/src/icu/source/i18n/unicode/rbnf.h
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1  |  | // © 2016 and later: Unicode, Inc. and others.  | 
2  |  | // License & terms of use: http://www.unicode.org/copyright.html  | 
3  |  | /*  | 
4  |  | *******************************************************************************  | 
5  |  | * Copyright (C) 1997-2015, International Business Machines Corporation and others.  | 
6  |  | * All Rights Reserved.  | 
7  |  | *******************************************************************************  | 
8  |  | */  | 
9  |  |  | 
10  |  | #ifndef RBNF_H  | 
11  |  | #define RBNF_H  | 
12  |  |  | 
13  |  | #include "unicode/utypes.h"  | 
14  |  |  | 
15  |  | #if U_SHOW_CPLUSPLUS_API  | 
16  |  |  | 
17  |  | /**  | 
18  |  |  * \file  | 
19  |  |  * \brief C++ API: Rule Based Number Format  | 
20  |  |  */  | 
21  |  |  | 
22  |  | /**  | 
23  |  |  * \def U_HAVE_RBNF  | 
24  |  |  * This will be 0 if RBNF support is not included in ICU  | 
25  |  |  * and 1 if it is.  | 
26  |  |  *  | 
27  |  |  * @stable ICU 2.4  | 
28  |  |  */  | 
29  |  | #if UCONFIG_NO_FORMATTING  | 
30  |  | #define U_HAVE_RBNF 0  | 
31  |  | #else  | 
32  |  | #define U_HAVE_RBNF 1  | 
33  |  |  | 
34  |  | #include "unicode/dcfmtsym.h"  | 
35  |  | #include "unicode/fmtable.h"  | 
36  |  | #include "unicode/locid.h"  | 
37  |  | #include "unicode/numfmt.h"  | 
38  |  | #include "unicode/unistr.h"  | 
39  |  | #include "unicode/strenum.h"  | 
40  |  | #include "unicode/brkiter.h"  | 
41  |  | #include "unicode/upluralrules.h"  | 
42  |  |  | 
43  |  | U_NAMESPACE_BEGIN  | 
44  |  |  | 
45  |  | class NFRule;  | 
46  |  | class NFRuleSet;  | 
47  |  | class LocalizationInfo;  | 
48  |  | class PluralFormat;  | 
49  |  | class RuleBasedCollator;  | 
50  |  |  | 
51  |  | /**  | 
52  |  |  * Tags for the predefined rulesets.  | 
53  |  |  *  | 
54  |  |  * @stable ICU 2.2  | 
55  |  |  */  | 
56  |  | enum URBNFRuleSetTag { | 
57  |  |     URBNF_SPELLOUT,  | 
58  |  |     URBNF_ORDINAL,  | 
59  |  |     URBNF_DURATION,  | 
60  |  |     URBNF_NUMBERING_SYSTEM,  | 
61  |  | #ifndef U_HIDE_DEPRECATED_API  | 
62  |  |     /**  | 
63  |  |      * One more than the highest normal URBNFRuleSetTag value.  | 
64  |  |      * @deprecated ICU 58 The numeric value may change over time, see ICU ticket #12420.  | 
65  |  |      */  | 
66  |  |     URBNF_COUNT  | 
67  |  | #endif  // U_HIDE_DEPRECATED_API  | 
68  |  | };  | 
69  |  |  | 
70  |  | /**  | 
71  |  |  * The RuleBasedNumberFormat class formats numbers according to a set of rules. This number formatter is  | 
72  |  |  * typically used for spelling out numeric values in words (e.g., 25,3476 as  | 
73  |  |  * "twenty-five thousand three hundred seventy-six" or "vingt-cinq mille trois  | 
74  |  |  * cents soixante-seize" or  | 
75  |  |  * "fünfundzwanzigtausenddreihundertsechsundsiebzig"), but can also be used for  | 
76  |  |  * other complicated formatting tasks, such as formatting a number of seconds as hours,  | 
77  |  |  * minutes and seconds (e.g., 3,730 as "1:02:10").  | 
78  |  |  *  | 
79  |  |  * <p>The resources contain three predefined formatters for each locale: spellout, which  | 
80  |  |  * spells out a value in words (123 is "one hundred twenty-three"); ordinal, which  | 
81  |  |  * appends an ordinal suffix to the end of a numeral (123 is "123rd"); and  | 
82  |  |  * duration, which shows a duration in seconds as hours, minutes, and seconds (123 is  | 
83  |  |  * "2:03").  The client can also define more specialized <tt>RuleBasedNumberFormat</tt>s  | 
84  |  |  * by supplying programmer-defined rule sets.</p>  | 
85  |  |  *  | 
86  |  |  * <p>The behavior of a <tt>RuleBasedNumberFormat</tt> is specified by a textual description  | 
87  |  |  * that is either passed to the constructor as a <tt>String</tt> or loaded from a resource  | 
88  |  |  * bundle. In its simplest form, the description consists of a semicolon-delimited list of <em>rules.</em>  | 
89  |  |  * Each rule has a string of output text and a value or range of values it is applicable to.  | 
90  |  |  * In a typical spellout rule set, the first twenty rules are the words for the numbers from  | 
91  |  |  * 0 to 19:</p>  | 
92  |  |  *  | 
93  |  |  * <pre>zero; one; two; three; four; five; six; seven; eight; nine;  | 
94  |  |  * ten; eleven; twelve; thirteen; fourteen; fifteen; sixteen; seventeen; eighteen; nineteen;</pre>  | 
95  |  |  *  | 
96  |  |  * <p>For larger numbers, we can use the preceding set of rules to format the ones place, and  | 
97  |  |  * we only have to supply the words for the multiples of 10:</p>  | 
98  |  |  *  | 
99  |  |  * <pre> 20: twenty[->>];  | 
100  |  |  * 30: thirty[->>];  | 
101  |  |  * 40: forty[->>];  | 
102  |  |  * 50: fifty[->>];  | 
103  |  |  * 60: sixty[->>];  | 
104  |  |  * 70: seventy[->>];  | 
105  |  |  * 80: eighty[->>];  | 
106  |  |  * 90: ninety[->>];</pre>  | 
107  |  |  *  | 
108  |  |  * <p>In these rules, the <em>base value</em> is spelled out explicitly and set off from the  | 
109  |  |  * rule's output text with a colon. The rules are in a sorted list, and a rule is applicable  | 
110  |  |  * to all numbers from its own base value to one less than the next rule's base value. The  | 
111  |  |  * ">>" token is called a <em>substitution</em> and tells the formatter to  | 
112  |  |  * isolate the number's ones digit, format it using this same set of rules, and place the  | 
113  |  |  * result at the position of the ">>" token. Text in brackets is omitted if  | 
114  |  |  * the number being formatted is an even multiple of 10 (the hyphen is a literal hyphen; 24  | 
115  |  |  * is "twenty-four," not "twenty four").</p>  | 
116  |  |  *  | 
117  |  |  * <p>For even larger numbers, we can actually look up several parts of the number in the  | 
118  |  |  * list:</p>  | 
119  |  |  *  | 
120  |  |  * <pre>100: << hundred[ >>];</pre>  | 
121  |  |  *  | 
122  |  |  * <p>The "<<" represents a new kind of substitution. The << isolates  | 
123  |  |  * the hundreds digit (and any digits to its left), formats it using this same rule set, and  | 
124  |  |  * places the result where the "<<" was. Notice also that the meaning of  | 
125  |  |  * >> has changed: it now refers to both the tens and the ones digits. The meaning of  | 
126  |  |  * both substitutions depends on the rule's base value. The base value determines the rule's <em>divisor,</em>  | 
127  |  |  * which is the highest power of 10 that is less than or equal to the base value (the user  | 
128  |  |  * can change this). To fill in the substitutions, the formatter divides the number being  | 
129  |  |  * formatted by the divisor. The integral quotient is used to fill in the <<  | 
130  |  |  * substitution, and the remainder is used to fill in the >> substitution. The meaning  | 
131  |  |  * of the brackets changes similarly: text in brackets is omitted if the value being  | 
132  |  |  * formatted is an even multiple of the rule's divisor. The rules are applied recursively, so  | 
133  |  |  * if a substitution is filled in with text that includes another substitution, that  | 
134  |  |  * substitution is also filled in.</p>  | 
135  |  |  *  | 
136  |  |  * <p>This rule covers values up to 999, at which point we add another rule:</p>  | 
137  |  |  *  | 
138  |  |  * <pre>1000: << thousand[ >>];</pre>  | 
139  |  |  *  | 
140  |  |  * <p>Again, the meanings of the brackets and substitution tokens shift because the rule's  | 
141  |  |  * base value is a higher power of 10, changing the rule's divisor. This rule can actually be  | 
142  |  |  * used all the way up to 999,999. This allows us to finish out the rules as follows:</p>  | 
143  |  |  *  | 
144  |  |  * <pre> 1,000,000: << million[ >>];  | 
145  |  |  * 1,000,000,000: << billion[ >>];  | 
146  |  |  * 1,000,000,000,000: << trillion[ >>];  | 
147  |  |  * 1,000,000,000,000,000: OUT OF RANGE!;</pre>  | 
148  |  |  *  | 
149  |  |  * <p>Commas, periods, and spaces can be used in the base values to improve legibility and  | 
150  |  |  * are ignored by the rule parser. The last rule in the list is customarily treated as an  | 
151  |  |  * "overflow rule," applying to everything from its base value on up, and often (as  | 
152  |  |  * in this example) being used to print out an error message or default representation.  | 
153  |  |  * Notice also that the size of the major groupings in large numbers is controlled by the  | 
154  |  |  * spacing of the rules: because in English we group numbers by thousand, the higher rules  | 
155  |  |  * are separated from each other by a factor of 1,000.</p>  | 
156  |  |  *  | 
157  |  |  * <p>To see how these rules actually work in practice, consider the following example:  | 
158  |  |  * Formatting 25,430 with this rule set would work like this:</p>  | 
159  |  |  *  | 
160  |  |  * <table border="0" width="100%">  | 
161  |  |  *   <tr>  | 
162  |  |  *     <td><strong><< thousand >></strong></td>  | 
163  |  |  *     <td>[the rule whose base value is 1,000 is applicable to 25,340]</td>  | 
164  |  |  *   </tr>  | 
165  |  |  *   <tr>  | 
166  |  |  *     <td><strong>twenty->></strong> thousand >></td>  | 
167  |  |  *     <td>[25,340 over 1,000 is 25. The rule for 20 applies.]</td>  | 
168  |  |  *   </tr>  | 
169  |  |  *   <tr>  | 
170  |  |  *     <td>twenty-<strong>five</strong> thousand >></td>  | 
171  |  |  *     <td>[25 mod 10 is 5. The rule for 5 is "five."</td>  | 
172  |  |  *   </tr>  | 
173  |  |  *   <tr>  | 
174  |  |  *     <td>twenty-five thousand <strong><< hundred >></strong></td>  | 
175  |  |  *     <td>[25,340 mod 1,000 is 340. The rule for 100 applies.]</td>  | 
176  |  |  *   </tr>  | 
177  |  |  *   <tr>  | 
178  |  |  *     <td>twenty-five thousand <strong>three</strong> hundred >></td>  | 
179  |  |  *     <td>[340 over 100 is 3. The rule for 3 is "three."]</td>  | 
180  |  |  *   </tr>  | 
181  |  |  *   <tr>  | 
182  |  |  *     <td>twenty-five thousand three hundred <strong>forty</strong></td>  | 
183  |  |  *     <td>[340 mod 100 is 40. The rule for 40 applies. Since 40 divides  | 
184  |  |  *     evenly by 10, the hyphen and substitution in the brackets are omitted.]</td>  | 
185  |  |  *   </tr>  | 
186  |  |  * </table>  | 
187  |  |  *  | 
188  |  |  * <p>The above syntax suffices only to format positive integers. To format negative numbers,  | 
189  |  |  * we add a special rule:</p>  | 
190  |  |  *  | 
191  |  |  * <pre>-x: minus >>;</pre>  | 
192  |  |  *  | 
193  |  |  * <p>This is called a <em>negative-number rule,</em> and is identified by "-x"  | 
194  |  |  * where the base value would be. This rule is used to format all negative numbers. the  | 
195  |  |  * >> token here means "find the number's absolute value, format it with these  | 
196  |  |  * rules, and put the result here."</p>  | 
197  |  |  *  | 
198  |  |  * <p>We also add a special rule called a <em>fraction rule </em>for numbers with fractional  | 
199  |  |  * parts:</p>  | 
200  |  |  *  | 
201  |  |  * <pre>x.x: << point >>;</pre>  | 
202  |  |  *  | 
203  |  |  * <p>This rule is used for all positive non-integers (negative non-integers pass through the  | 
204  |  |  * negative-number rule first and then through this rule). Here, the << token refers to  | 
205  |  |  * the number's integral part, and the >> to the number's fractional part. The  | 
206  |  |  * fractional part is formatted as a series of single-digit numbers (e.g., 123.456 would be  | 
207  |  |  * formatted as "one hundred twenty-three point four five six").</p>  | 
208  |  |  *  | 
209  |  |  * <p>To see how this rule syntax is applied to various languages, examine the resource data.</p>  | 
210  |  |  *  | 
211  |  |  * <p>There is actually much more flexibility built into the rule language than the  | 
212  |  |  * description above shows. A formatter may own multiple rule sets, which can be selected by  | 
213  |  |  * the caller, and which can use each other to fill in their substitutions. Substitutions can  | 
214  |  |  * also be filled in with digits, using a DecimalFormat object. There is syntax that can be  | 
215  |  |  * used to alter a rule's divisor in various ways. And there is provision for much more  | 
216  |  |  * flexible fraction handling. A complete description of the rule syntax follows:</p>  | 
217  |  |  *  | 
218  |  |  * <hr>  | 
219  |  |  *  | 
220  |  |  * <p>The description of a <tt>RuleBasedNumberFormat</tt>'s behavior consists of one or more <em>rule  | 
221  |  |  * sets.</em> Each rule set consists of a name, a colon, and a list of <em>rules.</em> A rule  | 
222  |  |  * set name must begin with a % sign. Rule sets with names that begin with a single % sign  | 
223  |  |  * are <em>public:</em> the caller can specify that they be used to format and parse numbers.  | 
224  |  |  * Rule sets with names that begin with %% are <em>private:</em> they exist only for the use  | 
225  |  |  * of other rule sets. If a formatter only has one rule set, the name may be omitted.</p>  | 
226  |  |  *  | 
227  |  |  * <p>The user can also specify a special "rule set" named <tt>%%lenient-parse</tt>.  | 
228  |  |  * The body of <tt>%%lenient-parse</tt> isn't a set of number-formatting rules, but a <tt>RuleBasedCollator</tt>  | 
229  |  |  * description which is used to define equivalences for lenient parsing. For more information  | 
230  |  |  * on the syntax, see <tt>RuleBasedCollator</tt>. For more information on lenient parsing,  | 
231  |  |  * see <tt>setLenientParse()</tt>.  <em>Note:</em> symbols that have syntactic meaning  | 
232  |  |  * in collation rules, such as '&', have no particular meaning when appearing outside  | 
233  |  |  * of the <tt>lenient-parse</tt> rule set.</p>  | 
234  |  |  *  | 
235  |  |  * <p>The body of a rule set consists of an ordered, semicolon-delimited list of <em>rules.</em>  | 
236  |  |  * Internally, every rule has a base value, a divisor, rule text, and zero, one, or two <em>substitutions.</em>  | 
237  |  |  * These parameters are controlled by the description syntax, which consists of a <em>rule  | 
238  |  |  * descriptor,</em> a colon, and a <em>rule body.</em></p>  | 
239  |  |  *  | 
240  |  |  * <p>A rule descriptor can take one of the following forms (text in <em>italics</em> is the  | 
241  |  |  * name of a token):</p>  | 
242  |  |  *  | 
243  |  |  * <table border="0" width="100%">  | 
244  |  |  *   <tr>  | 
245  |  |  *     <td><em>bv</em>:</td>  | 
246  |  |  *     <td><em>bv</em> specifies the rule's base value. <em>bv</em> is a decimal  | 
247  |  |  *     number expressed using ASCII digits. <em>bv</em> may contain spaces, period, and commas,  | 
248  |  |  *     which are ignored. The rule's divisor is the highest power of 10 less than or equal to  | 
249  |  |  *     the base value.</td>  | 
250  |  |  *   </tr>  | 
251  |  |  *   <tr>  | 
252  |  |  *     <td><em>bv</em>/<em>rad</em>:</td>  | 
253  |  |  *     <td><em>bv</em> specifies the rule's base value. The rule's divisor is the  | 
254  |  |  *     highest power of <em>rad</em> less than or equal to the base value.</td>  | 
255  |  |  *   </tr>  | 
256  |  |  *   <tr>  | 
257  |  |  *     <td><em>bv</em>>:</td>  | 
258  |  |  *     <td><em>bv</em> specifies the rule's base value. To calculate the divisor,  | 
259  |  |  *     let the radix be 10, and the exponent be the highest exponent of the radix that yields a  | 
260  |  |  *     result less than or equal to the base value. Every > character after the base value  | 
261  |  |  *     decreases the exponent by 1. If the exponent is positive or 0, the divisor is the radix  | 
262  |  |  *     raised to the power of the exponent; otherwise, the divisor is 1.</td>  | 
263  |  |  *   </tr>  | 
264  |  |  *   <tr>  | 
265  |  |  *     <td><em>bv</em>/<em>rad</em>>:</td>  | 
266  |  |  *     <td><em>bv</em> specifies the rule's base value. To calculate the divisor,  | 
267  |  |  *     let the radix be <em>rad</em>, and the exponent be the highest exponent of the radix that  | 
268  |  |  *     yields a result less than or equal to the base value. Every > character after the radix  | 
269  |  |  *     decreases the exponent by 1. If the exponent is positive or 0, the divisor is the radix  | 
270  |  |  *     raised to the power of the exponent; otherwise, the divisor is 1.</td>  | 
271  |  |  *   </tr>  | 
272  |  |  *   <tr>  | 
273  |  |  *     <td>-x:</td>  | 
274  |  |  *     <td>The rule is a negative-number rule.</td>  | 
275  |  |  *   </tr>  | 
276  |  |  *   <tr>  | 
277  |  |  *     <td>x.x:</td>  | 
278  |  |  *     <td>The rule is an <em>improper fraction rule</em>. If the full stop in  | 
279  |  |  *     the middle of the rule name is replaced with the decimal point  | 
280  |  |  *     that is used in the language or DecimalFormatSymbols, then that rule will  | 
281  |  |  *     have precedence when formatting and parsing this rule. For example, some  | 
282  |  |  *     languages use the comma, and can thus be written as x,x instead. For example,  | 
283  |  |  *     you can use "x.x: << point >>;x,x: << comma >>;" to  | 
284  |  |  *     handle the decimal point that matches the language's natural spelling of  | 
285  |  |  *     the punctuation of either the full stop or comma.</td>  | 
286  |  |  *   </tr>  | 
287  |  |  *   <tr>  | 
288  |  |  *     <td>0.x:</td>  | 
289  |  |  *     <td>The rule is a <em>proper fraction rule</em>. If the full stop in  | 
290  |  |  *     the middle of the rule name is replaced with the decimal point  | 
291  |  |  *     that is used in the language or DecimalFormatSymbols, then that rule will  | 
292  |  |  *     have precedence when formatting and parsing this rule. For example, some  | 
293  |  |  *     languages use the comma, and can thus be written as 0,x instead. For example,  | 
294  |  |  *     you can use "0.x: point >>;0,x: comma >>;" to  | 
295  |  |  *     handle the decimal point that matches the language's natural spelling of  | 
296  |  |  *     the punctuation of either the full stop or comma.</td>  | 
297  |  |  *   </tr>  | 
298  |  |  *   <tr>  | 
299  |  |  *     <td>x.0:</td>  | 
300  |  |  *     <td>The rule is a <em>default rule</em>. If the full stop in  | 
301  |  |  *     the middle of the rule name is replaced with the decimal point  | 
302  |  |  *     that is used in the language or DecimalFormatSymbols, then that rule will  | 
303  |  |  *     have precedence when formatting and parsing this rule. For example, some  | 
304  |  |  *     languages use the comma, and can thus be written as x,0 instead. For example,  | 
305  |  |  *     you can use "x.0: << point;x,0: << comma;" to  | 
306  |  |  *     handle the decimal point that matches the language's natural spelling of  | 
307  |  |  *     the punctuation of either the full stop or comma.</td>  | 
308  |  |  *   </tr>  | 
309  |  |  *   <tr>  | 
310  |  |  *     <td>Inf:</td>  | 
311  |  |  *     <td>The rule for infinity.</td>  | 
312  |  |  *   </tr>  | 
313  |  |  *   <tr>  | 
314  |  |  *     <td>NaN:</td>  | 
315  |  |  *     <td>The rule for an IEEE 754 NaN (not a number).</td>  | 
316  |  |  *   </tr>  | 
317  |  |  *   <tr>  | 
318  |  |  *     <td><em>nothing</em></td>  | 
319  |  |  *     <td>If the rule's rule descriptor is left out, the base value is one plus the  | 
320  |  |  *     preceding rule's base value (or zero if this is the first rule in the list) in a normal  | 
321  |  |  *     rule set.  In a fraction rule set, the base value is the same as the preceding rule's  | 
322  |  |  *     base value.</td>  | 
323  |  |  *   </tr>  | 
324  |  |  * </table>  | 
325  |  |  *  | 
326  |  |  * <p>A rule set may be either a regular rule set or a <em>fraction rule set,</em> depending  | 
327  |  |  * on whether it is used to format a number's integral part (or the whole number) or a  | 
328  |  |  * number's fractional part. Using a rule set to format a rule's fractional part makes it a  | 
329  |  |  * fraction rule set.</p>  | 
330  |  |  *  | 
331  |  |  * <p>Which rule is used to format a number is defined according to one of the following  | 
332  |  |  * algorithms: If the rule set is a regular rule set, do the following:  | 
333  |  |  *  | 
334  |  |  * <ul>  | 
335  |  |  *   <li>If the rule set includes a default rule (and the number was passed in as a <tt>double</tt>),  | 
336  |  |  *     use the default rule.  (If the number being formatted was passed in as a <tt>long</tt>,  | 
337  |  |  *     the default rule is ignored.)</li>  | 
338  |  |  *   <li>If the number is negative, use the negative-number rule.</li>  | 
339  |  |  *   <li>If the number has a fractional part and is greater than 1, use the improper fraction  | 
340  |  |  *     rule.</li>  | 
341  |  |  *   <li>If the number has a fractional part and is between 0 and 1, use the proper fraction  | 
342  |  |  *     rule.</li>  | 
343  |  |  *   <li>Binary-search the rule list for the rule with the highest base value less than or equal  | 
344  |  |  *     to the number. If that rule has two substitutions, its base value is not an even multiple  | 
345  |  |  *     of its divisor, and the number <em>is</em> an even multiple of the rule's divisor, use the  | 
346  |  |  *     rule that precedes it in the rule list. Otherwise, use the rule itself.</li>  | 
347  |  |  * </ul>  | 
348  |  |  *  | 
349  |  |  * <p>If the rule set is a fraction rule set, do the following:  | 
350  |  |  *  | 
351  |  |  * <ul>  | 
352  |  |  *   <li>Ignore negative-number and fraction rules.</li>  | 
353  |  |  *   <li>For each rule in the list, multiply the number being formatted (which will always be  | 
354  |  |  *     between 0 and 1) by the rule's base value. Keep track of the distance between the result  | 
355  |  |  *     the nearest integer.</li>  | 
356  |  |  *   <li>Use the rule that produced the result closest to zero in the above calculation. In the  | 
357  |  |  *     event of a tie or a direct hit, use the first matching rule encountered. (The idea here is  | 
358  |  |  *     to try each rule's base value as a possible denominator of a fraction. Whichever  | 
359  |  |  *     denominator produces the fraction closest in value to the number being formatted wins.) If  | 
360  |  |  *     the rule following the matching rule has the same base value, use it if the numerator of  | 
361  |  |  *     the fraction is anything other than 1; if the numerator is 1, use the original matching  | 
362  |  |  *     rule. (This is to allow singular and plural forms of the rule text without a lot of extra  | 
363  |  |  *     hassle.)</li>  | 
364  |  |  * </ul>  | 
365  |  |  *  | 
366  |  |  * <p>A rule's body consists of a string of characters terminated by a semicolon. The rule  | 
367  |  |  * may include zero, one, or two <em>substitution tokens,</em> and a range of text in  | 
368  |  |  * brackets. The brackets denote optional text (and may also include one or both  | 
369  |  |  * substitutions). The exact meanings of the substitution tokens, and under what conditions  | 
370  |  |  * optional text is omitted, depend on the syntax of the substitution token and the context.  | 
371  |  |  * The rest of the text in a rule body is literal text that is output when the rule matches  | 
372  |  |  * the number being formatted.</p>  | 
373  |  |  *  | 
374  |  |  * <p>A substitution token begins and ends with a <em>token character.</em> The token  | 
375  |  |  * character and the context together specify a mathematical operation to be performed on the  | 
376  |  |  * number being formatted. An optional <em>substitution descriptor </em>specifies how the  | 
377  |  |  * value resulting from that operation is used to fill in the substitution. The position of  | 
378  |  |  * the substitution token in the rule body specifies the location of the resultant text in  | 
379  |  |  * the original rule text.</p>  | 
380  |  |  *  | 
381  |  |  * <p>The meanings of the substitution token characters are as follows:</p>  | 
382  |  |  *  | 
383  |  |  * <table border="0" width="100%">  | 
384  |  |  *   <tr>  | 
385  |  |  *     <td>>></td>  | 
386  |  |  *     <td>in normal rule</td>  | 
387  |  |  *     <td>Divide the number by the rule's divisor and format the remainder</td>  | 
388  |  |  *   </tr>  | 
389  |  |  *   <tr>  | 
390  |  |  *     <td></td>  | 
391  |  |  *     <td>in negative-number rule</td>  | 
392  |  |  *     <td>Find the absolute value of the number and format the result</td>  | 
393  |  |  *   </tr>  | 
394  |  |  *   <tr>  | 
395  |  |  *     <td></td>  | 
396  |  |  *     <td>in fraction or default rule</td>  | 
397  |  |  *     <td>Isolate the number's fractional part and format it.</td>  | 
398  |  |  *   </tr>  | 
399  |  |  *   <tr>  | 
400  |  |  *     <td></td>  | 
401  |  |  *     <td>in rule in fraction rule set</td>  | 
402  |  |  *     <td>Not allowed.</td>  | 
403  |  |  *   </tr>  | 
404  |  |  *   <tr>  | 
405  |  |  *     <td>>>></td>  | 
406  |  |  *     <td>in normal rule</td>  | 
407  |  |  *     <td>Divide the number by the rule's divisor and format the remainder,  | 
408  |  |  *       but bypass the normal rule-selection process and just use the  | 
409  |  |  *       rule that precedes this one in this rule list.</td>  | 
410  |  |  *   </tr>  | 
411  |  |  *   <tr>  | 
412  |  |  *     <td></td>  | 
413  |  |  *     <td>in all other rules</td>  | 
414  |  |  *     <td>Not allowed.</td>  | 
415  |  |  *   </tr>  | 
416  |  |  *   <tr>  | 
417  |  |  *     <td><<</td>  | 
418  |  |  *     <td>in normal rule</td>  | 
419  |  |  *     <td>Divide the number by the rule's divisor and format the quotient</td>  | 
420  |  |  *   </tr>  | 
421  |  |  *   <tr>  | 
422  |  |  *     <td></td>  | 
423  |  |  *     <td>in negative-number rule</td>  | 
424  |  |  *     <td>Not allowed.</td>  | 
425  |  |  *   </tr>  | 
426  |  |  *   <tr>  | 
427  |  |  *     <td></td>  | 
428  |  |  *     <td>in fraction or default rule</td>  | 
429  |  |  *     <td>Isolate the number's integral part and format it.</td>  | 
430  |  |  *   </tr>  | 
431  |  |  *   <tr>  | 
432  |  |  *     <td></td>  | 
433  |  |  *     <td>in rule in fraction rule set</td>  | 
434  |  |  *     <td>Multiply the number by the rule's base value and format the result.</td>  | 
435  |  |  *   </tr>  | 
436  |  |  *   <tr>  | 
437  |  |  *     <td>==</td>  | 
438  |  |  *     <td>in all rule sets</td>  | 
439  |  |  *     <td>Format the number unchanged</td>  | 
440  |  |  *   </tr>  | 
441  |  |  *   <tr>  | 
442  |  |  *     <td>[]</td>  | 
443  |  |  *     <td>in normal rule</td>  | 
444  |  |  *     <td>Omit the optional text if the number is an even multiple of the rule's divisor</td>  | 
445  |  |  *   </tr>  | 
446  |  |  *   <tr>  | 
447  |  |  *     <td></td>  | 
448  |  |  *     <td>in negative-number rule</td>  | 
449  |  |  *     <td>Not allowed.</td>  | 
450  |  |  *   </tr>  | 
451  |  |  *   <tr>  | 
452  |  |  *     <td></td>  | 
453  |  |  *     <td>in improper-fraction rule</td>  | 
454  |  |  *     <td>Omit the optional text if the number is between 0 and 1 (same as specifying both an  | 
455  |  |  *     x.x rule and a 0.x rule)</td>  | 
456  |  |  *   </tr>  | 
457  |  |  *   <tr>  | 
458  |  |  *     <td></td>  | 
459  |  |  *     <td>in default rule</td>  | 
460  |  |  *     <td>Omit the optional text if the number is an integer (same as specifying both an x.x  | 
461  |  |  *     rule and an x.0 rule)</td>  | 
462  |  |  *   </tr>  | 
463  |  |  *   <tr>  | 
464  |  |  *     <td></td>  | 
465  |  |  *     <td>in proper-fraction rule</td>  | 
466  |  |  *     <td>Not allowed.</td>  | 
467  |  |  *   </tr>  | 
468  |  |  *   <tr>  | 
469  |  |  *     <td></td>  | 
470  |  |  *     <td>in rule in fraction rule set</td>  | 
471  |  |  *     <td>Omit the optional text if multiplying the number by the rule's base value yields 1.</td>  | 
472  |  |  *   </tr>  | 
473  |  |  *   <tr>  | 
474  |  |  *     <td width="37">$(cardinal,<i>plural syntax</i>)$</td>  | 
475  |  |  *     <td width="23"></td>  | 
476  |  |  *     <td width="165" valign="top">in all rule sets</td>  | 
477  |  |  *     <td>This provides the ability to choose a word based on the number divided by the radix to the power of the  | 
478  |  |  *     exponent of the base value for the specified locale, which is normally equivalent to the << value.  | 
479  |  |  *     This uses the cardinal plural rules from PluralFormat. All strings used in the plural format are treated  | 
480  |  |  *     as the same base value for parsing.</td>  | 
481  |  |  *   </tr>  | 
482  |  |  *   <tr>  | 
483  |  |  *     <td width="37">$(ordinal,<i>plural syntax</i>)$</td>  | 
484  |  |  *     <td width="23"></td>  | 
485  |  |  *     <td width="165" valign="top">in all rule sets</td>  | 
486  |  |  *     <td>This provides the ability to choose a word based on the number divided by the radix to the power of the  | 
487  |  |  *     exponent of the base value for the specified locale, which is normally equivalent to the << value.  | 
488  |  |  *     This uses the ordinal plural rules from PluralFormat. All strings used in the plural format are treated  | 
489  |  |  *     as the same base value for parsing.</td>  | 
490  |  |  *   </tr>  | 
491  |  |  * </table>  | 
492  |  |  *  | 
493  |  |  * <p>The substitution descriptor (i.e., the text between the token characters) may take one  | 
494  |  |  * of three forms:</p>  | 
495  |  |  *  | 
496  |  |  * <table border="0" width="100%">  | 
497  |  |  *   <tr>  | 
498  |  |  *     <td>a rule set name</td>  | 
499  |  |  *     <td>Perform the mathematical operation on the number, and format the result using the  | 
500  |  |  *     named rule set.</td>  | 
501  |  |  *   </tr>  | 
502  |  |  *   <tr>  | 
503  |  |  *     <td>a DecimalFormat pattern</td>  | 
504  |  |  *     <td>Perform the mathematical operation on the number, and format the result using a  | 
505  |  |  *     DecimalFormat with the specified pattern.  The pattern must begin with 0 or #.</td>  | 
506  |  |  *   </tr>  | 
507  |  |  *   <tr>  | 
508  |  |  *     <td>nothing</td>  | 
509  |  |  *     <td>Perform the mathematical operation on the number, and format the result using the rule  | 
510  |  |  *     set containing the current rule, except:  | 
511  |  |  *     <ul>  | 
512  |  |  *       <li>You can't have an empty substitution descriptor with a == substitution.</li>  | 
513  |  |  *       <li>If you omit the substitution descriptor in a >> substitution in a fraction rule,  | 
514  |  |  *         format the result one digit at a time using the rule set containing the current rule.</li>  | 
515  |  |  *       <li>If you omit the substitution descriptor in a << substitution in a rule in a  | 
516  |  |  *         fraction rule set, format the result using the default rule set for this formatter.</li>  | 
517  |  |  *     </ul>  | 
518  |  |  *     </td>  | 
519  |  |  *   </tr>  | 
520  |  |  * </table>  | 
521  |  |  *  | 
522  |  |  * <p>Whitespace is ignored between a rule set name and a rule set body, between a rule  | 
523  |  |  * descriptor and a rule body, or between rules. If a rule body begins with an apostrophe,  | 
524  |  |  * the apostrophe is ignored, but all text after it becomes significant (this is how you can  | 
525  |  |  * have a rule's rule text begin with whitespace). There is no escape function: the semicolon  | 
526  |  |  * is not allowed in rule set names or in rule text, and the colon is not allowed in rule set  | 
527  |  |  * names. The characters beginning a substitution token are always treated as the beginning  | 
528  |  |  * of a substitution token.</p>  | 
529  |  |  *  | 
530  |  |  * <p>See the resource data and the demo program for annotated examples of real rule sets  | 
531  |  |  * using these features.</p>  | 
532  |  |  *  | 
533  |  |  * <p><em>User subclasses are not supported.</em> While clients may write  | 
534  |  |  * subclasses, such code will not necessarily work and will not be  | 
535  |  |  * guaranteed to work stably from release to release.  | 
536  |  |  *  | 
537  |  |  * <p><b>Localizations</b></p>  | 
538  |  |  * <p>Constructors are available that allow the specification of localizations for the  | 
539  |  |  * public rule sets (and also allow more control over what public rule sets are available).  | 
540  |  |  * Localization data is represented as a textual description.  The description represents  | 
541  |  |  * an array of arrays of string.  The first element is an array of the public rule set names,  | 
542  |  |  * each of these must be one of the public rule set names that appear in the rules.  Only  | 
543  |  |  * names in this array will be treated as public rule set names by the API.  Each subsequent  | 
544  |  |  * element is an array of localizations of these names.  The first element of one of these  | 
545  |  |  * subarrays is the locale name, and the remaining elements are localizations of the  | 
546  |  |  * public rule set names, in the same order as they were listed in the first array.</p>  | 
547  |  |  * <p>In the syntax, angle brackets '<', '>' are used to delimit the arrays, and comma ',' is used  | 
548  |  |  * to separate elements of an array.  Whitespace is ignored, unless quoted.</p>  | 
549  |  |  * <p>For example:<pre>  | 
550  |  |  * < < %foo, %bar, %baz >,  | 
551  |  |  *   < en, Foo, Bar, Baz >,  | 
552  |  |  *   < fr, 'le Foo', 'le Bar', 'le Baz' >  | 
553  |  |  *   < zh, \\u7532, \\u4e59, \\u4e19 > >  | 
554  |  |  * </pre></p>  | 
555  |  |  * @author Richard Gillam  | 
556  |  |  * @see NumberFormat  | 
557  |  |  * @see DecimalFormat  | 
558  |  |  * @see PluralFormat  | 
559  |  |  * @see PluralRules  | 
560  |  |  * @stable ICU 2.0  | 
561  |  |  */  | 
562  |  | class U_I18N_API RuleBasedNumberFormat : public NumberFormat { | 
563  |  | public:  | 
564  |  |  | 
565  |  |   //-----------------------------------------------------------------------  | 
566  |  |   // constructors  | 
567  |  |   //-----------------------------------------------------------------------  | 
568  |  |  | 
569  |  |     /**  | 
570  |  |      * Creates a RuleBasedNumberFormat that behaves according to the description  | 
571  |  |      * passed in.  The formatter uses the default locale.  | 
572  |  |      * @param rules A description of the formatter's desired behavior.  | 
573  |  |      * See the class documentation for a complete explanation of the description  | 
574  |  |      * syntax.  | 
575  |  |      * @param perror The parse error if an error was encountered.  | 
576  |  |      * @param status The status indicating whether the constructor succeeded.  | 
577  |  |      * @stable ICU 3.2  | 
578  |  |      */  | 
579  |  |     RuleBasedNumberFormat(const UnicodeString& rules, UParseError& perror, UErrorCode& status);  | 
580  |  |  | 
581  |  |     /**  | 
582  |  |      * Creates a RuleBasedNumberFormat that behaves according to the description  | 
583  |  |      * passed in.  The formatter uses the default locale.  | 
584  |  |      * <p>  | 
585  |  |      * The localizations data provides information about the public  | 
586  |  |      * rule sets and their localized display names for different  | 
587  |  |      * locales. The first element in the list is an array of the names  | 
588  |  |      * of the public rule sets.  The first element in this array is  | 
589  |  |      * the initial default ruleset.  The remaining elements in the  | 
590  |  |      * list are arrays of localizations of the names of the public  | 
591  |  |      * rule sets.  Each of these is one longer than the initial array,  | 
592  |  |      * with the first String being the ULocale ID, and the remaining  | 
593  |  |      * Strings being the localizations of the rule set names, in the  | 
594  |  |      * same order as the initial array.  Arrays are NULL-terminated.  | 
595  |  |      * @param rules A description of the formatter's desired behavior.  | 
596  |  |      * See the class documentation for a complete explanation of the description  | 
597  |  |      * syntax.  | 
598  |  |      * @param localizations the localization information.  | 
599  |  |      * names in the description.  These will be copied by the constructor.  | 
600  |  |      * @param perror The parse error if an error was encountered.  | 
601  |  |      * @param status The status indicating whether the constructor succeeded.  | 
602  |  |      * @stable ICU 3.2  | 
603  |  |      */  | 
604  |  |     RuleBasedNumberFormat(const UnicodeString& rules, const UnicodeString& localizations,  | 
605  |  |                         UParseError& perror, UErrorCode& status);  | 
606  |  |  | 
607  |  |   /**  | 
608  |  |    * Creates a RuleBasedNumberFormat that behaves according to the rules  | 
609  |  |    * passed in.  The formatter uses the specified locale to determine the  | 
610  |  |    * characters to use when formatting numerals, and to define equivalences  | 
611  |  |    * for lenient parsing.  | 
612  |  |    * @param rules The formatter rules.  | 
613  |  |    * See the class documentation for a complete explanation of the rule  | 
614  |  |    * syntax.  | 
615  |  |    * @param locale A locale that governs which characters are used for  | 
616  |  |    * formatting values in numerals and which characters are equivalent in  | 
617  |  |    * lenient parsing.  | 
618  |  |    * @param perror The parse error if an error was encountered.  | 
619  |  |    * @param status The status indicating whether the constructor succeeded.  | 
620  |  |    * @stable ICU 2.0  | 
621  |  |    */  | 
622  |  |   RuleBasedNumberFormat(const UnicodeString& rules, const Locale& locale,  | 
623  |  |                         UParseError& perror, UErrorCode& status);  | 
624  |  |  | 
625  |  |     /**  | 
626  |  |      * Creates a RuleBasedNumberFormat that behaves according to the description  | 
627  |  |      * passed in.  The formatter uses the default locale.  | 
628  |  |      * <p>  | 
629  |  |      * The localizations data provides information about the public  | 
630  |  |      * rule sets and their localized display names for different  | 
631  |  |      * locales. The first element in the list is an array of the names  | 
632  |  |      * of the public rule sets.  The first element in this array is  | 
633  |  |      * the initial default ruleset.  The remaining elements in the  | 
634  |  |      * list are arrays of localizations of the names of the public  | 
635  |  |      * rule sets.  Each of these is one longer than the initial array,  | 
636  |  |      * with the first String being the ULocale ID, and the remaining  | 
637  |  |      * Strings being the localizations of the rule set names, in the  | 
638  |  |      * same order as the initial array.  Arrays are NULL-terminated.  | 
639  |  |      * @param rules A description of the formatter's desired behavior.  | 
640  |  |      * See the class documentation for a complete explanation of the description  | 
641  |  |      * syntax.  | 
642  |  |      * @param localizations a list of localizations for the rule set  | 
643  |  |      * names in the description.  These will be copied by the constructor.  | 
644  |  |      * @param locale A locale that governs which characters are used for  | 
645  |  |      * formatting values in numerals and which characters are equivalent in  | 
646  |  |      * lenient parsing.  | 
647  |  |      * @param perror The parse error if an error was encountered.  | 
648  |  |      * @param status The status indicating whether the constructor succeeded.  | 
649  |  |      * @stable ICU 3.2  | 
650  |  |      */  | 
651  |  |     RuleBasedNumberFormat(const UnicodeString& rules, const UnicodeString& localizations,  | 
652  |  |                         const Locale& locale, UParseError& perror, UErrorCode& status);  | 
653  |  |  | 
654  |  |   /**  | 
655  |  |    * Creates a RuleBasedNumberFormat from a predefined ruleset.  The selector  | 
656  |  |    * code chose among three possible predefined formats: spellout, ordinal,  | 
657  |  |    * and duration.  | 
658  |  |    * @param tag A selector code specifying which kind of formatter to create for that  | 
659  |  |    * locale.  There are four legal values: URBNF_SPELLOUT, which creates a formatter that  | 
660  |  |    * spells out a value in words in the desired language, URBNF_ORDINAL, which attaches  | 
661  |  |    * an ordinal suffix from the desired language to the end of a number (e.g. "123rd"),  | 
662  |  |    * URBNF_DURATION, which formats a duration in seconds as hours, minutes, and seconds always rounding down,  | 
663  |  |    * and URBNF_NUMBERING_SYSTEM, which is used to invoke rules for alternate numbering  | 
664  |  |    * systems such as the Hebrew numbering system, or for Roman Numerals, etc.  | 
665  |  |    * @param locale The locale for the formatter.  | 
666  |  |    * @param status The status indicating whether the constructor succeeded.  | 
667  |  |    * @stable ICU 2.0  | 
668  |  |    */  | 
669  |  |   RuleBasedNumberFormat(URBNFRuleSetTag tag, const Locale& locale, UErrorCode& status);  | 
670  |  |  | 
671  |  |   //-----------------------------------------------------------------------  | 
672  |  |   // boilerplate  | 
673  |  |   //-----------------------------------------------------------------------  | 
674  |  |  | 
675  |  |   /**  | 
676  |  |    * Copy constructor  | 
677  |  |    * @param rhs    the object to be copied from.  | 
678  |  |    * @stable ICU 2.6  | 
679  |  |    */  | 
680  |  |   RuleBasedNumberFormat(const RuleBasedNumberFormat& rhs);  | 
681  |  |  | 
682  |  |   /**  | 
683  |  |    * Assignment operator  | 
684  |  |    * @param rhs    the object to be copied from.  | 
685  |  |    * @stable ICU 2.6  | 
686  |  |    */  | 
687  |  |   RuleBasedNumberFormat& operator=(const RuleBasedNumberFormat& rhs);  | 
688  |  |  | 
689  |  |   /**  | 
690  |  |    * Release memory allocated for a RuleBasedNumberFormat when you are finished with it.  | 
691  |  |    * @stable ICU 2.6  | 
692  |  |    */  | 
693  |  |   virtual ~RuleBasedNumberFormat();  | 
694  |  |  | 
695  |  |   /**  | 
696  |  |    * Clone this object polymorphically.  The caller is responsible  | 
697  |  |    * for deleting the result when done.  | 
698  |  |    * @return  A copy of the object.  | 
699  |  |    * @stable ICU 2.6  | 
700  |  |    */  | 
701  |  |   virtual RuleBasedNumberFormat* clone() const;  | 
702  |  |  | 
703  |  |   /**  | 
704  |  |    * Return true if the given Format objects are semantically equal.  | 
705  |  |    * Objects of different subclasses are considered unequal.  | 
706  |  |    * @param other    the object to be compared with.  | 
707  |  |    * @return        true if the given Format objects are semantically equal.  | 
708  |  |    * @stable ICU 2.6  | 
709  |  |    */  | 
710  |  |   virtual bool operator==(const Format& other) const;  | 
711  |  |  | 
712  |  | //-----------------------------------------------------------------------  | 
713  |  | // public API functions  | 
714  |  | //-----------------------------------------------------------------------  | 
715  |  |  | 
716  |  |   /**  | 
717  |  |    * return the rules that were provided to the RuleBasedNumberFormat.  | 
718  |  |    * @return the result String that was passed in  | 
719  |  |    * @stable ICU 2.0  | 
720  |  |    */  | 
721  |  |   virtual UnicodeString getRules() const;  | 
722  |  |  | 
723  |  |   /**  | 
724  |  |    * Return the number of public rule set names.  | 
725  |  |    * @return the number of public rule set names.  | 
726  |  |    * @stable ICU 2.0  | 
727  |  |    */  | 
728  |  |   virtual int32_t getNumberOfRuleSetNames() const;  | 
729  |  |  | 
730  |  |   /**  | 
731  |  |    * Return the name of the index'th public ruleSet.  If index is not valid,  | 
732  |  |    * the function returns null.  | 
733  |  |    * @param index the index of the ruleset  | 
734  |  |    * @return the name of the index'th public ruleSet.  | 
735  |  |    * @stable ICU 2.0  | 
736  |  |    */  | 
737  |  |   virtual UnicodeString getRuleSetName(int32_t index) const;  | 
738  |  |  | 
739  |  |   /**  | 
740  |  |    * Return the number of locales for which we have localized rule set display names.  | 
741  |  |    * @return the number of locales for which we have localized rule set display names.  | 
742  |  |    * @stable ICU 3.2  | 
743  |  |    */  | 
744  |  |   virtual int32_t getNumberOfRuleSetDisplayNameLocales(void) const;  | 
745  |  |  | 
746  |  |   /**  | 
747  |  |    * Return the index'th display name locale.  | 
748  |  |    * @param index the index of the locale  | 
749  |  |    * @param status set to a failure code when this function fails  | 
750  |  |    * @return the locale  | 
751  |  |    * @see #getNumberOfRuleSetDisplayNameLocales  | 
752  |  |    * @stable ICU 3.2  | 
753  |  |    */  | 
754  |  |   virtual Locale getRuleSetDisplayNameLocale(int32_t index, UErrorCode& status) const;  | 
755  |  |  | 
756  |  |     /**  | 
757  |  |      * Return the rule set display names for the provided locale.  These are in the same order  | 
758  |  |      * as those returned by getRuleSetName.  The locale is matched against the locales for  | 
759  |  |      * which there is display name data, using normal fallback rules.  If no locale matches,  | 
760  |  |      * the default display names are returned.  (These are the internal rule set names minus  | 
761  |  |      * the leading '%'.)  | 
762  |  |      * @param index the index of the rule set  | 
763  |  |      * @param locale the locale (returned by getRuleSetDisplayNameLocales) for which the localized  | 
764  |  |      * display name is desired  | 
765  |  |      * @return the display name for the given index, which might be bogus if there is an error  | 
766  |  |      * @see #getRuleSetName  | 
767  |  |      * @stable ICU 3.2  | 
768  |  |      */  | 
769  |  |   virtual UnicodeString getRuleSetDisplayName(int32_t index,  | 
770  |  |                           const Locale& locale = Locale::getDefault());  | 
771  |  |  | 
772  |  |     /**  | 
773  |  |      * Return the rule set display name for the provided rule set and locale.  | 
774  |  |      * The locale is matched against the locales for which there is display name data, using  | 
775  |  |      * normal fallback rules.  If no locale matches, the default display name is returned.  | 
776  |  |      * @return the display name for the rule set  | 
777  |  |      * @stable ICU 3.2  | 
778  |  |      * @see #getRuleSetDisplayName  | 
779  |  |      */  | 
780  |  |   virtual UnicodeString getRuleSetDisplayName(const UnicodeString& ruleSetName,  | 
781  |  |                           const Locale& locale = Locale::getDefault());  | 
782  |  |  | 
783  |  |  | 
784  |  |   using NumberFormat::format;  | 
785  |  |  | 
786  |  |   /**  | 
787  |  |    * Formats the specified 32-bit number using the default ruleset.  | 
788  |  |    * @param number The number to format.  | 
789  |  |    * @param toAppendTo the string that will hold the (appended) result  | 
790  |  |    * @param pos the fieldposition  | 
791  |  |    * @return A textual representation of the number.  | 
792  |  |    * @stable ICU 2.0  | 
793  |  |    */  | 
794  |  |   virtual UnicodeString& format(int32_t number,  | 
795  |  |                                 UnicodeString& toAppendTo,  | 
796  |  |                                 FieldPosition& pos) const;  | 
797  |  |  | 
798  |  |   /**  | 
799  |  |    * Formats the specified 64-bit number using the default ruleset.  | 
800  |  |    * @param number The number to format.  | 
801  |  |    * @param toAppendTo the string that will hold the (appended) result  | 
802  |  |    * @param pos the fieldposition  | 
803  |  |    * @return A textual representation of the number.  | 
804  |  |    * @stable ICU 2.1  | 
805  |  |    */  | 
806  |  |   virtual UnicodeString& format(int64_t number,  | 
807  |  |                                 UnicodeString& toAppendTo,  | 
808  |  |                                 FieldPosition& pos) const;  | 
809  |  |   /**  | 
810  |  |    * Formats the specified number using the default ruleset.  | 
811  |  |    * @param number The number to format.  | 
812  |  |    * @param toAppendTo the string that will hold the (appended) result  | 
813  |  |    * @param pos the fieldposition  | 
814  |  |    * @return A textual representation of the number.  | 
815  |  |    * @stable ICU 2.0  | 
816  |  |    */  | 
817  |  |   virtual UnicodeString& format(double number,  | 
818  |  |                                 UnicodeString& toAppendTo,  | 
819  |  |                                 FieldPosition& pos) const;  | 
820  |  |  | 
821  |  |   /**  | 
822  |  |    * Formats the specified number using the named ruleset.  | 
823  |  |    * @param number The number to format.  | 
824  |  |    * @param ruleSetName The name of the rule set to format the number with.  | 
825  |  |    * This must be the name of a valid public rule set for this formatter.  | 
826  |  |    * @param toAppendTo the string that will hold the (appended) result  | 
827  |  |    * @param pos the fieldposition  | 
828  |  |    * @param status the status  | 
829  |  |    * @return A textual representation of the number.  | 
830  |  |    * @stable ICU 2.0  | 
831  |  |    */  | 
832  |  |   virtual UnicodeString& format(int32_t number,  | 
833  |  |                                 const UnicodeString& ruleSetName,  | 
834  |  |                                 UnicodeString& toAppendTo,  | 
835  |  |                                 FieldPosition& pos,  | 
836  |  |                                 UErrorCode& status) const;  | 
837  |  |   /**  | 
838  |  |    * Formats the specified 64-bit number using the named ruleset.  | 
839  |  |    * @param number The number to format.  | 
840  |  |    * @param ruleSetName The name of the rule set to format the number with.  | 
841  |  |    * This must be the name of a valid public rule set for this formatter.  | 
842  |  |    * @param toAppendTo the string that will hold the (appended) result  | 
843  |  |    * @param pos the fieldposition  | 
844  |  |    * @param status the status  | 
845  |  |    * @return A textual representation of the number.  | 
846  |  |    * @stable ICU 2.1  | 
847  |  |    */  | 
848  |  |   virtual UnicodeString& format(int64_t number,  | 
849  |  |                                 const UnicodeString& ruleSetName,  | 
850  |  |                                 UnicodeString& toAppendTo,  | 
851  |  |                                 FieldPosition& pos,  | 
852  |  |                                 UErrorCode& status) const;  | 
853  |  |   /**  | 
854  |  |    * Formats the specified number using the named ruleset.  | 
855  |  |    * @param number The number to format.  | 
856  |  |    * @param ruleSetName The name of the rule set to format the number with.  | 
857  |  |    * This must be the name of a valid public rule set for this formatter.  | 
858  |  |    * @param toAppendTo the string that will hold the (appended) result  | 
859  |  |    * @param pos the fieldposition  | 
860  |  |    * @param status the status  | 
861  |  |    * @return A textual representation of the number.  | 
862  |  |    * @stable ICU 2.0  | 
863  |  |    */  | 
864  |  |   virtual UnicodeString& format(double number,  | 
865  |  |                                 const UnicodeString& ruleSetName,  | 
866  |  |                                 UnicodeString& toAppendTo,  | 
867  |  |                                 FieldPosition& pos,  | 
868  |  |                                 UErrorCode& status) const;  | 
869  |  |  | 
870  |  | protected:  | 
871  |  |     /**  | 
872  |  |      * Format a decimal number.  | 
873  |  |      * The number is a DigitList wrapper onto a floating point decimal number.  | 
874  |  |      * The default implementation in NumberFormat converts the decimal number  | 
875  |  |      * to a double and formats that.  Subclasses of NumberFormat that want  | 
876  |  |      * to specifically handle big decimal numbers must override this method.  | 
877  |  |      * class DecimalFormat does so.  | 
878  |  |      *  | 
879  |  |      * @param number    The number, a DigitList format Decimal Floating Point.  | 
880  |  |      * @param appendTo  Output parameter to receive result.  | 
881  |  |      *                  Result is appended to existing contents.  | 
882  |  |      * @param pos       On input: an alignment field, if desired.  | 
883  |  |      *                  On output: the offsets of the alignment field.  | 
884  |  |      * @param status    Output param filled with success/failure status.  | 
885  |  |      * @return          Reference to 'appendTo' parameter.  | 
886  |  |      * @internal  | 
887  |  |      */  | 
888  |  |     virtual UnicodeString& format(const number::impl::DecimalQuantity &number,  | 
889  |  |                                   UnicodeString& appendTo,  | 
890  |  |                                   FieldPosition& pos,  | 
891  |  |                                   UErrorCode& status) const;  | 
892  |  | public:  | 
893  |  |  | 
894  |  |   using NumberFormat::parse;  | 
895  |  |  | 
896  |  |   /**  | 
897  |  |    * Parses the specified string, beginning at the specified position, according  | 
898  |  |    * to this formatter's rules.  This will match the string against all of the  | 
899  |  |    * formatter's public rule sets and return the value corresponding to the longest  | 
900  |  |    * parseable substring.  This function's behavior is affected by the lenient  | 
901  |  |    * parse mode.  | 
902  |  |    * @param text The string to parse  | 
903  |  |    * @param result the result of the parse, either a double or a long.  | 
904  |  |    * @param parsePosition On entry, contains the position of the first character  | 
905  |  |    * in "text" to examine.  On exit, has been updated to contain the position  | 
906  |  |    * of the first character in "text" that wasn't consumed by the parse.  | 
907  |  |    * @see #setLenient  | 
908  |  |    * @stable ICU 2.0  | 
909  |  |    */  | 
910  |  |   virtual void parse(const UnicodeString& text,  | 
911  |  |                      Formattable& result,  | 
912  |  |                      ParsePosition& parsePosition) const;  | 
913  |  |  | 
914  |  | #if !UCONFIG_NO_COLLATION  | 
915  |  |  | 
916  |  |   /**  | 
917  |  |    * Turns lenient parse mode on and off.  | 
918  |  |    *  | 
919  |  |    * When in lenient parse mode, the formatter uses a Collator for parsing the text.  | 
920  |  |    * Only primary differences are treated as significant.  This means that case  | 
921  |  |    * differences, accent differences, alternate spellings of the same letter  | 
922  |  |    * (e.g., ae and a-umlaut in German), ignorable characters, etc. are ignored in  | 
923  |  |    * matching the text.  In many cases, numerals will be accepted in place of words  | 
924  |  |    * or phrases as well.  | 
925  |  |    *  | 
926  |  |    * For example, all of the following will correctly parse as 255 in English in  | 
927  |  |    * lenient-parse mode:  | 
928  |  |    * <br>"two hundred fifty-five"  | 
929  |  |    * <br>"two hundred fifty five"  | 
930  |  |    * <br>"TWO HUNDRED FIFTY-FIVE"  | 
931  |  |    * <br>"twohundredfiftyfive"  | 
932  |  |    * <br>"2 hundred fifty-5"  | 
933  |  |    *  | 
934  |  |    * The Collator used is determined by the locale that was  | 
935  |  |    * passed to this object on construction.  The description passed to this object  | 
936  |  |    * on construction may supply additional collation rules that are appended to the  | 
937  |  |    * end of the default collator for the locale, enabling additional equivalences  | 
938  |  |    * (such as adding more ignorable characters or permitting spelled-out version of  | 
939  |  |    * symbols; see the demo program for examples).  | 
940  |  |    *  | 
941  |  |    * It's important to emphasize that even strict parsing is relatively lenient: it  | 
942  |  |    * will accept some text that it won't produce as output.  In English, for example,  | 
943  |  |    * it will correctly parse "two hundred zero" and "fifteen hundred".  | 
944  |  |    *  | 
945  |  |    * @param enabled If true, turns lenient-parse mode on; if false, turns it off.  | 
946  |  |    * @see RuleBasedCollator  | 
947  |  |    * @stable ICU 2.0  | 
948  |  |    */  | 
949  |  |   virtual void setLenient(UBool enabled);  | 
950  |  |  | 
951  |  |   /**  | 
952  |  |    * Returns true if lenient-parse mode is turned on.  Lenient parsing is off  | 
953  |  |    * by default.  | 
954  |  |    * @return true if lenient-parse mode is turned on.  | 
955  |  |    * @see #setLenient  | 
956  |  |    * @stable ICU 2.0  | 
957  |  |    */  | 
958  |  |   virtual inline UBool isLenient(void) const;  | 
959  |  |  | 
960  |  | #endif  | 
961  |  |  | 
962  |  |   /**  | 
963  |  |    * Override the default rule set to use.  If ruleSetName is null, reset  | 
964  |  |    * to the initial default rule set.  If the rule set is not a public rule set name,  | 
965  |  |    * U_ILLEGAL_ARGUMENT_ERROR is returned in status.  | 
966  |  |    * @param ruleSetName the name of the rule set, or null to reset the initial default.  | 
967  |  |    * @param status set to failure code when a problem occurs.  | 
968  |  |    * @stable ICU 2.6  | 
969  |  |    */  | 
970  |  |   virtual void setDefaultRuleSet(const UnicodeString& ruleSetName, UErrorCode& status);  | 
971  |  |  | 
972  |  |   /**  | 
973  |  |    * Return the name of the current default rule set.  If the current rule set is  | 
974  |  |    * not public, returns a bogus (and empty) UnicodeString.  | 
975  |  |    * @return the name of the current default rule set  | 
976  |  |    * @stable ICU 3.0  | 
977  |  |    */  | 
978  |  |   virtual UnicodeString getDefaultRuleSetName() const;  | 
979  |  |  | 
980  |  |   /**  | 
981  |  |    * Set a particular UDisplayContext value in the formatter, such as  | 
982  |  |    * UDISPCTX_CAPITALIZATION_FOR_STANDALONE. Note: For getContext, see  | 
983  |  |    * NumberFormat.  | 
984  |  |    * @param value The UDisplayContext value to set.  | 
985  |  |    * @param status Input/output status. If at entry this indicates a failure  | 
986  |  |    *               status, the function will do nothing; otherwise this will be  | 
987  |  |    *               updated with any new status from the function.   | 
988  |  |    * @stable ICU 53  | 
989  |  |    */  | 
990  |  |   virtual void setContext(UDisplayContext value, UErrorCode& status);  | 
991  |  |  | 
992  |  |     /**  | 
993  |  |      * Get the rounding mode.  | 
994  |  |      * @return A rounding mode  | 
995  |  |      * @stable ICU 60  | 
996  |  |      */  | 
997  |  |     virtual ERoundingMode getRoundingMode(void) const;  | 
998  |  |  | 
999  |  |     /**  | 
1000  |  |      * Set the rounding mode.  | 
1001  |  |      * @param roundingMode A rounding mode  | 
1002  |  |      * @stable ICU 60  | 
1003  |  |      */  | 
1004  |  |     virtual void setRoundingMode(ERoundingMode roundingMode);  | 
1005  |  |  | 
1006  |  | public:  | 
1007  |  |     /**  | 
1008  |  |      * ICU "poor man's RTTI", returns a UClassID for this class.  | 
1009  |  |      *  | 
1010  |  |      * @stable ICU 2.8  | 
1011  |  |      */  | 
1012  |  |     static UClassID U_EXPORT2 getStaticClassID(void);  | 
1013  |  |  | 
1014  |  |     /**  | 
1015  |  |      * ICU "poor man's RTTI", returns a UClassID for the actual class.  | 
1016  |  |      *  | 
1017  |  |      * @stable ICU 2.8  | 
1018  |  |      */  | 
1019  |  |     virtual UClassID getDynamicClassID(void) const;  | 
1020  |  |  | 
1021  |  |     /**  | 
1022  |  |      * Sets the decimal format symbols, which is generally not changed  | 
1023  |  |      * by the programmer or user. The formatter takes ownership of  | 
1024  |  |      * symbolsToAdopt; the client must not delete it.  | 
1025  |  |      *  | 
1026  |  |      * @param symbolsToAdopt DecimalFormatSymbols to be adopted.  | 
1027  |  |      * @stable ICU 49  | 
1028  |  |      */  | 
1029  |  |     virtual void adoptDecimalFormatSymbols(DecimalFormatSymbols* symbolsToAdopt);  | 
1030  |  |  | 
1031  |  |     /**  | 
1032  |  |      * Sets the decimal format symbols, which is generally not changed  | 
1033  |  |      * by the programmer or user. A clone of the symbols is created and  | 
1034  |  |      * the symbols is _not_ adopted; the client is still responsible for  | 
1035  |  |      * deleting it.  | 
1036  |  |      *  | 
1037  |  |      * @param symbols DecimalFormatSymbols.  | 
1038  |  |      * @stable ICU 49  | 
1039  |  |      */  | 
1040  |  |     virtual void setDecimalFormatSymbols(const DecimalFormatSymbols& symbols);  | 
1041  |  |  | 
1042  |  | private:  | 
1043  |  |     RuleBasedNumberFormat(); // default constructor not implemented  | 
1044  |  |  | 
1045  |  |     // this will ref the localizations if they are not NULL  | 
1046  |  |     // caller must deref to get adoption  | 
1047  |  |     RuleBasedNumberFormat(const UnicodeString& description, LocalizationInfo* localizations,  | 
1048  |  |               const Locale& locale, UParseError& perror, UErrorCode& status);  | 
1049  |  |  | 
1050  |  |     void init(const UnicodeString& rules, LocalizationInfo* localizations, UParseError& perror, UErrorCode& status);  | 
1051  |  |     void initCapitalizationContextInfo(const Locale& thelocale);  | 
1052  |  |     void dispose();  | 
1053  |  |     void stripWhitespace(UnicodeString& src);  | 
1054  |  |     void initDefaultRuleSet();  | 
1055  |  |     NFRuleSet* findRuleSet(const UnicodeString& name, UErrorCode& status) const;  | 
1056  |  |  | 
1057  |  |     /* friend access */  | 
1058  |  |     friend class NFSubstitution;  | 
1059  |  |     friend class NFRule;  | 
1060  |  |     friend class NFRuleSet;  | 
1061  |  |     friend class FractionalPartSubstitution;  | 
1062  |  |  | 
1063  |  |     inline NFRuleSet * getDefaultRuleSet() const;  | 
1064  |  |     const RuleBasedCollator * getCollator() const;  | 
1065  |  |     DecimalFormatSymbols * initializeDecimalFormatSymbols(UErrorCode &status);  | 
1066  |  |     const DecimalFormatSymbols * getDecimalFormatSymbols() const;  | 
1067  |  |     NFRule * initializeDefaultInfinityRule(UErrorCode &status);  | 
1068  |  |     const NFRule * getDefaultInfinityRule() const;  | 
1069  |  |     NFRule * initializeDefaultNaNRule(UErrorCode &status);  | 
1070  |  |     const NFRule * getDefaultNaNRule() const;  | 
1071  |  |     PluralFormat *createPluralFormat(UPluralType pluralType, const UnicodeString &pattern, UErrorCode& status) const;  | 
1072  |  |     UnicodeString& adjustForCapitalizationContext(int32_t startPos, UnicodeString& currentResult, UErrorCode& status) const;  | 
1073  |  |     UnicodeString& format(int64_t number, NFRuleSet *ruleSet, UnicodeString& toAppendTo, UErrorCode& status) const;  | 
1074  |  |     void format(double number, NFRuleSet& rs, UnicodeString& toAppendTo, UErrorCode& status) const;  | 
1075  |  |  | 
1076  |  | private:  | 
1077  |  |     NFRuleSet **fRuleSets;  | 
1078  |  |     UnicodeString* ruleSetDescriptions;  | 
1079  |  |     int32_t numRuleSets;  | 
1080  |  |     NFRuleSet *defaultRuleSet;  | 
1081  |  |     Locale locale;  | 
1082  |  |     RuleBasedCollator* collator;  | 
1083  |  |     DecimalFormatSymbols* decimalFormatSymbols;  | 
1084  |  |     NFRule *defaultInfinityRule;  | 
1085  |  |     NFRule *defaultNaNRule;  | 
1086  |  |     ERoundingMode fRoundingMode;  | 
1087  |  |     UBool lenient;  | 
1088  |  |     UnicodeString* lenientParseRules;  | 
1089  |  |     LocalizationInfo* localizations;  | 
1090  |  |     UnicodeString originalDescription;  | 
1091  |  |     UBool capitalizationInfoSet;  | 
1092  |  |     UBool capitalizationForUIListMenu;  | 
1093  |  |     UBool capitalizationForStandAlone;  | 
1094  |  |     BreakIterator* capitalizationBrkIter;  | 
1095  |  | };  | 
1096  |  |  | 
1097  |  | // ---------------  | 
1098  |  |  | 
1099  |  | #if !UCONFIG_NO_COLLATION  | 
1100  |  |  | 
1101  |  | inline UBool  | 
1102  | 0  | RuleBasedNumberFormat::isLenient(void) const { | 
1103  | 0  |     return lenient;  | 
1104  | 0  | }  | 
1105  |  |  | 
1106  |  | #endif  | 
1107  |  |  | 
1108  |  | inline NFRuleSet*  | 
1109  | 0  | RuleBasedNumberFormat::getDefaultRuleSet() const { | 
1110  | 0  |     return defaultRuleSet;  | 
1111  | 0  | }  | 
1112  |  |  | 
1113  |  | U_NAMESPACE_END  | 
1114  |  |  | 
1115  |  | /* U_HAVE_RBNF */  | 
1116  |  | #endif  | 
1117  |  |  | 
1118  |  | #endif /* U_SHOW_CPLUSPLUS_API */  | 
1119  |  |  | 
1120  |  | /* RBNF_H */  | 
1121  |  | #endif  |