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typesetting/hyphenate/scribblings/hyphenate.scrbl

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#lang scribble/manual
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@(require scribble/eval (for-label racket "../main.rkt"))
@(define my-eval (make-base-eval))
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@(my-eval `(require hyphenate))
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@title{Hyphenate}
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@author[(author+email "Matthew Butterick" "mb@mbtype.com")]
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A simple hyphenation engine that uses the KnuthLiang hyphenation algorithm originally developed for TeX. This implementation is a port of Ned Batchelder's @link["http://nedbatchelder.com/code/modules/hyphenate.html"]{Python version}. I have added little to their work. Accordingly, I take little credit.
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I originally put together this module to handle hyphenation for my web-based book @link["http://practicaltypography.com"]{Butterick's Practical Typography} (which I made with Racket & Scribble). Though support for CSS-based hyphenation in web browsers is @link["http://caniuse.com/#search=hyphen"]{still iffy}, soft hyphens work reliably well. But putting them into the text manually is a drag. Thus a module was born.
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@section{Installation & updates}
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At the command line:
@verbatim{raco pkg install hyphenate}
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After that, you can update the package from the command line:
@verbatim{raco pkg update hyphenate}
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@section{Interface}
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@defmodule[hyphenate]
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@defproc[
(hyphenate
[text string?]
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[joiner (or/c char? string?) (integer->char #x00AD)]
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[#:exceptions exceptions (listof string?) empty]
[#:min-length length (or/c integer? false?) 5])
string?]
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Hyphenate @racket[_text] by calculating hyphenation points and inserting @racket[_joiner] at those points. By default, @racket[_joiner] is the soft hyphen (Unicode 00AD = decimal 173). Words shorter than @racket[#:min-length] @racket[_length] will not be hyphenated. To hyphenate words of any length, use @racket[#:min-length] @racket[#f].
@margin-note{The REPL displays a soft hyphen as \u00AD. But in ordinary use, you'll only see a soft hyphen when it appears at the end of a line or page as part of a hyphenated word. Otherwise it's not displayed. In most of the examples here, I use a standard hyphen for clarity.}
@examples[#:eval my-eval
(hyphenate "ergo polymorphic")
(hyphenate "ergo polymorphic" #\-)
(hyphenate "ergo polymorphic" #:min-length 13)
(hyphenate "ergo polymorphic" #:min-length #f)
]
Because the hyphenation is based on an algorithm rather than a dictionary, it makes good guesses with unusual words:
@examples[#:eval my-eval
(hyphenate "scraunched strengths" #\-)
(hyphenate "Racketcon" #\-)
(hyphenate "supercalifragilisticexpialidocious" #\-)
]
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Using the @racket[#:exceptions] keyword, you can pass hyphenation exceptions as a list of words with hyphenation points marked with regular hyphens (@racket["-"]). If an exception word contains no hyphens, that word will never be hyphenated.
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@examples[#:eval my-eval
(hyphenate "polymorphic" #\-)
(hyphenate "polymorphic" #\- #:exceptions '("polymo-rphic"))
(hyphenate "polymorphic" #\- #:exceptions '("polymorphic"))
]
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Knuth & Liang were sufficiently confident about their algorithm that they originally released it with only 14 exceptions: @italic{associate[s], declination, obligatory, philanthropic, present[s], project[s], reciprocity, recognizance, reformation, retribution}, and @italic{table}. Admirable bravado, but it's not hard to discover others that need adjustment.
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@examples[#:eval my-eval
(hyphenate "wrong: columns signage lawyers" #\-)
(hyphenate "right: columns signage lawyers" #\-
#:exceptions '("col-umns" "sign-age" "law-yers"))
]
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Overall, my impression is that the KnuthLiang algorithm is more likely to miss legitimate hyphenation points (i.e., generate false negatives) than create erroneous hyphenation points (i.e., false positives). This is good policy. Perfect hyphenation — that is, hyphenation that represents an exact linguistic syllabification of each word — is superfluous for typesetting. Hyphenation simply seeks to mark possible line-break and page-break locations for whatever layout engine is drawing the text. The ultimate goal is to permit more even text flow. Like horseshoes and hand grenades, close is good enough. And a word wrongly hyphenated is more likely to be noticed by a reader than a word inefficiently hyphenated.
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For this reason, certain words can't be hyphenated algorithmically, because the correct hyphenation depends on meaning, not merely on spelling. For instance:
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@examples[#:eval my-eval
(hyphenate "adder")
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]
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This is the right result. If you used @italic{adder} to mean the machine, it would be hyphenated @italic{add-er}; if you meant the snake, it would be @italic{ad-der}. Better to avoid hyphenation than to hyphenate incorrectly.
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Don't send raw HTML through @racket[hyphenate]. It can't distinguish HTML tags and attributes from textual content, so it will hyphenate everything, which will goof up your file.
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@examples[#:eval my-eval
(hyphenate "<body style=\"background: yellow\">Hello world</body>")
]
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Instead, send your textual content through @racket[hyphenate] @italic{before} you put it into your HTML template. Or convert your HTML to an X-expression and process it selectively (e.g., with @racket[match]).
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@defproc[
(hyphenatef
[text string?]
[pred procedure?]
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[joiner (or/c char? string?) (integer->char \#x00AD)]
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[#:exceptions exceptions (listof string?) empty]
[#:min-length length (or/c integer? false?) 5])
string?]
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Like @racket[hyphenate], but only words matching @racket[_pred] are hyphenated. Convenient if you want to prevent hyphenation of certain sets of words, like proper names:
@examples[#:eval my-eval
(hyphenate "Brennan Huff likes fancy sauce" #\-)
(define uncapitalized? (λ(word) (let ([letter (substring word 0 1)])
(equal? letter (string-downcase letter)))))
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(hyphenatef "Brennan Huff likes fancy sauce" uncapitalized? #\-)
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]
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Sometimes you need @racket[hyphenatef] to prevent unintended consequences. For instance, if you're using ligatures in CSS, certain groups of characters (fi, fl, ffi, et al.) will be replaced by a single glyph. That looks snazzy, but adding soft hyphens between any of these pairs will defeat the ligature substitution, creating inconsistent results. With @racket[hyphenatef], you can skip these words:
@examples[#:eval my-eval
(hyphenate "Hufflepuff golfing final on Tuesday" #\-)
(define (no-ligs? word)
(not (ormap (λ(lig) (regexp-match lig word)) '("ff" "fi" "fl" "ffi" "ffl"))))
(hyphenatef "Hufflepuff golfing final on Tuesday" no-ligs? #\-)
]
It's possible to do fancier kinds of hyphenation restrictions that take account of context, like not hyphenating the last word of a paragraph. But @racket[hyphenatef] only operates on words. So you'll have to write some fancier code. Separate out the words eligible for hyphenation, and then send them through good old @racket[hyphenate].
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@defproc[
(unhyphenate
[text string?]
[joiner (or/c char? string?) @(integer->char #x00AD)])
string?]
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Remove @racket[_joiner] from @racket[_text] using @racket[string-replace].
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A side effect of using @racket[hyphenate] is that soft hyphens (or whatever the @racket[_joiner] is) will be embedded in the output text. If you need to support copying of text, for instance in a GUI application, you'll probably want to strip out the hyphenation before the copied text is moved to the clipboard.
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@examples[#:eval my-eval
(hyphenate "ribbon-cutting ceremony")
(unhyphenate (hyphenate "ribbon-cutting ceremony"))
]
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Use this function cautiously — if @racket[_joiner] appeared in the original input to @racket[hyphenate], the output from @racket[unhyphenate] won't be the same string.
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@examples[#:eval my-eval
(hyphenate "ribbon-cutting ceremony" #\-)
(unhyphenate (hyphenate "ribbon-cutting ceremony" #\-) #\-)
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]
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It's also possible that soft hyphens could appear in your input string. Certain word processors allow users to @link["http://practicaltypography.com/optional-hyphens.html"]{insert soft hyphens} in their text.
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@examples[#:eval my-eval
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(hyphenate "True\u00ADType typefaces")
(unhyphenate (hyphenate "True\u00ADType typefaces"))
(hyphenate (unhyphenate "True\u00ADType typefaces") #\-)
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]
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@section{License & source code}
This module is licensed under the LGPL.
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Source repository at @link["http://github.com/mbutterick/hyphenate"]{http://github.com/mbutterick/hyphenate}. Suggestions & corrections welcome.
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