Does anyone have any code for alphabetizing Arabic and Japanese text that is in Unicode? If the code was in ruby that would be great.
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2I don't see what this has to do specifically with the iPhone.– Rob LourensMar 2, 2010 at 2:13
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The Arabic and Japanese character's are part of the Arabic, Japanese Alphabet. I think some people could take your question as an insult.– johannesMar 2, 2010 at 15:09
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1@johannes: I don't think "alphabetize" means "converting to an English alphabet", but "sorting in an appropriate order".– Andrew GrimmMar 2, 2010 at 22:13
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My understanding is that both Arabic and Japanese alphabets each have an alphabetical order. I have translated an iPhone app into both Arabic and Japanese and I would like to organize the translated items in an alphabetical list in each of these two languages.– James TestaMar 3, 2010 at 6:06
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What version of Ruby are you using? 1.8 or 1.9?– Ken BloomMar 18, 2010 at 14:39
5 Answers
Unicode code points are not listed in alphabetic order (Z < a, for example), but they try to be approximately in that order anyway. There is a canonical unicode order, defined by the Unicode Collation Algorithm and they are also language-specific ordering (french order is not exacly the same as german or czech order, even with the same alphabet), which can be specified in locale information. I think the ICU library contains the language specific algorithms you are looking for.
I don't know Ruby, but python has a function, ord() that translates a unicode special character to its unicode code point. For example,
>>> a = u'ل'
>>> ord(a)
0: 1604
>>> b = u'ع'
>>> ord(b)
1: 1593
Look for something like that in Ruby. I assume that the Arabic symbols are listed in unicode in alphabetic order.
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1Would this help with this question? If we did this to ordinary Latin characters, it'd mean letters would be sorted into being upper or lower case first, which wouldn't make sense in some situations. Mar 2, 2010 at 22:14
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Right, if that applies to Arabic and Japanese too, I guess the OP would have to account for that. Mar 2, 2010 at 22:51
To ask the obvious question, what don't you like about mylist.sort
?
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Does mylist.sort work with Unicode and knows the alphabetical order of the Arabic or Japanese alphabet? Mar 3, 2010 at 6:08
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Depending on your needs words.sort
in ruby will be fine for Japanese. The order the characters appear in Unicode are in a reasonably good sorting order. Can't vouch for Arabic though, but my guess is that it's ok as well.
mylist.sort
should work out of the box in Ruby 1.9 (which has built-in unicode support). In Ruby 1.8, where Unicode support isn't built in, I think you'd have to use the character-encodings
gem extend the String class with UTF-8 string comparisions. (And then mylist.sort
would work.)