8

I am designing one android application in English and Chinese both. I want to know whether the user type English text or Chinese text?. Is there any way to check this in android?

2
  • use a TextWatcher for your EditText
    – Ameer
    Jul 10, 2014 at 9:30
  • 2
    Take each char from the input and see if the unicode point matches the range for chinese characters (stackoverflow.com/questions/1366068/…)
    – Suau
    Jul 10, 2014 at 9:32

4 Answers 4

11

If you want to detect whether the input string contains Chinese-like character(s) (CJK), the following may help you:

public static boolean isCJK(String str){
        int length = str.length();
        for (int i = 0; i < length; i++){
            char ch = str.charAt(i);
            Character.UnicodeBlock block = Character.UnicodeBlock.of(ch);
            if (Character.UnicodeBlock.CJK_UNIFIED_IDEOGRAPHS.equals(block)|| 
                Character.UnicodeBlock.CJK_COMPATIBILITY_IDEOGRAPHS.equals(block)|| 
                Character.UnicodeBlock.CJK_UNIFIED_IDEOGRAPHS_EXTENSION_A.equals(block)){
                return true;
            }
        }
        return false;
    }
1
  • Can you please tell me, how to detect if its in the English language? what code should I change? Sep 29, 2020 at 14:01
4

The accepted answer is either incomplete or outdated. Here are a few methods you can use to test if a character is a CJK Ideograph. My fuller answer is here.

It is better to use the codepoint rather than charAt (as in the accepted answer) because many Chinese characters are in a higher code plane. Using charAt will just give you one of the surrogate pairs rather than the actual Chinese character. So a better way to loop through a String is like this:

final int length = myString.length();
for (int offset = 0; offset < length; ) {
    final int codepoint = Character.codePointAt(myString, offset);

    // use codepoint here

    offset += Character.charCount(codepoint);
}

And testing the codepoints can be done in one of the following ways.

private boolean isCJK(int codepoint) {
    Character.UnicodeBlock block = Character.UnicodeBlock.of(codepoint);
    return (Character.UnicodeBlock.CJK_UNIFIED_IDEOGRAPHS.equals(block)||
            Character.UnicodeBlock.CJK_UNIFIED_IDEOGRAPHS_EXTENSION_A.equals(block) ||
            Character.UnicodeBlock.CJK_UNIFIED_IDEOGRAPHS_EXTENSION_B.equals(block) ||
            Character.UnicodeBlock.CJK_UNIFIED_IDEOGRAPHS_EXTENSION_C.equals(block) || // api 19, remove these if supporting lower versions
            Character.UnicodeBlock.CJK_UNIFIED_IDEOGRAPHS_EXTENSION_D.equals(block) || // api 19
            Character.UnicodeBlock.CJK_COMPATIBILITY.equals(block) ||
            Character.UnicodeBlock.CJK_COMPATIBILITY_FORMS.equals(block) ||
            Character.UnicodeBlock.CJK_COMPATIBILITY_IDEOGRAPHS.equals(block) ||
            Character.UnicodeBlock.CJK_COMPATIBILITY_IDEOGRAPHS_SUPPLEMENT.equals(block) ||
            Character.UnicodeBlock.CJK_RADICALS_SUPPLEMENT.equals(block) ||
            Character.UnicodeBlock.CJK_STROKES.equals(block) ||                        // api 19
            Character.UnicodeBlock.CJK_SYMBOLS_AND_PUNCTUATION.equals(block) ||
            Character.UnicodeBlock.ENCLOSED_CJK_LETTERS_AND_MONTHS.equals(block) ||
            Character.UnicodeBlock.ENCLOSED_IDEOGRAPHIC_SUPPLEMENT.equals(block) ||    // api 19
            Character.UnicodeBlock.KANGXI_RADICALS.equals(block) ||
            Character.UnicodeBlock.IDEOGRAPHIC_DESCRIPTION_CHARACTERS.equals(block));
}

Or for API 19

private boolean isCJK(int codepoint) {
    return Character.isIdeographic(codepoint);
}

Or for API 24

private boolean isCJK(int codepoint) {
    return (Character.UnicodeScript.of(codepoint) == Character.UnicodeScript.HAN);
}
2

If you want to get default language of device Locale.getDisplayLanguage() should give you user's language.

Otherwise, this may help you.

EDIT:

I am not sure but Google Translate does this. When user types something, it automatically detects the language. So, Google Translate API should be able to do this for you.

EDIT2

Yes, it does with a simple HttpGet, here is the link.

4
  • Actually my company has it own keyboard in English and Chinese. Even if device language is changed, user can use both languages. So this wont work for me Jul 10, 2014 at 9:36
  • If you are using your own keyboard, shouldn't it be easy for you to detect which keyboard is selected? Jul 10, 2014 at 9:38
  • Actually Detecting Keyboard is not the Issue.I have created an Greeting application where user store 10 messages. Some are english and some are chinese.Depending chinese message is pressed or English one, i want to display different Output.That why i want to recognize the language Jul 10, 2014 at 10:08
  • 1
    While saving those 10 messages itself, you could add a flag which you can use later to know which language it is. Jul 10, 2014 at 10:27
1
String language = Locale.getDefault().getDisplayLanguage(); will give your default language of your device
System.out.println("My locale::"+Locale.getDefault().getDisplayLanguage());
it will print like My locale:: english;

now you have to check

if(language.equalignorecase("engish")){
  // do your stuff for english
}else{
// do your stuff for chienese
}

also you can use Language Detection Library for android

1
  • This is to detect language used in android. I want to know specific language type in my activity. For example: Text1.IsThisEnglishOrChinese()..Something like this Jul 10, 2014 at 10:13

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