note
graff
Larry Wall recently posted this nifty little script on the perl-unicode mail list -- here it is, pretty much verbatim (I added the "S" on the shebang line, to make STDIN/STDOUT/STDERR be utf8):
<code>
#!/usr/bin/perl -CS
$pat = shift;
if (ord $pat > 256) {
$pat = sprintf("%04x", ord $pat);
}
elsif (ord $pat > 128) { # arg in sneaky UTF-8
$pat = sprintf("%04x", unpack("U0U",$pat));
}
@names = split /^/, do 'unicore/Name.pl';
for (@names) {
if (/$pat/io) {
$hex = hex($_);
print chr($hex),"\t",$_;
}
}
</code>
The idea is to output a list of unicode code points (if any) that match any given expression you put into <code> $ARGV[0] </code> -- here's a relevant command-line usage example (Larry had this script in a file named "uni"):
<code>
uni "latin (?:small|capital) letter A with"
</code>
(update: if you try this, you'll want to be running in a terminal window that handles utf8 characters!)
<P>
So, all you need for what you want is the part that assigns the output of "unicode/Name.pl" to an array -- this gives you the unicode character database -- and grep through the array to get the set of vowels you want. Then, put the first token (first character in each array element is the utf8 character itself) into a character-class expression.
Something like:
<code>
my @names = split/^/, do 'unicore/Name.pl';
#...
my @vowelsets;
for my $v ( qw/A E I O U/ ) {
push( @vowelsets,
join( '', map { chr hex( substr $_, 0, 4 ) }
grep /LATIN (?:SMALL|CAPITAL) LETTER $v/, @names ));
}
# now you can use each element of @vowelsets as a character class
# (similiarly for consonants...)
</code>
(updated this snippet: changed the map block from a regex to substr; updated a second time to use "chr hex()" in the map block -- each element of @names begins with a four-digit hex code-point value, which needs to be converted to a character.)
<P>
Still a bit cumbersome, I suppose, but quite manageable and not that bulky.
416513
416513