blob: 558e677b5f947e42244c61f458ae87c188a10d36 [file] [log] [blame]
/*
*******************************************************************************
* Copyright (C) 2005, International Business Machines Corporation and *
* others. All Rights Reserved. *
*******************************************************************************
*/
package com.ibm.icu.dev.test.normalizer;
import com.ibm.icu.dev.test.TestFmwk;
import com.ibm.icu.text.Normalizer;
public class NormalizerRegressionTests extends TestFmwk {
public static void main(String[] args) throws Exception {
new NormalizerRegressionTests().run(args);
}
public void TestJB4472() {
// submitter's test case
String tamil = "\u0b87\u0ba8\u0bcd\u0ba4\u0bbf\u0baf\u0bbe";
logln("Normalized: " + Normalizer.isNormalized(tamil, Normalizer.NFC, 0));
// markus's test case
// the combining cedilla can't be applied to 'b', so this is in normalized form.
// but the isNormalized test identifies the cedilla as a 'maybe' and so tries
// to normalize the relevant substring ("b\u0327")and compare the result to the
// original. the original code was passing in the start and length of the
// substring (3, 5-3 = 2) but the called code was expecting start and limit.
// it subtracted the start again to get what it thought was the length, but
// ended up with -1. the loop was incrementing an index from 0 and testing
// against length, but 0 was never == -1 before it walked off the array end.
// a workaround in lieu of this patch is to catch the exception and always
// normalize.
// this should return true, since the string is normalized (and it should
// not throw an exception!)
String sample = "aaab\u0327";
logln("Normalized: " + Normalizer.isNormalized(sample, Normalizer.NFC, 0));
// this should return false, since the string is _not_ normalized (and it should
// not throw an exception!)
String sample2 = "aaac\u0327";
logln("Normalized: " + Normalizer.isNormalized(sample2, Normalizer.NFC, 0));
}
}