LatinIME/java/src/com/android/inputmethod/latin/LastComposedWord.java

87 lines
3.6 KiB
Java

/*
* Copyright (C) 2012 The Android Open Source Project
*
* Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License"); you may not
* use this file except in compliance with the License. You may obtain a copy of
* the License at
*
* http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
*
* Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
* distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS, WITHOUT
* WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. See the
* License for the specific language governing permissions and limitations under
* the License.
*/
package com.android.inputmethod.latin;
import android.text.TextUtils;
/**
* This class encapsulates data about a word previously composed, but that has been
* committed already. This is used for resuming suggestion, and cancel auto-correction.
*/
public final class LastComposedWord {
// COMMIT_TYPE_USER_TYPED_WORD is used when the word committed is the exact typed word, with
// no hinting from the IME. It happens when some external event happens (rotating the device,
// for example) or when auto-correction is off by settings or editor attributes.
public static final int COMMIT_TYPE_USER_TYPED_WORD = 0;
// COMMIT_TYPE_MANUAL_PICK is used when the user pressed a field in the suggestion strip.
public static final int COMMIT_TYPE_MANUAL_PICK = 1;
// COMMIT_TYPE_DECIDED_WORD is used when the IME commits the word it decided was best
// for the current user input. It may be different from what the user typed (true auto-correct)
// or it may be exactly what the user typed if it's in the dictionary or the IME does not have
// enough confidence in any suggestion to auto-correct (auto-correct to typed word).
public static final int COMMIT_TYPE_DECIDED_WORD = 2;
// COMMIT_TYPE_CANCEL_AUTO_CORRECT is used upon committing back the old word upon cancelling
// an auto-correction.
public static final int COMMIT_TYPE_CANCEL_AUTO_CORRECT = 3;
public static final String NOT_A_SEPARATOR = "";
public final int[] mPrimaryKeyCodes;
public final String mTypedWord;
public final String mCommittedWord;
public final String mSeparatorString;
public final String mPrevWord;
public final InputPointers mInputPointers = new InputPointers(BinaryDictionary.MAX_WORD_LENGTH);
private boolean mActive;
public static final LastComposedWord NOT_A_COMPOSED_WORD =
new LastComposedWord(null, null, "", "", NOT_A_SEPARATOR, null);
// Warning: this is using the passed objects as is and fully expects them to be
// immutable. Do not fiddle with their contents after you passed them to this constructor.
public LastComposedWord(final int[] primaryKeyCodes, final InputPointers inputPointers,
final String typedWord, final String committedWord,
final String separatorString, final String prevWord) {
mPrimaryKeyCodes = primaryKeyCodes;
if (inputPointers != null) {
mInputPointers.copy(inputPointers);
}
mTypedWord = typedWord;
mCommittedWord = committedWord;
mSeparatorString = separatorString;
mActive = true;
mPrevWord = prevWord;
}
public void deactivate() {
mActive = false;
}
public boolean canRevertCommit() {
return mActive && !TextUtils.isEmpty(mCommittedWord) && !didCommitTypedWord();
}
private boolean didCommitTypedWord() {
return TextUtils.equals(mTypedWord, mCommittedWord);
}
public static int getSeparatorLength(final String separatorString) {
return StringUtils.codePointCount(separatorString);
}
}