It depends on encoding. Simplest one is UTF-8, in which you can simply store strings in char*
arrays. Surprisingly, building a frequency list would be done using almost same code like in case of ASCII text. This is kind of UTF-8 magic, but it is why this encoding is so powerful!
There are a few thing that you should remember in this case:
Unicode provides more white characters than ASCII. You'll need a list of them to know where the words are separated. Happily, Wikipedia has one.
Unicode is not always unequivocal. There are cases when different sequences produces the same character. It happens usually with composed characters: e.g. German Ä
may be represented as:
- character
U+00C4
- single letter Ä
- sequence
U+0041 U+0308
- Latin letter A
and diaeresis (umlaut) over it.
Happily, in German there are only seven non-English characters: ÄäÖöÜüß
. You'd need to check how their alternative variants looks (e.g. here on pages 4 and 5 you should find all German characters and their alternative forms).
Of course to solve both problems you will also need to know how all your findings are represented in UTF-8. This is described in RFC 3629, page 3.
In case of other encodings (or other languages), I'd suggest not to deal with it yourself, but use some already existing library. If you are on Linux (or most of other Unices), you can use iconv
function (man 3 iconv
) to convert your text to UTF-8, and go as I described before.
Other choice is using some library that already deals with various Unicode variants. The most powerful is probably ICU - International Components For Unicode, check their manuals to see how to perform your task using it.
print(Counter(re.findall(r'(?u)\w+', open('input.txt').read())).most_common(3000))
. Not the fastest way, but it won't take 30 minutes.