/// Compute the display width of `text` /// /// # Examples /// /// **Note:** When the `unicode` Cargo feature is disabled, all characters are presumed to take up /// 1 width. With the feature enabled, function will correctly deal with [combining characters] in /// their decomposed form (see [Unicode equivalence]). /// /// An example of a decomposed character is “é”, which can be decomposed into: “e” followed by a /// combining acute accent: “◌́”. Without the `unicode` Cargo feature, every `char` has a width of /// 1. This includes the combining accent: /// /// ## Emojis and CJK Characters /// /// Characters such as emojis and [CJK characters] used in the /// Chinese, Japanese, and Korean languages are seen as double-width, /// even if the `unicode-width` feature is disabled: /// /// # Limitations /// /// The displayed width of a string cannot always be computed from the /// string alone. This is because the width depends on the rendering /// engine used. This is particularly visible with [emoji modifier /// sequences] where a base emoji is modified with, e.g., skin tone or /// hair color modifiers. It is up to the rendering engine to detect /// this and to produce a suitable emoji. /// /// A simple example is “❤️”, which consists of “❤” (U+2764: Black /// Heart Symbol) followed by U+FE0F (Variation Selector-16). By /// itself, “❤” is a black heart, but if you follow it with the /// variant selector, you may get a wider red heart. /// /// A more complex example would be “👨‍🦰” which should depict a man /// with red hair. Here the computed width is too large — and the /// width differs depending on the use of the `unicode-width` feature: /// /// This happens because the grapheme consists of three code points: /// “👨” (U+1F468: Man), Zero Width Joiner (U+200D), and “🦰” /// (U+1F9B0: Red Hair). You can see them above in the test. With /// `unicode-width` enabled, the ZWJ is correctly seen as having zero /// width, without it is counted as a double-width character. /// /// ## Terminal Support /// /// Modern browsers typically do a great job at combining characters /// as shown above, but terminals often struggle more. As an example, /// Gnome Terminal version 3.38.1, shows “❤️” as a big red heart, but /// shows "👨‍🦰" as “👨🦰”. /// /// [combining characters]: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Combining_character /// [Unicode equivalence]: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Unicode_equivalence /// [CJK characters]: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CJK_characters /// [emoji modifier sequences]: https://unicode.org/emoji/charts/full-emoji-modifiers.html #[inline(never)] pub(crate) fn display_width(text: &str) -> usize { let mut width = 0; let mut control_sequence = false; let control_terminate: char = 'm'; for ch in text.chars() { if ch.is_ascii_control() { control_sequence = true; } else if control_sequence && ch == control_terminate { control_sequence = false; continue; } if !control_sequence { width += ch_width(ch); } } width } #[cfg(feature = "unicode")] fn ch_width(ch: char) -> usize { unicode_width::UnicodeWidthChar::width(ch).unwrap_or(0) } #[cfg(not(feature = "unicode"))] fn ch_width(_: char) -> usize { 1 } #[cfg(test)] mod tests { use super::*; #[cfg(feature = "unicode")] use unicode_width::UnicodeWidthChar; #[test] fn emojis_have_correct_width() { use unic_emoji_char::is_emoji; // Emojis in the Basic Latin (ASCII) and Latin-1 Supplement // blocks all have a width of 1 column. This includes // characters such as '#' and '©'. for ch in '\u{1}'..'\u{FF}' { if is_emoji(ch) { let desc = format!("{:?} U+{:04X}", ch, ch as u32); #[cfg(feature = "unicode")] assert_eq!(ch.width().unwrap(), 1, "char: {}", desc); #[cfg(not(feature = "unicode"))] assert_eq!(ch_width(ch), 1, "char: {}", desc); } } // Emojis in the remaining blocks of the Basic Multilingual // Plane (BMP), in the Supplementary Multilingual Plane (SMP), // and in the Supplementary Ideographic Plane (SIP), are all 1 // or 2 columns wide when unicode-width is used, and always 2 // columns wide otherwise. This includes all of our favorite // emojis such as 😊. for ch in '\u{FF}'..'\u{2FFFF}' { if is_emoji(ch) { let desc = format!("{:?} U+{:04X}", ch, ch as u32); #[cfg(feature = "unicode")] assert!(ch.width().unwrap() <= 2, "char: {}", desc); #[cfg(not(feature = "unicode"))] assert_eq!(ch_width(ch), 1, "char: {}", desc); } } // The remaining planes contain almost no assigned code points // and thus also no emojis. } #[test] #[cfg(feature = "unicode")] fn display_width_works() { assert_eq!("Café Plain".len(), 11); // “é” is two bytes assert_eq!(display_width("Café Plain"), 10); } #[test] #[cfg(feature = "unicode")] fn display_width_narrow_emojis() { assert_eq!(display_width("⁉"), 1); } #[test] #[cfg(feature = "unicode")] fn display_width_narrow_emojis_variant_selector() { assert_eq!(display_width("⁉\u{fe0f}"), 1); } #[test] #[cfg(feature = "unicode")] fn display_width_emojis() { assert_eq!(display_width("😂😭🥺🤣✨😍🙏🥰😊🔥"), 20); } }