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nexedi
cython
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ae2864e6
Commit
ae2864e6
authored
Feb 06, 2011
by
Stefan Behnel
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describe Py_UCS4 changes for Cython 0.15
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c1a460a5
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src/tutorial/strings.rst
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ae2864e6
...
...
@@ -203,18 +203,23 @@ Single bytes and characters
---------------------------
The Python C-API uses the normal C ``char`` type to represent a byte
value, but it has a special ``Py_UNICODE`` integer type for a Unicode
code point value, i.e. a single Unicode character. Since version
0.13, Cython supports the latter natively, which is either defined as
an unsigned 2-byte or 4-byte integer, or as ``wchar_t``, depending on
the platform. The exact type is a compile time option in the build of
the CPython interpreter and extension modules inherit this definition
at C compile time.
In Cython, the ``char`` and ``Py_UNICODE`` types behave differently
when coercing to Python objects. Similar to the behaviour of the
bytes type in Python 3, the ``char`` type coerces to a Python integer
value by default, so that the following prints 65 and not ``A``::
value, but it has two special integer types for a Unicode code point
value, i.e. a single Unicode character: ``Py_UNICODE`` and
``Py_UCS4``. Since version 0.13, Cython supports the first natively,
support for ``Py_UCS4`` is new in Cython 0.15. ``Py_UNICODE`` is
either defined as an unsigned 2-byte or 4-byte integer, or as
``wchar_t``, depending on the platform. The exact type is a compile
time option in the build of the CPython interpreter and extension
modules inherit this definition at C compile time. The advantage of
``Py_UCS4`` is that it is guaranteed to be large enough for any
Unicode code point value, regardless of the platform. It is defined
as a 32bit unsigned int or long.
In Cython, the ``char`` type behaves differently from the
``Py_UNICODE`` and ``Py_UCS4`` types when coercing to Python objects.
Similar to the behaviour of the bytes type in Python 3, the ``char``
type coerces to a Python integer value by default, so that the
following prints 65 and not ``A``::
# -*- coding: ASCII -*-
...
...
@@ -230,31 +235,32 @@ explicitly, and the following will print ``A`` (or ``b'A'`` in Python
The explicit coercion works for any C integer type. Values outside of
the range of a ``char`` or ``unsigned char`` will raise an
``OverflowError``
. Coercion will also happen automatically when
assigning to a typed variable, e.g.::
``OverflowError``
at runtime. Coercion will also happen automatically
when
assigning to a typed variable, e.g.::
cdef bytes py_byte_string = char_val
cdef bytes py_byte_string
py_byte_string = char_val
On the other hand, the ``Py_UNICODE`` type is rarely used outside of
the context of a Python unicode string, so its default behaviour is to
coerce to a Python unicode object. The following will therefore print
the character ``A``::
On the other hand, the ``Py_UNICODE`` and ``Py_UCS4`` types are rarely
used outside of the context of a Python unicode string, so their
default behaviour is to coerce to a Python unicode object. The
following will therefore print the character ``A``, as would the same
code with the ``Py_UNICODE`` type::
cdef Py_U
NICODE
uchar_val = u'A'
cdef Py_U
CS4
uchar_val = u'A'
assert uchar_val == 65 # character point value of u'A'
print( uchar_val )
Again, explicit casting will allow users to override this behaviour.
The following will print 65::
cdef Py_U
NICODE
uchar_val = u'A'
print( <
int
>uchar_val )
cdef Py_U
CS4
uchar_val = u'A'
print( <
long
>uchar_val )
Note that casting to a C ``int`` (or ``unsigned int``) will do just
fine on a platform with 32bit or more, as the maximum code point value
that a Unicode character can have is 1114111 on a 4-byte unicode
CPython platform ("wide unicode") and 65535 on a narrow (2-byte)
unicode platform.
Note that casting to a C ``long`` (or ``unsigned long``) will work
just fine, as the maximum code point value that a Unicode character
can have is 1114111 (``0x10FFFF``). On platforms with 32bit or more,
``int`` is just as good.
Narrow Unicode builds
...
...
@@ -263,14 +269,14 @@ Narrow Unicode builds
In narrow Unicode builds of CPython, i.e. builds where
``sys.maxunicode`` is 65535 (such as all Windows builds, as opposed to
1114111 in wide builds), it is still possible to use Unicode character
code points that do not fit into the
two bytes wide ``Py_UNICODE``
type. For example, such a CPython build will accept the unicode
literal ``u'\U00012345'``. However, the underlying system level
encoding leaks into Python space in this case, so that the length of
this literal becomes 2 instead of 1. This also shows when iterating
over it or when indexing into it. The visible substrings are
``u'\uD808'`` and ``u'\uDF45'`` in this example. They form a
so-called surrogate
pair that represents the above character.
code points that do not fit into the
16 bit wide ``Py_UNICODE`` type.
For example, such a CPython build will accept the unicode literal
``u'\U00012345'``. However, the underlying system level encoding
leaks into Python space in this case, so that the length of this
literal becomes 2 instead of 1. This also shows when iterating over
it or when indexing into it. The visible substrings are ``u'\uD808'``
and ``u'\uDF45'`` in this example. They form a so-called surrogate
pair that represents the above character.
For more information on this topic, it is worth reading the `Wikipedia
article about the UTF-16 encoding`_.
...
...
@@ -298,6 +304,20 @@ in question. Looking for substrings works correctly because the two
code units in the surrogate pair use distinct value ranges, so the
pair is always identifiable in a sequence of code points.
As of version 0.15, Cython has extended support for surrogate pairs so
that you can safely use an ``in`` test to search character values from
the full ``Py_UCS4`` range even on narrow platforms::
cdef Py_UCS4 uchar = 0x12345
print( uchar in some_unicode_string )
Similarly, it can coerce a one character string with a high Unicode
code point value to a Py_UCS4 value on both narrow and wide Unicode
platforms::
cdef Py_UCS4 uchar = u'\U00012345'
assert uchar == 0x12345
Iteration
---------
...
...
@@ -321,7 +341,7 @@ The same applies to bytes objects::
if c == 'A': ...
For unicode objects, Cython will automatically infer the type of the
loop variable as ``Py_U
NICODE
``::
loop variable as ``Py_U
CS4
``::
cdef unicode ustring = ...
...
...
@@ -335,13 +355,16 @@ value to be a Python object, so Cython may end up generating redundant
conversion code for the loop variable value inside of the loop. If
this leads to a performance degradation for a specific piece of code,
you can either type the loop variable as a Python object explicitly,
or assign it to a Python typed temporary variable to enforce one-time
coercion before running Python operations on it.
or assign its value to a Python typed variable somewhere inside of the
loop to enforce one-time coercion before running Python operations on
it.
There
is also an optimisation
for ``in`` tests, so that the following
There
are also optimisations
for ``in`` tests, so that the following
code will run in plain C code, (actually using a switch statement)::
cdef Py_U
NICODE
uchar_val = get_a_unicode_character()
cdef Py_U
CS4
uchar_val = get_a_unicode_character()
if uchar_val in u'abcABCxY':
...
Combined with the looping optimisation above, this can result in very
efficient character switching code, e.g. in unicode parsers.
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