I tried writing a culture-aware string replacement method:
public static string Replace(string text, string oldValue, string newValue)
{
int index = text.IndexOf(oldValue, StringComparison.CurrentCulture);
return index >= 0
? text.Substring(0, index) + newValue + text.Substring(index + oldValue.Length)
: text;
}
However, it chokes on Unicode combining characters:
// \u0301 is Combining Acute Accent
Console.WriteLine(Replace("déf", "é", "o")); // 1. CORRECT: dof
Console.WriteLine(Replace("déf", "e\u0301", "o")); // 2. INCORRECT: do
Console.WriteLine(Replace("de\u0301f", "é", "o")); // 3. INCORRECT: dóf
To fix my code, I need to know that in the second example, String.IndexOf
matched only one character (é
) even though it searched for two (e\u0301
). Similarly, I need to know that in the third example, String.IndexOf
matched two characters (e\u0301
) even though it only searched for one (é
).
How can I determine the actual length of the substring matched by String.IndexOf
?
NOTE: Performing Unicode normalization on text
and oldValue
(as suggested by James Keesey) would accommodate combining characters, but ligatures would still be a problem:
Console.WriteLine(Replace("œf", "œ", "i")); // 4. CORRECT: if
Console.WriteLine(Replace("œf", "oe", "i")); // 5. INCORRECT: i
Console.WriteLine(Replace("oef", "œ", "i")); // 6. INCORRECT: ief