ergo/irc/strings.go

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2014-03-09 21:45:36 +01:00
package irc
import (
"code.google.com/p/go.text/unicode/norm"
"regexp"
"strings"
)
var (
// regexps
ChannelNameExpr = regexp.MustCompile(`^[&!#+][\pL\pN]{1,63}$`)
NicknameExpr = regexp.MustCompile("^[\\pL\\pN\\pP\\pS]{1,32}$")
)
// Names are normalized and canonicalized to remove formatting marks
// and simplify usage. They are things like hostnames and usermasks.
type Name string
func NewName(str string) Name {
return Name(norm.NFKC.String(str))
}
func NewNames(strs []string) []Name {
names := make([]Name, len(strs))
for index, str := range strs {
names[index] = NewName(str)
}
return names
}
// tests
func (name Name) IsChannel() bool {
return ChannelNameExpr.MatchString(name.String())
}
func (name Name) IsNickname() bool {
return NicknameExpr.MatchString(name.String())
}
// conversions
func (name Name) String() string {
return string(name)
}
func (name Name) ToLower() Name {
return Name(strings.ToLower(name.String()))
}
// It's safe to coerce a Name to Text. Name is a strict subset of Text.
func (name Name) Text() Text {
return Text(name)
}
// Text is PRIVMSG, NOTICE, or TOPIC data. It's canonicalized UTF8
// data to simplify but keeps all formatting.
type Text string
func NewText(str string) Text {
return Text(norm.NFC.String(str))
}
func (text Text) String() string {
return string(text)
}
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// CTCPText is text suitably escaped for CTCP.
type CTCPText string
var ctcpEscaper = strings.NewReplacer("\x00", "\x200", "\n", "\x20n", "\r", "\x20r")
func NewCTCPText(str string) CTCPText {
return CTCPText(ctcpEscaper.Replace(str))
}