BSD-3-Clause licensed by Mark Wotton
Maintained by [email protected]
This version can be pinned in stack with:unidecode-0.1.0.4@sha256:99581ee1ea334a4596a09ae3642e007808457c66893b587e965b31f15cbf8c4d,1144

Module documentation for 0.1.0.4

Depends on 1 package(full list with versions):
Used by 1 package in nightly-2024-09-12(full list with versions):

Unidecode: a transliterator of last resort

So, for some reason you’re stuck in the 90s and can’t use UTF text. Punycode isn’t cutting it? Fine: Unidecode will help you murder some carefully constructed text into something vaguely readable in good ol’ “I don’t wanna learn anything”-ASCII.

There’s one function, unidecode :: Char -> String. If you have more text, I’m sure you can foldMap & pack it.

(This is sourced ultimately from Unicode.PM, but I scavenged the tables from Carter Schonwald, who graciously allowed usage.)

Why did you write a bunch of C, Mark? Don’t you like Haskell?

GHC compiled a big Haskell literal list fine, then crashed at runtime with some weaksauce excuse about “i can’t handle something that big, the compiler should have rejected it”. Cons cells are for closers, RTS.

The other approach that Carter took was to build an IntMap on top of the C data structures, but for reasons I still can’t quite comprehend, it didn’t pass the stack-leak detection trick at https://neilmitchell.blogspot.de/2015/09/detecting-space-leaks.html

quick bsearch did the job (and I learned in the process that a Haskell project is not a bad way to build C code).

issues/PRs all welcome, but hopefully there’s not anything missing.