commit | d03b41800055b01e3895b1e047af09733c93bf63 | [log] [tgz] |
---|---|---|
author | Russ Cox <rsc@golang.org> | Fri Jul 22 11:11:07 2022 -0400 |
committer | Russ Cox <rsc@golang.org> | Fri Jul 22 15:53:01 2022 +0000 |
tree | 506bd665bc7dac268dd72e03ca15f0887ec2adac | |
parent | b4bca84b03619dba00657375259024a7f8ae6712 [diff] |
A+C: delete AUTHORS and CONTRIBUTORS In 2009, Google's open-source lawyers asked us to create the AUTHORS file to define "The Go Authors", and the CONTRIBUTORS file was in keeping with open source best practices of the time. Re-reviewing our repos now in 2022, the open-source lawyers are comfortable with source control history taking the place of the AUTHORS file, and most open source projects no longer maintain CONTRIBUTORS files. To ease maintenance, remove AUTHORS and CONTRIBUTORS from all repos. For golang/go#53961. Change-Id: I3abeb5f16d9a9446e16a3a5318d22a9c622db0b6 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/text/+/418923 TryBot-Result: Gopher Robot <gobot@golang.org> Reviewed-by: David Chase <drchase@google.com> Run-TryBot: Russ Cox <rsc@golang.org>
This repository holds supplementary Go libraries for text processing, many involving Unicode.
This repo uses Semantic versioning (http://semver.org/), so
Until version 1.0.0 of x/text is reached, the minor version is considered a major version. So going from 0.1.0 to 0.2.0 is considered to be a major version bump.
A major new CLDR version is mapped to a minor version increase in x/text. Any other new CLDR version is mapped to a patch version increase in x/text.
It is important that the Unicode version used in x/text
matches the one used by your Go compiler. The x/text
repository supports multiple versions of Unicode and will match the version of Unicode to that of the Go compiler. At the moment this is supported for Go compilers from version 1.7.
The easiest way to install is to run go get -u golang.org/x/text
. You can also manually git clone the repository to $GOPATH/src/golang.org/x/text
.
To submit changes to this repository, see http://golang.org/doc/contribute.html.
To generate the tables in this repository (except for the encoding tables), run go generate from this directory. By default tables are generated for the Unicode version in core and the CLDR version defined in golang.org/x/text/unicode/cldr.
Running go generate will as a side effect create a DATA subdirectory in this directory, which holds all files that are used as a source for generating the tables. This directory will also serve as a cache.
Run
go test ./...
from this directory to run all tests. Add the “-tags icu” flag to also run ICU conformance tests (if available). This requires that you have the correct ICU version installed on your system.
TODO:
To generate the tables in this repository (except for the encoding tables), run go generate
from this directory. By default tables are generated for the Unicode version in core and the CLDR version defined in golang.org/x/text/unicode/cldr.
Running go generate will as a side effect create a DATA subdirectory in this directory which holds all files that are used as a source for generating the tables. This directory will also serve as a cache.
To update a Unicode version run
UNICODE_VERSION=x.x.x go generate
where x.x.x
must correspond to a directory in https://www.unicode.org/Public/. If this version is newer than the version in core it will also update the relevant packages there. The idna package in x/net will always be updated.
To update a CLDR version run
CLDR_VERSION=version go generate
where version
must correspond to a directory in https://www.unicode.org/Public/cldr/.
Note that the code gets adapted over time to changes in the data and that backwards compatibility is not maintained. So updating to a different version may not work.
The files in DATA/{iana|icu|w3|whatwg} are currently not versioned.
This repository uses Gerrit for code changes. To learn how to submit changes to this repository, see https://golang.org/doc/contribute.html.
The main issue tracker for the image repository is located at https://github.com/golang/go/issues. Prefix your issue with “x/text:” in the subject line, so it is easy to find.