.ASCII);
The runtime library comes with all sorts of functionality to convert between different text encodings. Surely you don't want to attempt to replicate this functionality yourself?
I trust you realise that this conversion is liable to lose data. Characters with ordinal greater than 127 cannot be represented in ASCII. In fact every code point that requires more than 1 octet in UTF-8 cannot be represented in ASCII.
You asked the same question 5 hours later in another topic, the answer od which better addresses your specific question:
Replacing a unicode character in UTF-8 file using delphi 2010
I have incorrect result when converting file to string in Delphi XE. There are several ' characters that makes the result incorrect. I've used UnicodeFileToWideString and FileToString from http://www.delphidabbler.com/codesnip and my code :
function LoadFile(const FileName: TFileName): ansistring;
begin
with TFileStream.Create(FileName, fmOpenRead or fmShareDenyWrite) do
begin
try
SetLength(Result, Size);
Read(Pointer(Result)^, Size);
// ReadBuffer(Result[1], Size);
except
Result := '';
Free;
end;
Free;
end;
end;
The result between Delphi XE and Delphi 6 is different. The result from D6 is correct. I've compared with result of a hex editor program.
Your output is being produced in the style of the Delphi debugger, which displays string variables using Delphi's own string-literal format. Whatever function you're using to produce that output from your own program has actually been fixed for Delphi XE. It's really your Delphi 6 output that's incorrect.
Delphi string literals consist of a series of printable characters between apostrophes and a series of non-printable characters designated by number signs and the numeric values of each character. To represent an apostrophe, write two of them next to each other. The printable and non-printable series of characters can be written right not to each other; there's no need to concatenate them with the + operator.
Here's an excerpt from the output you say is correct:
#$12'O)=ù'dlû'#6't
There are four lone apostrophes in that string, so each one either opens or closes a series of printable characters. We don't necessarily know which is which when we start reading the string at the left because the #, $, 1, and 2 characters are all printable on their own. But if they represent printable characters, then the 0, ), =, and ù characters are in the non-printable region, and that can't be. Therefore, the first apostrophe above opens a printable series, and the #$12 part represents the character at code 18 (12 in hexadecimal). After the ù is another apostrophe. Since the previous one opened a printable string, this one must close it. But the next character after that is d, which is not #, and therefore cannot be the start of a non-printable character code. Therefore, this string from your Delphi 6 code is mal-formed.
The correct version of that excerpt is this:
#$12'O)=ù''dlû'#6't
Now there are three lone apostrophes and one set of doubled apostrophes. The problematic apostrophe from the previous string has been doubled, indicating that it is a literal apostrophe instead of a printable-string-closing one. The printable series continues with dlû. Then it's closed to insert character No. 6, and then opened again for t. The apostrophe that opens the entire string, at the beginning of the file, is implicit.
You haven't indicated what code you're using to produce the output you've shown, but that's where the problem was. It's not there anymore, and the code that loads the file is correct, so the only place that needs your debugging attention is any code that depended on the old, incorrect format. You'd still do well to replace your code with that of Robmil since it does better at handling (or not handling) exceptions and empty files.
Actually, looking at the real data, your problem is that the file stores binary data, not string data, so interpreting this as a string is not valid at all. The only reason it works at all in Delphi 6 is that non-Unicode Delphi allows you to treat binary data and strings the same way. You cannot do this in Unicode Delphi, nor should you.
The solution to get the actual text from within the file is to read the file as binary data, and then copy any values from this binary data, one byte at a time, to a string if it is a "valid" Ansi character (printable).
I will suggest the code:
function LoadFile(const FileName: TFileName): AnsiString;
begin
with TFileStream.Create(FileName, fmOpenRead or fmShareDenyWrite) do
try
SetLength(Result, Size);
if Size > 0 then
Read(Result[1], Size);
finally
Free;
end;
end;
I use this function to read file to string
function LoadFile(const FileName: TFileName): string;
begin
with TFileStream.Create(FileName,
fmOpenRead or fmShareDenyWrite) do begin
try
SetLength(Result, Size);
Read(Pointer(Result)^, Size);
except
Result := '';
Free;
raise;
end;
Free;
end;
end;
Here's the text of file :
version
Here's the return value of LoadFile :
'ÿþv'#0'e'#0'r'#0's'#0'i'#0'o'#0'n'#0
I want to make a new file contain "verabc". The problem is I still have a problem to replace "sion" with "abc". I am using D2007. If I remove all #0 then the result become Chinese character.
What you think is the text of the file isn't really the text of the file. What you've read into your string variable is accurate. You have a Unicode text file encoded as little-endian UTF-16. The first two bytes represent the byte-order mark, and each pair of bytes after that are another character of the string.
If you're reading a Unicode file, you should use a Unicode data type, such as WideString. You'll want to divide the file size by two when setting the length of the string, and you'll want to discard the first two bytes.
If you don't know what kind of file you're reading, then you need to read the first two or three bytes first. If the first two bytes are $ff $fe, as above, then you might have a little-endian UTF-16 file; read the rest of the file into a WideString, or UnicodeString if you have that type. If they're $fe $ff, then it might be big-endian; read the remainder of the file into a WideString and then swap the order of each pair of bytes. If the first two bytes are $ef $bb, then check the third byte. If it's $bf, then they are probably the UTF-8 byte-order mark. Discard all three and read the rest of the file into an AnsiString or an array of bytes, and then use a function like UTF8Decode to convert it into a WideString.
Once you have your data in a WideString, the debugger will show that it contains version, and you should have no trouble using a Unicode-enabled version of StringReplace to do your replacement.
It seems that you load a unicode encoded text file. 0 indicates Latin character.
If you don't want to deal with unicode text, choose ANSI encoding in your editor when you save the file.
If you need unicode encoding, use WideCharToString to convert it to an ANSI string, or just remove yourself the 0s, though the latter isn't the best solution. Also remove the 2 leading characters, ÿþ.
The editor put those bytes to mark the file as unicode.