am e8db06fc: Merge "Replace immediate values with named constants for characters (A6)" into jb-mr1-dev
* commit 'e8db06fc023eed076776185e8148d491493a18d9': Replace immediate values with named constants for characters (A6)main
commit
e5db4c815d
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@ -57,6 +57,8 @@ public class Keyboard {
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public static final int CODE_DASH = '-';
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public static final int CODE_SINGLE_QUOTE = '\'';
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public static final int CODE_DOUBLE_QUOTE = '"';
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public static final int CODE_QUESTION_MARK = '?';
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public static final int CODE_EXCLAMATION_MARK = '!';
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// TODO: Check how this should work for right-to-left languages. It seems to stand
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// that for rtl languages, a closing parenthesis is a left parenthesis. Is this
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// managed by the font? Or is it a different char?
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@ -18,6 +18,8 @@ package com.android.inputmethod.latin;
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import android.text.TextUtils;
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import com.android.inputmethod.keyboard.Keyboard; // For character constants
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import java.util.ArrayList;
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import java.util.Locale;
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@ -246,7 +248,8 @@ public final class StringUtils {
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int i;
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for (i = cs.length(); i > 0; i--) {
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final char c = cs.charAt(i - 1);
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if (c != '"' && c != '\'' && Character.getType(c) != Character.START_PUNCTUATION) {
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if (c != Keyboard.CODE_DOUBLE_QUOTE && c != Keyboard.CODE_SINGLE_QUOTE
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&& Character.getType(c) != Character.START_PUNCTUATION) {
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break;
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}
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}
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@ -294,14 +297,16 @@ public final class StringUtils {
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// (note that American rules and British rules have nothing to do with en_US and en_GB,
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// as both rules are used in both countries - it's merely a name for the set of rules)
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final char c = cs.charAt(j - 1);
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if (c != '"' && c != '\'' && Character.getType(c) != Character.END_PUNCTUATION) {
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if (c != Keyboard.CODE_DOUBLE_QUOTE && c != Keyboard.CODE_SINGLE_QUOTE
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&& Character.getType(c) != Character.END_PUNCTUATION) {
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break;
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}
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}
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if (j <= 0) return TextUtils.CAP_MODE_CHARACTERS & reqModes;
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char c = cs.charAt(j - 1);
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if (c == '.' || c == '?' || c == '!') {
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if (c == Keyboard.CODE_PERIOD || c == Keyboard.CODE_QUESTION_MARK
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|| c == Keyboard.CODE_EXCLAMATION_MARK) {
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// Here we found a marker for sentence end (we consider these to be one of
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// either . or ? or ! only). So this is probably the end of a sentence, but if we
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// found a period, we still want to check the case where this is a abbreviation
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@ -314,10 +319,10 @@ public final class StringUtils {
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// whatever the reason. In the example "in the U.S..", the last period is a full
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// stop following the abbreviation period, and we should capitalize but we don't.
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// Likewise, "I don't know... " should capitalize, but fails to do so.
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if (c == '.') {
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if (c == Keyboard.CODE_PERIOD) {
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for (int k = j - 2; k >= 0; k--) {
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c = cs.charAt(k);
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if (c == '.') {
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if (c == Keyboard.CODE_PERIOD) {
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return TextUtils.CAP_MODE_CHARACTERS & reqModes;
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}
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if (!Character.isLetter(c)) {
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