stri_enc_detect2(str, locale = NULL)
raw
vectorsNULL
or ""
for default locale,
NA
for just checking the UTF-* family,
or a single string with locale identifier.stri_enc_detect
,
this function returns a list of length equal to the length of str
.
Each list element is a list with the following three named components:
Encoding
-- string; guessed encodings; NA
on failure
(iff encodings
is empty),
Language
-- always NA
,
Confidence
-- numeric in [0,1]; the higher the value,
the more confidence there is in the match; NA
on failure.
str
. First, the text is checked whether it is valid
UTF-32BE, UTF-32LE, UTF-16BE, UTF-16LE, UTF-8
(as in stri_enc_detect
,
this slightly bases on ICU's i18n/csrucode.cpp
,
but we do it in our own way, however) or ASCII. If locale
is not NA
and the above fails,
the text is checked for the number of occurrences
of language-specific code points (data provided by the ICU library)
converted to all possible 8-bit encodings
that fully cover the indicated language.
The encoding is selected basing on the greatest number of total
byte hits. The guess is of course imprecise
[This is DRAFT API - still does not work as expected],
as it is obtained using statistics.
Because of this, detection works best if you supply at least a few hundred
bytes of character data that's in a single language. If you have no initial guess on language and encoding, try with
stri_enc_detect
(uses ICU facilities).
However, it turns out that (empirically) stri_enc_detect2
works better than the ICU-based one if UTF-* text
is provided. Test yourself.stri_enc_detect
,
stri_enc_isascii
,
stri_enc_isutf16be
,
stri_enc_isutf8
,
stringi-encoding
Other locale_sensitive: %s<%
,
stri_compare
,
stri_count_boundaries
,
stri_duplicated
,
stri_extract_all_boundaries
,
stri_locate_all_boundaries
,
stri_opts_collator
,
stri_order
,
stri_split_boundaries
,
stri_trans_tolower
,
stri_unique
, stri_wrap
,
stringi-locale
,
stringi-search-boundaries
,
stringi-search-coll