I am trying to extract the characters from a string of a word in Slovak. For example, the word for "TURTLE" is "KORYTNAČKA". However, it skips over the "Č" character when I try to extract it from the string:
local str = "KORYTNAČKA"
for c in str:gmatch("%a") do print(c) end
--result: K,O,R,Y,T,N,A,K,A
I am reading this page and I have also tried just pasting in the string itself as a set, but it comes up with something weird:
local str = "KORYTNAČKA"
for c in str:gmatch("["..str.."]") do print(c) end
--result: K,O,R,Y,T,N,A,Ä,Œ,K,A
Anyone know how to solve this?
Lua has no built-in treatment for Unicode strings. You can see that
Ä,Œ
is a 2 bytes representing UTF-8 encoding of aČ
character.Yu Hao already provided sample solution, but for more details here is good source.
I've tested and found this solution working properly in Lua 5.1, reserve link. You could extract individual characters using
utf8sub
function, see sample.Use utf8 plugin. Then replace
string.gmatch
withutf8.gmatch
.Example (tested on Win7, it works for me)
and
Read more :
Have a nice day:)
Lua is 8-bit clean, which means Lua strings assume every character is one byte. The pattern
"%a"
matches one-byte character, so the result is not what you expected.The pattern
"["..str.."]"
works because, a Unicode character may contain more than one byte, in this pattern, it uses these bytes in a set, so that it could match the character.If UTF-8 is used, you can use the pattern
"[\0-\x7F\xC2-\xF4][\x80-\xBF]*"
to match a single UTF-8 byte sequence in Lua 5.2, like this:In Lua 5.1(which is the version Corona SDK is using), use this:
For details about this pattern, see Equivalent pattern to “[\0-\x7F\xC2-\xF4][\x80-\xBF]*” in Lua 5.1.