This function breaks text paragraphs into lines,
of total width (if it is possible) at most given width
.
stri_wrap(str, width = floor(0.9 * getOption("width")),
cost_exponent = 2, simplify = TRUE, normalize = TRUE, indent = 0,
exdent = 0, prefix = "", initial = prefix,
whitespace_only = FALSE, use_length = FALSE, locale = NULL)
character vector of strings to reformat
single integer giving the suggested maximal number of code points per line
single numeric value, values not greater than zero will select a greedy word-wrapping algorithm; otherwise this value denotes the exponent in the cost function of a (more aesthetic) dynamic programming-based algorithm (values in [2, 3] are recommended)
single logical value, see Value
single logical value, see Details
single non-negative integer; gives the indentation of the first line in each paragraph
single non-negative integer; specifies the indentation of subsequent lines in paragraphs
single strings; prefix
is used as prefix for each
line except the first, for which initial
is utilized
single logical value; allow breaks only at white-spaces?
if FALSE
, ICU's line break iterator is used to split text
into words, which is suitable for natural language processing
single logical value; should the number of code
points be used instead of the total code point width (see stri_width
)?
NULL
or ""
for text boundary analysis following
the conventions of the default locale, or a single string with
locale identifier, see stringi-locale
If simplify
is TRUE
, then a character vector is returned.
Otherwise, you will get a list of length(str)
character vectors.
Vectorized over str
.
If whitespace_only
is FALSE
,
then ICU's line-BreakIterator
is used to determine
text boundaries where a line break is possible.
This is a locale-dependent operation.
Otherwise, the breaks are only at white-spaces.
Note that Unicode code points may have various widths when
printed on the console and that the function takes that by default
into account. By changing the state of the use_length
argument, this function starts to act like each code point
was of width 1. This feature should rather be used with
text in Latin script.
If normalize
is FALSE
,
then multiple white spaces between the word boundaries are
preserved within each wrapped line.
In such a case, none of the strings can contain \r
, \n
,
or other new line characters, otherwise you will get an error.
You should split the input text into lines
or, for example, substitute line breaks with spaces
before applying this function.
If normalize
is TRUE
, then
all consecutive white space (ASCII space, horizontal TAB, CR, LF)
sequences are replaced with single ASCII spaces
before actual string wrapping. Moreover, stri_split_lines
and stri_trans_nfc
is called on the input character vector.
This is for compatibility with strwrap
.
The greedy algorithm (for cost_exponent
being non-positive)
provides a very simple way for word wrapping.
It always puts as many words in each line as possible.
This method -- contrary to the dynamic algorithm -- does not minimize
the number of space left at the end of every line.
The dynamic algorithm (a.k.a. Knuth's word wrapping algorithm)
is more complex, but it returns text wrapped
in a more aesthetic way. This method minimizes the squared
(by default, see cost_exponent
) number of spaces (raggedness)
at the end of each line, so the text is mode arranged evenly.
Note that the cost of printing the last line is always zero.
D.E. Knuth, M.F. Plass, Breaking paragraphs into lines, Software: Practice and Experience 11(11), 1981, pp. 1119--1184
Other locale_sensitive: %s<%
,
stri_compare
,
stri_count_boundaries
,
stri_duplicated
,
stri_enc_detect2
,
stri_extract_all_boundaries
,
stri_locate_all_boundaries
,
stri_opts_collator
,
stri_order
,
stri_split_boundaries
,
stri_trans_tolower
,
stri_unique
, stringi-locale
,
stringi-search-boundaries
,
stringi-search-coll
Other text_boundaries: stri_count_boundaries
,
stri_extract_all_boundaries
,
stri_locate_all_boundaries
,
stri_opts_brkiter
,
stri_split_boundaries
,
stri_split_lines
,
stri_trans_tolower
,
stringi-search-boundaries
,
stringi-search
# NOT RUN {
s <- stri_paste(
"Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipisicing elit. Proin ",
"nibh augue, suscipit a, scelerisque sed, lacinia in, mi. Cras vel ",
"lorem. Etiam pellentesque aliquet tellus.")
cat(stri_wrap(s, 20, 0.0), sep="\n") # greedy
cat(stri_wrap(s, 20, 2.0), sep="\n") # dynamic
cat(stri_pad(stri_wrap(s), side='both'), sep="\n")
# }
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