summaryrefslogtreecommitdiff
path: root/vendor/textwrap/src
diff options
context:
space:
mode:
Diffstat (limited to 'vendor/textwrap/src')
-rw-r--r--vendor/textwrap/src/core.rs433
-rw-r--r--vendor/textwrap/src/indentation.rs347
-rw-r--r--vendor/textwrap/src/lib.rs1847
-rw-r--r--vendor/textwrap/src/word_separators.rs428
-rw-r--r--vendor/textwrap/src/word_splitters.rs314
-rw-r--r--vendor/textwrap/src/wrap_algorithms.rs381
-rw-r--r--vendor/textwrap/src/wrap_algorithms/optimal_fit.rs433
7 files changed, 4183 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/vendor/textwrap/src/core.rs b/vendor/textwrap/src/core.rs
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..0ab4ef8
--- /dev/null
+++ b/vendor/textwrap/src/core.rs
@@ -0,0 +1,433 @@
+//! Building blocks for advanced wrapping functionality.
+//!
+//! The functions and structs in this module can be used to implement
+//! advanced wrapping functionality when the [`wrap`](super::wrap) and
+//! [`fill`](super::fill) function don't do what you want.
+//!
+//! In general, you want to follow these steps when wrapping
+//! something:
+//!
+//! 1. Split your input into [`Fragment`]s. These are abstract blocks
+//! of text or content which can be wrapped into lines. See
+//! [`WordSeparator`](crate::word_separators::WordSeparator) for
+//! how to do this for text.
+//!
+//! 2. Potentially split your fragments into smaller pieces. This
+//! allows you to implement things like hyphenation. If you use the
+//! `Word` type, you can use [`WordSplitter`](crate::WordSplitter)
+//! enum for this.
+//!
+//! 3. Potentially break apart fragments that are still too large to
+//! fit on a single line. This is implemented in [`break_words`].
+//!
+//! 4. Finally take your fragments and put them into lines. There are
+//! two algorithms for this in the
+//! [`wrap_algorithms`](crate::wrap_algorithms) module:
+//! [`wrap_optimal_fit`](crate::wrap_algorithms::wrap_optimal_fit)
+//! and [`wrap_first_fit`](crate::wrap_algorithms::wrap_first_fit).
+//! The former produces better line breaks, the latter is faster.
+//!
+//! 5. Iterate through the slices returned by the wrapping functions
+//! and construct your lines of output.
+//!
+//! Please [open an issue](https://github.com/mgeisler/textwrap/) if
+//! the functionality here is not sufficient or if you have ideas for
+//! improving it. We would love to hear from you!
+
+/// The CSI or “Control Sequence Introducer” introduces an ANSI escape
+/// sequence. This is typically used for colored text and will be
+/// ignored when computing the text width.
+const CSI: (char, char) = ('\x1b', '[');
+/// The final bytes of an ANSI escape sequence must be in this range.
+const ANSI_FINAL_BYTE: std::ops::RangeInclusive<char> = '\x40'..='\x7e';
+
+/// Skip ANSI escape sequences. The `ch` is the current `char`, the
+/// `chars` provide the following characters. The `chars` will be
+/// modified if `ch` is the start of an ANSI escape sequence.
+#[inline]
+pub(crate) fn skip_ansi_escape_sequence<I: Iterator<Item = char>>(ch: char, chars: &mut I) -> bool {
+ if ch == CSI.0 && chars.next() == Some(CSI.1) {
+ // We have found the start of an ANSI escape code, typically
+ // used for colored terminal text. We skip until we find a
+ // "final byte" in the range 0x40–0x7E.
+ for ch in chars {
+ if ANSI_FINAL_BYTE.contains(&ch) {
+ return true;
+ }
+ }
+ }
+ false
+}
+
+#[cfg(feature = "unicode-width")]
+#[inline]
+fn ch_width(ch: char) -> usize {
+ unicode_width::UnicodeWidthChar::width(ch).unwrap_or(0)
+}
+
+/// First character which [`ch_width`] will classify as double-width.
+/// Please see [`display_width`].
+#[cfg(not(feature = "unicode-width"))]
+const DOUBLE_WIDTH_CUTOFF: char = '\u{1100}';
+
+#[cfg(not(feature = "unicode-width"))]
+#[inline]
+fn ch_width(ch: char) -> usize {
+ if ch < DOUBLE_WIDTH_CUTOFF {
+ 1
+ } else {
+ 2
+ }
+}
+
+/// Compute the display width of `text` while skipping over ANSI
+/// escape sequences.
+///
+/// # Examples
+///
+/// ```
+/// use textwrap::core::display_width;
+///
+/// assert_eq!(display_width("Café Plain"), 10);
+/// assert_eq!(display_width("\u{1b}[31mCafé Rouge\u{1b}[0m"), 10);
+/// ```
+///
+/// **Note:** When the `unicode-width` Cargo feature is disabled, the
+/// width of a `char` is determined by a crude approximation which
+/// simply counts chars below U+1100 as 1 column wide, and all other
+/// characters as 2 columns wide. With the feature enabled, function
+/// will correctly deal with [combining characters] in their
+/// decomposed form (see [Unicode equivalence]).
+///
+/// An example of a decomposed character is “é”, which can be
+/// decomposed into: “e” followed by a combining acute accent: “◌́”.
+/// Without the `unicode-width` Cargo feature, every `char` below
+/// U+1100 has a width of 1. This includes the combining accent:
+///
+/// ```
+/// use textwrap::core::display_width;
+///
+/// assert_eq!(display_width("Cafe Plain"), 10);
+/// #[cfg(feature = "unicode-width")]
+/// assert_eq!(display_width("Cafe\u{301} Plain"), 10);
+/// #[cfg(not(feature = "unicode-width"))]
+/// assert_eq!(display_width("Cafe\u{301} Plain"), 11);
+/// ```
+///
+/// ## Emojis and CJK Characters
+///
+/// Characters such as emojis and [CJK characters] used in the
+/// Chinese, Japanese, and Korean langauges are seen as double-width,
+/// even if the `unicode-width` feature is disabled:
+///
+/// ```
+/// use textwrap::core::display_width;
+///
+/// assert_eq!(display_width("😂😭🥺🤣✨😍🙏🥰😊🔥"), 20);
+/// assert_eq!(display_width("你好"), 4); // “Nǐ hǎo” or “Hello” in Chinese
+/// ```
+///
+/// # Limitations
+///
+/// The displayed width of a string cannot always be computed from the
+/// string alone. This is because the width depends on the rendering
+/// engine used. This is particularly visible with [emoji modifier
+/// sequences] where a base emoji is modified with, e.g., skin tone or
+/// hair color modifiers. It is up to the rendering engine to detect
+/// this and to produce a suitable emoji.
+///
+/// A simple example is “❤️”, which consists of “❤” (U+2764: Black
+/// Heart Symbol) followed by U+FE0F (Variation Selector-16). By
+/// itself, “❤” is a black heart, but if you follow it with the
+/// variant selector, you may get a wider red heart.
+///
+/// A more complex example would be “👨‍🦰” which should depict a man
+/// with red hair. Here the computed width is too large — and the
+/// width differs depending on the use of the `unicode-width` feature:
+///
+/// ```
+/// use textwrap::core::display_width;
+///
+/// assert_eq!("👨‍🦰".chars().collect::<Vec<char>>(), ['\u{1f468}', '\u{200d}', '\u{1f9b0}']);
+/// #[cfg(feature = "unicode-width")]
+/// assert_eq!(display_width("👨‍🦰"), 4);
+/// #[cfg(not(feature = "unicode-width"))]
+/// assert_eq!(display_width("👨‍🦰"), 6);
+/// ```
+///
+/// This happens because the grapheme consists of three code points:
+/// “👨” (U+1F468: Man), Zero Width Joiner (U+200D), and “🦰”
+/// (U+1F9B0: Red Hair). You can see them above in the test. With
+/// `unicode-width` enabled, the ZWJ is correctly seen as having zero
+/// width, without it is counted as a double-width character.
+///
+/// ## Terminal Support
+///
+/// Modern browsers typically do a great job at combining characters
+/// as shown above, but terminals often struggle more. As an example,
+/// Gnome Terminal version 3.38.1, shows “❤️” as a big red heart, but
+/// shows "👨‍🦰" as “👨🦰”.
+///
+/// [combining characters]: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Combining_character
+/// [Unicode equivalence]: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Unicode_equivalence
+/// [CJK characters]: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CJK_characters
+/// [emoji modifier sequences]: https://unicode.org/emoji/charts/full-emoji-modifiers.html
+pub fn display_width(text: &str) -> usize {
+ let mut chars = text.chars();
+ let mut width = 0;
+ while let Some(ch) = chars.next() {
+ if skip_ansi_escape_sequence(ch, &mut chars) {
+ continue;
+ }
+ width += ch_width(ch);
+ }
+ width
+}
+
+/// A (text) fragment denotes the unit which we wrap into lines.
+///
+/// Fragments represent an abstract _word_ plus the _whitespace_
+/// following the word. In case the word falls at the end of the line,
+/// the whitespace is dropped and a so-called _penalty_ is inserted
+/// instead (typically `"-"` if the word was hyphenated).
+///
+/// For wrapping purposes, the precise content of the word, the
+/// whitespace, and the penalty is irrelevant. All we need to know is
+/// the displayed width of each part, which this trait provides.
+pub trait Fragment: std::fmt::Debug {
+ /// Displayed width of word represented by this fragment.
+ fn width(&self) -> f64;
+
+ /// Displayed width of the whitespace that must follow the word
+ /// when the word is not at the end of a line.
+ fn whitespace_width(&self) -> f64;
+
+ /// Displayed width of the penalty that must be inserted if the
+ /// word falls at the end of a line.
+ fn penalty_width(&self) -> f64;
+}
+
+/// A piece of wrappable text, including any trailing whitespace.
+///
+/// A `Word` is an example of a [`Fragment`], so it has a width,
+/// trailing whitespace, and potentially a penalty item.
+#[derive(Debug, Copy, Clone, PartialEq, Eq)]
+pub struct Word<'a> {
+ /// Word content.
+ pub word: &'a str,
+ /// Whitespace to insert if the word does not fall at the end of a line.
+ pub whitespace: &'a str,
+ /// Penalty string to insert if the word falls at the end of a line.
+ pub penalty: &'a str,
+ // Cached width in columns.
+ pub(crate) width: usize,
+}
+
+impl std::ops::Deref for Word<'_> {
+ type Target = str;
+
+ fn deref(&self) -> &Self::Target {
+ self.word
+ }
+}
+
+impl<'a> Word<'a> {
+ /// Construct a `Word` from a string.
+ ///
+ /// A trailing stretch of `' '` is automatically taken to be the
+ /// whitespace part of the word.
+ pub fn from(word: &str) -> Word<'_> {
+ let trimmed = word.trim_end_matches(' ');
+ Word {
+ word: trimmed,
+ width: display_width(trimmed),
+ whitespace: &word[trimmed.len()..],
+ penalty: "",
+ }
+ }
+
+ /// Break this word into smaller words with a width of at most
+ /// `line_width`. The whitespace and penalty from this `Word` is
+ /// added to the last piece.
+ ///
+ /// # Examples
+ ///
+ /// ```
+ /// use textwrap::core::Word;
+ /// assert_eq!(
+ /// Word::from("Hello! ").break_apart(3).collect::<Vec<_>>(),
+ /// vec![Word::from("Hel"), Word::from("lo! ")]
+ /// );
+ /// ```
+ pub fn break_apart<'b>(&'b self, line_width: usize) -> impl Iterator<Item = Word<'a>> + 'b {
+ let mut char_indices = self.word.char_indices();
+ let mut offset = 0;
+ let mut width = 0;
+
+ std::iter::from_fn(move || {
+ while let Some((idx, ch)) = char_indices.next() {
+ if skip_ansi_escape_sequence(ch, &mut char_indices.by_ref().map(|(_, ch)| ch)) {
+ continue;
+ }
+
+ if width > 0 && width + ch_width(ch) > line_width {
+ let word = Word {
+ word: &self.word[offset..idx],
+ width: width,
+ whitespace: "",
+ penalty: "",
+ };
+ offset = idx;
+ width = ch_width(ch);
+ return Some(word);
+ }
+
+ width += ch_width(ch);
+ }
+
+ if offset < self.word.len() {
+ let word = Word {
+ word: &self.word[offset..],
+ width: width,
+ whitespace: self.whitespace,
+ penalty: self.penalty,
+ };
+ offset = self.word.len();
+ return Some(word);
+ }
+
+ None
+ })
+ }
+}
+
+impl Fragment for Word<'_> {
+ #[inline]
+ fn width(&self) -> f64 {
+ self.width as f64
+ }
+
+ // We assume the whitespace consist of ' ' only. This allows us to
+ // compute the display width in constant time.
+ #[inline]
+ fn whitespace_width(&self) -> f64 {
+ self.whitespace.len() as f64
+ }
+
+ // We assume the penalty is `""` or `"-"`. This allows us to
+ // compute the display width in constant time.
+ #[inline]
+ fn penalty_width(&self) -> f64 {
+ self.penalty.len() as f64
+ }
+}
+
+/// Forcibly break words wider than `line_width` into smaller words.
+///
+/// This simply calls [`Word::break_apart`] on words that are too
+/// wide. This means that no extra `'-'` is inserted, the word is
+/// simply broken into smaller pieces.
+pub fn break_words<'a, I>(words: I, line_width: usize) -> Vec<Word<'a>>
+where
+ I: IntoIterator<Item = Word<'a>>,
+{
+ let mut shortened_words = Vec::new();
+ for word in words {
+ if word.width() > line_width as f64 {
+ shortened_words.extend(word.break_apart(line_width));
+ } else {
+ shortened_words.push(word);
+ }
+ }
+ shortened_words
+}
+
+#[cfg(test)]
+mod tests {
+ use super::*;
+
+ #[cfg(feature = "unicode-width")]
+ use unicode_width::UnicodeWidthChar;
+
+ #[test]
+ fn skip_ansi_escape_sequence_works() {
+ let blue_text = "\u{1b}[34mHello\u{1b}[0m";
+ let mut chars = blue_text.chars();
+ let ch = chars.next().unwrap();
+ assert!(skip_ansi_escape_sequence(ch, &mut chars));
+ assert_eq!(chars.next(), Some('H'));
+ }
+
+ #[test]
+ fn emojis_have_correct_width() {
+ use unic_emoji_char::is_emoji;
+
+ // Emojis in the Basic Latin (ASCII) and Latin-1 Supplement
+ // blocks all have a width of 1 column. This includes
+ // characters such as '#' and '©'.
+ for ch in '\u{1}'..'\u{FF}' {
+ if is_emoji(ch) {
+ let desc = format!("{:?} U+{:04X}", ch, ch as u32);
+
+ #[cfg(feature = "unicode-width")]
+ assert_eq!(ch.width().unwrap(), 1, "char: {}", desc);
+
+ #[cfg(not(feature = "unicode-width"))]
+ assert_eq!(ch_width(ch), 1, "char: {}", desc);
+ }
+ }
+
+ // Emojis in the remaining blocks of the Basic Multilingual
+ // Plane (BMP), in the Supplementary Multilingual Plane (SMP),
+ // and in the Supplementary Ideographic Plane (SIP), are all 1
+ // or 2 columns wide when unicode-width is used, and always 2
+ // columns wide otherwise. This includes all of our favorite
+ // emojis such as 😊.
+ for ch in '\u{FF}'..'\u{2FFFF}' {
+ if is_emoji(ch) {
+ let desc = format!("{:?} U+{:04X}", ch, ch as u32);
+
+ #[cfg(feature = "unicode-width")]
+ assert!(ch.width().unwrap() <= 2, "char: {}", desc);
+
+ #[cfg(not(feature = "unicode-width"))]
+ assert_eq!(ch_width(ch), 2, "char: {}", desc);
+ }
+ }
+
+ // The remaining planes contain almost no assigned code points
+ // and thus also no emojis.
+ }
+
+ #[test]
+ fn display_width_works() {
+ assert_eq!("Café Plain".len(), 11); // “é” is two bytes
+ assert_eq!(display_width("Café Plain"), 10);
+ assert_eq!(display_width("\u{1b}[31mCafé Rouge\u{1b}[0m"), 10);
+ }
+
+ #[test]
+ fn display_width_narrow_emojis() {
+ #[cfg(feature = "unicode-width")]
+ assert_eq!(display_width("⁉"), 1);
+
+ // The ⁉ character is above DOUBLE_WIDTH_CUTOFF.
+ #[cfg(not(feature = "unicode-width"))]
+ assert_eq!(display_width("⁉"), 2);
+ }
+
+ #[test]
+ fn display_width_narrow_emojis_variant_selector() {
+ #[cfg(feature = "unicode-width")]
+ assert_eq!(display_width("⁉\u{fe0f}"), 1);
+
+ // The variant selector-16 is also counted.
+ #[cfg(not(feature = "unicode-width"))]
+ assert_eq!(display_width("⁉\u{fe0f}"), 4);
+ }
+
+ #[test]
+ fn display_width_emojis() {
+ assert_eq!(display_width("😂😭🥺🤣✨😍🙏🥰😊🔥"), 20);
+ }
+}
diff --git a/vendor/textwrap/src/indentation.rs b/vendor/textwrap/src/indentation.rs
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..5d90c06
--- /dev/null
+++ b/vendor/textwrap/src/indentation.rs
@@ -0,0 +1,347 @@
+//! Functions related to adding and removing indentation from lines of
+//! text.
+//!
+//! The functions here can be used to uniformly indent or dedent
+//! (unindent) word wrapped lines of text.
+
+/// Indent each line by the given prefix.
+///
+/// # Examples
+///
+/// ```
+/// use textwrap::indent;
+///
+/// assert_eq!(indent("First line.\nSecond line.\n", " "),
+/// " First line.\n Second line.\n");
+/// ```
+///
+/// When indenting, trailing whitespace is stripped from the prefix.
+/// This means that empty lines remain empty afterwards:
+///
+/// ```
+/// use textwrap::indent;
+///
+/// assert_eq!(indent("First line.\n\n\nSecond line.\n", " "),
+/// " First line.\n\n\n Second line.\n");
+/// ```
+///
+/// Notice how `"\n\n\n"` remained as `"\n\n\n"`.
+///
+/// This feature is useful when you want to indent text and have a
+/// space between your prefix and the text. In this case, you _don't_
+/// want a trailing space on empty lines:
+///
+/// ```
+/// use textwrap::indent;
+///
+/// assert_eq!(indent("foo = 123\n\nprint(foo)\n", "# "),
+/// "# foo = 123\n#\n# print(foo)\n");
+/// ```
+///
+/// Notice how `"\n\n"` became `"\n#\n"` instead of `"\n# \n"` which
+/// would have trailing whitespace.
+///
+/// Leading and trailing whitespace coming from the text itself is
+/// kept unchanged:
+///
+/// ```
+/// use textwrap::indent;
+///
+/// assert_eq!(indent(" \t Foo ", "->"), "-> \t Foo ");
+/// ```
+pub fn indent(s: &str, prefix: &str) -> String {
+ // We know we'll need more than s.len() bytes for the output, but
+ // without counting '\n' characters (which is somewhat slow), we
+ // don't know exactly how much. However, we can preemptively do
+ // the first doubling of the output size.
+ let mut result = String::with_capacity(2 * s.len());
+ let trimmed_prefix = prefix.trim_end();
+ for (idx, line) in s.split_terminator('\n').enumerate() {
+ if idx > 0 {
+ result.push('\n');
+ }
+ if line.trim().is_empty() {
+ result.push_str(trimmed_prefix);
+ } else {
+ result.push_str(prefix);
+ }
+ result.push_str(line);
+ }
+ if s.ends_with('\n') {
+ // split_terminator will have eaten the final '\n'.
+ result.push('\n');
+ }
+ result
+}
+
+/// Removes common leading whitespace from each line.
+///
+/// This function will look at each non-empty line and determine the
+/// maximum amount of whitespace that can be removed from all lines:
+///
+/// ```
+/// use textwrap::dedent;
+///
+/// assert_eq!(dedent("
+/// 1st line
+/// 2nd line
+/// 3rd line
+/// "), "
+/// 1st line
+/// 2nd line
+/// 3rd line
+/// ");
+/// ```
+pub fn dedent(s: &str) -> String {
+ let mut prefix = "";
+ let mut lines = s.lines();
+
+ // We first search for a non-empty line to find a prefix.
+ for line in &mut lines {
+ let mut whitespace_idx = line.len();
+ for (idx, ch) in line.char_indices() {
+ if !ch.is_whitespace() {
+ whitespace_idx = idx;
+ break;
+ }
+ }
+
+ // Check if the line had anything but whitespace
+ if whitespace_idx < line.len() {
+ prefix = &line[..whitespace_idx];
+ break;
+ }
+ }
+
+ // We then continue looking through the remaining lines to
+ // possibly shorten the prefix.
+ for line in &mut lines {
+ let mut whitespace_idx = line.len();
+ for ((idx, a), b) in line.char_indices().zip(prefix.chars()) {
+ if a != b {
+ whitespace_idx = idx;
+ break;
+ }
+ }
+
+ // Check if the line had anything but whitespace and if we
+ // have found a shorter prefix
+ if whitespace_idx < line.len() && whitespace_idx < prefix.len() {
+ prefix = &line[..whitespace_idx];
+ }
+ }
+
+ // We now go over the lines a second time to build the result.
+ let mut result = String::new();
+ for line in s.lines() {
+ if line.starts_with(&prefix) && line.chars().any(|c| !c.is_whitespace()) {
+ let (_, tail) = line.split_at(prefix.len());
+ result.push_str(tail);
+ }
+ result.push('\n');
+ }
+
+ if result.ends_with('\n') && !s.ends_with('\n') {
+ let new_len = result.len() - 1;
+ result.truncate(new_len);
+ }
+
+ result
+}
+
+#[cfg(test)]
+mod tests {
+ use super::*;
+
+ #[test]
+ fn indent_empty() {
+ assert_eq!(indent("\n", " "), "\n");
+ }
+
+ #[test]
+ #[rustfmt::skip]
+ fn indent_nonempty() {
+ let text = [
+ " foo\n",
+ "bar\n",
+ " baz\n",
+ ].join("");
+ let expected = [
+ "// foo\n",
+ "// bar\n",
+ "// baz\n",
+ ].join("");
+ assert_eq!(indent(&text, "// "), expected);
+ }
+
+ #[test]
+ #[rustfmt::skip]
+ fn indent_empty_line() {
+ let text = [
+ " foo",
+ "bar",
+ "",
+ " baz",
+ ].join("\n");
+ let expected = [
+ "// foo",
+ "// bar",
+ "//",
+ "// baz",
+ ].join("\n");
+ assert_eq!(indent(&text, "// "), expected);
+ }
+
+ #[test]
+ fn dedent_empty() {
+ assert_eq!(dedent(""), "");
+ }
+
+ #[test]
+ #[rustfmt::skip]
+ fn dedent_multi_line() {
+ let x = [
+ " foo",
+ " bar",
+ " baz",
+ ].join("\n");
+ let y = [
+ " foo",
+ "bar",
+ " baz"
+ ].join("\n");
+ assert_eq!(dedent(&x), y);
+ }
+
+ #[test]
+ #[rustfmt::skip]
+ fn dedent_empty_line() {
+ let x = [
+ " foo",
+ " bar",
+ " ",
+ " baz"
+ ].join("\n");
+ let y = [
+ " foo",
+ "bar",
+ "",
+ " baz"
+ ].join("\n");
+ assert_eq!(dedent(&x), y);
+ }
+
+ #[test]
+ #[rustfmt::skip]
+ fn dedent_blank_line() {
+ let x = [
+ " foo",
+ "",
+ " bar",
+ " foo",
+ " bar",
+ " baz",
+ ].join("\n");
+ let y = [
+ "foo",
+ "",
+ " bar",
+ " foo",
+ " bar",
+ " baz",
+ ].join("\n");
+ assert_eq!(dedent(&x), y);
+ }
+
+ #[test]
+ #[rustfmt::skip]
+ fn dedent_whitespace_line() {
+ let x = [
+ " foo",
+ " ",
+ " bar",
+ " foo",
+ " bar",
+ " baz",
+ ].join("\n");
+ let y = [
+ "foo",
+ "",
+ " bar",
+ " foo",
+ " bar",
+ " baz",
+ ].join("\n");
+ assert_eq!(dedent(&x), y);
+ }
+
+ #[test]
+ #[rustfmt::skip]
+ fn dedent_mixed_whitespace() {
+ let x = [
+ "\tfoo",
+ " bar",
+ ].join("\n");
+ let y = [
+ "\tfoo",
+ " bar",
+ ].join("\n");
+ assert_eq!(dedent(&x), y);
+ }
+
+ #[test]
+ #[rustfmt::skip]
+ fn dedent_tabbed_whitespace() {
+ let x = [
+ "\t\tfoo",
+ "\t\t\tbar",
+ ].join("\n");
+ let y = [
+ "foo",
+ "\tbar",
+ ].join("\n");
+ assert_eq!(dedent(&x), y);
+ }
+
+ #[test]
+ #[rustfmt::skip]
+ fn dedent_mixed_tabbed_whitespace() {
+ let x = [
+ "\t \tfoo",
+ "\t \t\tbar",
+ ].join("\n");
+ let y = [
+ "foo",
+ "\tbar",
+ ].join("\n");
+ assert_eq!(dedent(&x), y);
+ }
+
+ #[test]
+ #[rustfmt::skip]
+ fn dedent_mixed_tabbed_whitespace2() {
+ let x = [
+ "\t \tfoo",
+ "\t \tbar",
+ ].join("\n");
+ let y = [
+ "\tfoo",
+ " \tbar",
+ ].join("\n");
+ assert_eq!(dedent(&x), y);
+ }
+
+ #[test]
+ #[rustfmt::skip]
+ fn dedent_preserve_no_terminating_newline() {
+ let x = [
+ " foo",
+ " bar",
+ ].join("\n");
+ let y = [
+ "foo",
+ " bar",
+ ].join("\n");
+ assert_eq!(dedent(&x), y);
+ }
+}
diff --git a/vendor/textwrap/src/lib.rs b/vendor/textwrap/src/lib.rs
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..e570eac
--- /dev/null
+++ b/vendor/textwrap/src/lib.rs
@@ -0,0 +1,1847 @@
+//! The textwrap library provides functions for word wrapping and
+//! indenting text.
+//!
+//! # Wrapping Text
+//!
+//! Wrapping text can be very useful in command-line programs where
+//! you want to format dynamic output nicely so it looks good in a
+//! terminal. A quick example:
+//!
+//! ```
+//! # #[cfg(feature = "smawk")] {
+//! let text = "textwrap: a small library for wrapping text.";
+//! assert_eq!(textwrap::wrap(text, 18),
+//! vec!["textwrap: a",
+//! "small library for",
+//! "wrapping text."]);
+//! # }
+//! ```
+//!
+//! The [`wrap`] function returns the individual lines, use [`fill`]
+//! is you want the lines joined with `'\n'` to form a `String`.
+//!
+//! If you enable the `hyphenation` Cargo feature, you can get
+//! automatic hyphenation for a number of languages:
+//!
+//! ```
+//! #[cfg(feature = "hyphenation")] {
+//! use hyphenation::{Language, Load, Standard};
+//! use textwrap::{wrap, Options, WordSplitter};
+//!
+//! let text = "textwrap: a small library for wrapping text.";
+//! let dictionary = Standard::from_embedded(Language::EnglishUS).unwrap();
+//! let options = Options::new(18).word_splitter(WordSplitter::Hyphenation(dictionary));
+//! assert_eq!(wrap(text, &options),
+//! vec!["textwrap: a small",
+//! "library for wrap-",
+//! "ping text."]);
+//! }
+//! ```
+//!
+//! See also the [`unfill`] and [`refill`] functions which allow you to
+//! manipulate already wrapped text.
+//!
+//! ## Wrapping Strings at Compile Time
+//!
+//! If your strings are known at compile time, please take a look at
+//! the procedural macros from the [textwrap-macros] crate.
+//!
+//! ## Displayed Width vs Byte Size
+//!
+//! To word wrap text, one must know the width of each word so one can
+//! know when to break lines. This library will by default measure the
+//! width of text using the _displayed width_, not the size in bytes.
+//! The `unicode-width` Cargo feature controls this.
+//!
+//! This is important for non-ASCII text. ASCII characters such as `a`
+//! and `!` are simple and take up one column each. This means that
+//! the displayed width is equal to the string length in bytes.
+//! However, non-ASCII characters and symbols take up more than one
+//! byte when UTF-8 encoded: `é` is `0xc3 0xa9` (two bytes) and `⚙` is
+//! `0xe2 0x9a 0x99` (three bytes) in UTF-8, respectively.
+//!
+//! This is why we take care to use the displayed width instead of the
+//! byte count when computing line lengths. All functions in this
+//! library handle Unicode characters like this when the
+//! `unicode-width` Cargo feature is enabled (it is enabled by
+//! default).
+//!
+//! # Indentation and Dedentation
+//!
+//! The textwrap library also offers functions for adding a prefix to
+//! every line of a string and to remove leading whitespace. As an
+//! example, the [`indent`] function allows you to turn lines of text
+//! into a bullet list:
+//!
+//! ```
+//! let before = "\
+//! foo
+//! bar
+//! baz
+//! ";
+//! let after = "\
+//! * foo
+//! * bar
+//! * baz
+//! ";
+//! assert_eq!(textwrap::indent(before, "* "), after);
+//! ```
+//!
+//! Removing leading whitespace is done with [`dedent`]:
+//!
+//! ```
+//! let before = "
+//! Some
+//! indented
+//! text
+//! ";
+//! let after = "
+//! Some
+//! indented
+//! text
+//! ";
+//! assert_eq!(textwrap::dedent(before), after);
+//! ```
+//!
+//! # Cargo Features
+//!
+//! The textwrap library can be slimmed down as needed via a number of
+//! Cargo features. This means you only pay for the features you
+//! actually use.
+//!
+//! The full dependency graph, where dashed lines indicate optional
+//! dependencies, is shown below:
+//!
+//! <img src="https://raw.githubusercontent.com/mgeisler/textwrap/master/images/textwrap-0.15.2.svg">
+//!
+//! ## Default Features
+//!
+//! These features are enabled by default:
+//!
+//! * `unicode-linebreak`: enables finding words using the
+//! [unicode-linebreak] crate, which implements the line breaking
+//! algorithm described in [Unicode Standard Annex
+//! #14](https://www.unicode.org/reports/tr14/).
+//!
+//! This feature can be disabled if you are happy to find words
+//! separated by ASCII space characters only. People wrapping text
+//! with emojis or East-Asian characters will want most likely want
+//! to enable this feature. See [`WordSeparator`] for details.
+//!
+//! * `unicode-width`: enables correct width computation of non-ASCII
+//! characters via the [unicode-width] crate. Without this feature,
+//! every [`char`] is 1 column wide, except for emojis which are 2
+//! columns wide. See the [`core::display_width`] function for
+//! details.
+//!
+//! This feature can be disabled if you only need to wrap ASCII
+//! text, or if the functions in [`core`] are used directly with
+//! [`core::Fragment`]s for which the widths have been computed in
+//! other ways.
+//!
+//! * `smawk`: enables linear-time wrapping of the whole paragraph via
+//! the [smawk] crate. See the [`wrap_algorithms::wrap_optimal_fit`]
+//! function for details on the optimal-fit algorithm.
+//!
+//! This feature can be disabled if you only ever intend to use
+//! [`wrap_algorithms::wrap_first_fit`].
+//!
+//! With Rust 1.59.0, the size impact of the above features on your
+//! binary is as follows:
+//!
+//! | Configuration | Binary Size | Delta |
+//! | :--- | ---: | ---: |
+//! | quick-and-dirty implementation | 289 KB | — KB |
+//! | textwrap without default features | 301 KB | 12 KB |
+//! | textwrap with smawk | 317 KB | 28 KB |
+//! | textwrap with unicode-width | 313 KB | 24 KB |
+//! | textwrap with unicode-linebreak | 395 KB | 106 KB |
+//!
+//! The above sizes are the stripped sizes and the binary is compiled
+//! in release mode with this profile:
+//!
+//! ```toml
+//! [profile.release]
+//! lto = true
+//! codegen-units = 1
+//! ```
+//!
+//! See the [binary-sizes demo] if you want to reproduce these
+//! results.
+//!
+//! ## Optional Features
+//!
+//! These Cargo features enable new functionality:
+//!
+//! * `terminal_size`: enables automatic detection of the terminal
+//! width via the [terminal_size] crate. See the
+//! [`Options::with_termwidth`] constructor for details.
+//!
+//! * `hyphenation`: enables language-sensitive hyphenation via the
+//! [hyphenation] crate. See the [`word_splitters::WordSplitter`]
+//! trait for details.
+//!
+//! [unicode-linebreak]: https://docs.rs/unicode-linebreak/
+//! [unicode-width]: https://docs.rs/unicode-width/
+//! [smawk]: https://docs.rs/smawk/
+//! [binary-sizes demo]: https://github.com/mgeisler/textwrap/tree/master/examples/binary-sizes
+//! [textwrap-macros]: https://docs.rs/textwrap-macros/
+//! [terminal_size]: https://docs.rs/terminal_size/
+//! [hyphenation]: https://docs.rs/hyphenation/
+
+#![doc(html_root_url = "https://docs.rs/textwrap/0.15.2")]
+#![forbid(unsafe_code)] // See https://github.com/mgeisler/textwrap/issues/210
+#![deny(missing_docs)]
+#![deny(missing_debug_implementations)]
+#![allow(clippy::redundant_field_names)]
+
+// Make `cargo test` execute the README doctests.
+#[cfg(doctest)]
+#[doc = include_str!("../README.md")]
+mod readme_doctest {}
+
+use std::borrow::Cow;
+
+mod indentation;
+pub use crate::indentation::{dedent, indent};
+
+mod word_separators;
+pub use word_separators::WordSeparator;
+
+pub mod word_splitters;
+pub use word_splitters::WordSplitter;
+
+pub mod wrap_algorithms;
+pub use wrap_algorithms::WrapAlgorithm;
+
+pub mod core;
+
+#[cfg(feature = "unicode-linebreak")]
+macro_rules! DefaultWordSeparator {
+ () => {
+ WordSeparator::UnicodeBreakProperties
+ };
+}
+
+#[cfg(not(feature = "unicode-linebreak"))]
+macro_rules! DefaultWordSeparator {
+ () => {
+ WordSeparator::AsciiSpace
+ };
+}
+
+/// Holds configuration options for wrapping and filling text.
+#[derive(Debug, Clone)]
+pub struct Options<'a> {
+ /// The width in columns at which the text will be wrapped.
+ pub width: usize,
+ /// Indentation used for the first line of output. See the
+ /// [`Options::initial_indent`] method.
+ pub initial_indent: &'a str,
+ /// Indentation used for subsequent lines of output. See the
+ /// [`Options::subsequent_indent`] method.
+ pub subsequent_indent: &'a str,
+ /// Allow long words to be broken if they cannot fit on a line.
+ /// When set to `false`, some lines may be longer than
+ /// `self.width`. See the [`Options::break_words`] method.
+ pub break_words: bool,
+ /// Wrapping algorithm to use, see the implementations of the
+ /// [`wrap_algorithms::WrapAlgorithm`] trait for details.
+ pub wrap_algorithm: WrapAlgorithm,
+ /// The line breaking algorithm to use, see
+ /// [`word_separators::WordSeparator`] trait for an overview and
+ /// possible implementations.
+ pub word_separator: WordSeparator,
+ /// The method for splitting words. This can be used to prohibit
+ /// splitting words on hyphens, or it can be used to implement
+ /// language-aware machine hyphenation.
+ pub word_splitter: WordSplitter,
+}
+
+impl<'a> From<&'a Options<'a>> for Options<'a> {
+ fn from(options: &'a Options<'a>) -> Self {
+ Self {
+ width: options.width,
+ initial_indent: options.initial_indent,
+ subsequent_indent: options.subsequent_indent,
+ break_words: options.break_words,
+ word_separator: options.word_separator,
+ wrap_algorithm: options.wrap_algorithm,
+ word_splitter: options.word_splitter.clone(),
+ }
+ }
+}
+
+impl<'a> From<usize> for Options<'a> {
+ fn from(width: usize) -> Self {
+ Options::new(width)
+ }
+}
+
+impl<'a> Options<'a> {
+ /// Creates a new [`Options`] with the specified width. Equivalent to
+ ///
+ /// ```
+ /// # use textwrap::{Options, WordSplitter, WordSeparator, WrapAlgorithm};
+ /// # let width = 80;
+ /// # let actual = Options::new(width);
+ /// # let expected =
+ /// Options {
+ /// width: width,
+ /// initial_indent: "",
+ /// subsequent_indent: "",
+ /// break_words: true,
+ /// #[cfg(feature = "unicode-linebreak")]
+ /// word_separator: WordSeparator::UnicodeBreakProperties,
+ /// #[cfg(not(feature = "unicode-linebreak"))]
+ /// word_separator: WordSeparator::AsciiSpace,
+ /// #[cfg(feature = "smawk")]
+ /// wrap_algorithm: WrapAlgorithm::new_optimal_fit(),
+ /// #[cfg(not(feature = "smawk"))]
+ /// wrap_algorithm: WrapAlgorithm::FirstFit,
+ /// word_splitter: WordSplitter::HyphenSplitter,
+ /// }
+ /// # ;
+ /// # assert_eq!(actual.width, expected.width);
+ /// # assert_eq!(actual.initial_indent, expected.initial_indent);
+ /// # assert_eq!(actual.subsequent_indent, expected.subsequent_indent);
+ /// # assert_eq!(actual.break_words, expected.break_words);
+ /// # assert_eq!(actual.word_splitter, expected.word_splitter);
+ /// ```
+ ///
+ /// Note that the default word separator and wrap algorithms
+ /// changes based on the available Cargo features. The best
+ /// available algorithms are used by default.
+ pub const fn new(width: usize) -> Self {
+ Options {
+ width,
+ initial_indent: "",
+ subsequent_indent: "",
+ break_words: true,
+ word_separator: DefaultWordSeparator!(),
+ wrap_algorithm: WrapAlgorithm::new(),
+ word_splitter: WordSplitter::HyphenSplitter,
+ }
+ }
+
+ /// Creates a new [`Options`] with `width` set to the current
+ /// terminal width. If the terminal width cannot be determined
+ /// (typically because the standard input and output is not
+ /// connected to a terminal), a width of 80 characters will be
+ /// used. Other settings use the same defaults as
+ /// [`Options::new`].
+ ///
+ /// Equivalent to:
+ ///
+ /// ```no_run
+ /// use textwrap::{termwidth, Options};
+ ///
+ /// let options = Options::new(termwidth());
+ /// ```
+ ///
+ /// **Note:** Only available when the `terminal_size` feature is
+ /// enabled.
+ #[cfg(feature = "terminal_size")]
+ pub fn with_termwidth() -> Self {
+ Self::new(termwidth())
+ }
+}
+
+impl<'a> Options<'a> {
+ /// Change [`self.initial_indent`]. The initial indentation is
+ /// used on the very first line of output.
+ ///
+ /// # Examples
+ ///
+ /// Classic paragraph indentation can be achieved by specifying an
+ /// initial indentation and wrapping each paragraph by itself:
+ ///
+ /// ```
+ /// use textwrap::{wrap, Options};
+ ///
+ /// let options = Options::new(16).initial_indent(" ");
+ /// assert_eq!(wrap("This is a little example.", options),
+ /// vec![" This is a",
+ /// "little example."]);
+ /// ```
+ ///
+ /// [`self.initial_indent`]: #structfield.initial_indent
+ pub fn initial_indent(self, indent: &'a str) -> Self {
+ Options {
+ initial_indent: indent,
+ ..self
+ }
+ }
+
+ /// Change [`self.subsequent_indent`]. The subsequent indentation
+ /// is used on lines following the first line of output.
+ ///
+ /// # Examples
+ ///
+ /// Combining initial and subsequent indentation lets you format a
+ /// single paragraph as a bullet list:
+ ///
+ /// ```
+ /// use textwrap::{wrap, Options};
+ ///
+ /// let options = Options::new(12)
+ /// .initial_indent("* ")
+ /// .subsequent_indent(" ");
+ /// #[cfg(feature = "smawk")]
+ /// assert_eq!(wrap("This is a little example.", options),
+ /// vec!["* This is",
+ /// " a little",
+ /// " example."]);
+ ///
+ /// // Without the `smawk` feature, the wrapping is a little different:
+ /// #[cfg(not(feature = "smawk"))]
+ /// assert_eq!(wrap("This is a little example.", options),
+ /// vec!["* This is a",
+ /// " little",
+ /// " example."]);
+ /// ```
+ ///
+ /// [`self.subsequent_indent`]: #structfield.subsequent_indent
+ pub fn subsequent_indent(self, indent: &'a str) -> Self {
+ Options {
+ subsequent_indent: indent,
+ ..self
+ }
+ }
+
+ /// Change [`self.break_words`]. This controls if words longer
+ /// than `self.width` can be broken, or if they will be left
+ /// sticking out into the right margin.
+ ///
+ /// # Examples
+ ///
+ /// ```
+ /// use textwrap::{wrap, Options};
+ ///
+ /// let options = Options::new(4).break_words(true);
+ /// assert_eq!(wrap("This is a little example.", options),
+ /// vec!["This",
+ /// "is a",
+ /// "litt",
+ /// "le",
+ /// "exam",
+ /// "ple."]);
+ /// ```
+ ///
+ /// [`self.break_words`]: #structfield.break_words
+ pub fn break_words(self, setting: bool) -> Self {
+ Options {
+ break_words: setting,
+ ..self
+ }
+ }
+
+ /// Change [`self.word_separator`].
+ ///
+ /// See [`word_separators::WordSeparator`] for details on the choices.
+ ///
+ /// [`self.word_separator`]: #structfield.word_separator
+ pub fn word_separator(self, word_separator: WordSeparator) -> Options<'a> {
+ Options {
+ width: self.width,
+ initial_indent: self.initial_indent,
+ subsequent_indent: self.subsequent_indent,
+ break_words: self.break_words,
+ word_separator: word_separator,
+ wrap_algorithm: self.wrap_algorithm,
+ word_splitter: self.word_splitter,
+ }
+ }
+
+ /// Change [`self.wrap_algorithm`].
+ ///
+ /// See the [`wrap_algorithms::WrapAlgorithm`] trait for details on
+ /// the choices.
+ ///
+ /// [`self.wrap_algorithm`]: #structfield.wrap_algorithm
+ pub fn wrap_algorithm(self, wrap_algorithm: WrapAlgorithm) -> Options<'a> {
+ Options {
+ width: self.width,
+ initial_indent: self.initial_indent,
+ subsequent_indent: self.subsequent_indent,
+ break_words: self.break_words,
+ word_separator: self.word_separator,
+ wrap_algorithm: wrap_algorithm,
+ word_splitter: self.word_splitter,
+ }
+ }
+
+ /// Change [`self.word_splitter`]. The
+ /// [`word_splitters::WordSplitter`] is used to fit part of a word
+ /// into the current line when wrapping text.
+ ///
+ /// # Examples
+ ///
+ /// ```
+ /// use textwrap::{Options, WordSplitter};
+ /// let opt = Options::new(80);
+ /// assert_eq!(opt.word_splitter, WordSplitter::HyphenSplitter);
+ /// let opt = opt.word_splitter(WordSplitter::NoHyphenation);
+ /// assert_eq!(opt.word_splitter, WordSplitter::NoHyphenation);
+ /// ```
+ ///
+ /// [`self.word_splitter`]: #structfield.word_splitter
+ pub fn word_splitter(self, word_splitter: WordSplitter) -> Options<'a> {
+ Options {
+ width: self.width,
+ initial_indent: self.initial_indent,
+ subsequent_indent: self.subsequent_indent,
+ break_words: self.break_words,
+ word_separator: self.word_separator,
+ wrap_algorithm: self.wrap_algorithm,
+ word_splitter,
+ }
+ }
+}
+
+/// Return the current terminal width.
+///
+/// If the terminal width cannot be determined (typically because the
+/// standard output is not connected to a terminal), a default width
+/// of 80 characters will be used.
+///
+/// # Examples
+///
+/// Create an [`Options`] for wrapping at the current terminal width
+/// with a two column margin to the left and the right:
+///
+/// ```no_run
+/// use textwrap::{termwidth, Options};
+///
+/// let width = termwidth() - 4; // Two columns on each side.
+/// let options = Options::new(width)
+/// .initial_indent(" ")
+/// .subsequent_indent(" ");
+/// ```
+///
+/// **Note:** Only available when the `terminal_size` Cargo feature is
+/// enabled.
+#[cfg(feature = "terminal_size")]
+pub fn termwidth() -> usize {
+ terminal_size::terminal_size().map_or(80, |(terminal_size::Width(w), _)| w.into())
+}
+
+/// Fill a line of text at a given width.
+///
+/// The result is a [`String`], complete with newlines between each
+/// line. Use the [`wrap`] function if you need access to the
+/// individual lines.
+///
+/// The easiest way to use this function is to pass an integer for
+/// `width_or_options`:
+///
+/// ```
+/// use textwrap::fill;
+///
+/// assert_eq!(
+/// fill("Memory safety without garbage collection.", 15),
+/// "Memory safety\nwithout garbage\ncollection."
+/// );
+/// ```
+///
+/// If you need to customize the wrapping, you can pass an [`Options`]
+/// instead of an `usize`:
+///
+/// ```
+/// use textwrap::{fill, Options};
+///
+/// let options = Options::new(15)
+/// .initial_indent("- ")
+/// .subsequent_indent(" ");
+/// assert_eq!(
+/// fill("Memory safety without garbage collection.", &options),
+/// "- Memory safety\n without\n garbage\n collection."
+/// );
+/// ```
+pub fn fill<'a, Opt>(text: &str, width_or_options: Opt) -> String
+where
+ Opt: Into<Options<'a>>,
+{
+ // This will avoid reallocation in simple cases (no
+ // indentation, no hyphenation).
+ let mut result = String::with_capacity(text.len());
+
+ for (i, line) in wrap(text, width_or_options).iter().enumerate() {
+ if i > 0 {
+ result.push('\n');
+ }
+ result.push_str(line);
+ }
+
+ result
+}
+
+/// Unpack a paragraph of already-wrapped text.
+///
+/// This function attempts to recover the original text from a single
+/// paragraph of text produced by the [`fill`] function. This means
+/// that it turns
+///
+/// ```text
+/// textwrap: a small
+/// library for
+/// wrapping text.
+/// ```
+///
+/// back into
+///
+/// ```text
+/// textwrap: a small library for wrapping text.
+/// ```
+///
+/// In addition, it will recognize a common prefix among the lines.
+/// The prefix of the first line is returned in
+/// [`Options::initial_indent`] and the prefix (if any) of the the
+/// other lines is returned in [`Options::subsequent_indent`].
+///
+/// In addition to `' '`, the prefixes can consist of characters used
+/// for unordered lists (`'-'`, `'+'`, and `'*'`) and block quotes
+/// (`'>'`) in Markdown as well as characters often used for inline
+/// comments (`'#'` and `'/'`).
+///
+/// The text must come from a single wrapped paragraph. This means
+/// that there can be no `"\n\n"` within the text.
+///
+/// # Examples
+///
+/// ```
+/// use textwrap::unfill;
+///
+/// let (text, options) = unfill("\
+/// * This is an
+/// example of
+/// a list item.
+/// ");
+///
+/// assert_eq!(text, "This is an example of a list item.\n");
+/// assert_eq!(options.initial_indent, "* ");
+/// assert_eq!(options.subsequent_indent, " ");
+/// ```
+pub fn unfill(text: &str) -> (String, Options<'_>) {
+ let trimmed = text.trim_end_matches('\n');
+ let prefix_chars: &[_] = &[' ', '-', '+', '*', '>', '#', '/'];
+
+ let mut options = Options::new(0);
+ for (idx, line) in trimmed.split('\n').enumerate() {
+ options.width = std::cmp::max(options.width, core::display_width(line));
+ let without_prefix = line.trim_start_matches(prefix_chars);
+ let prefix = &line[..line.len() - without_prefix.len()];
+
+ if idx == 0 {
+ options.initial_indent = prefix;
+ } else if idx == 1 {
+ options.subsequent_indent = prefix;
+ } else if idx > 1 {
+ for ((idx, x), y) in prefix.char_indices().zip(options.subsequent_indent.chars()) {
+ if x != y {
+ options.subsequent_indent = &prefix[..idx];
+ break;
+ }
+ }
+ if prefix.len() < options.subsequent_indent.len() {
+ options.subsequent_indent = prefix;
+ }
+ }
+ }
+
+ let mut unfilled = String::with_capacity(text.len());
+ for (idx, line) in trimmed.split('\n').enumerate() {
+ if idx == 0 {
+ unfilled.push_str(&line[options.initial_indent.len()..]);
+ } else {
+ unfilled.push(' ');
+ unfilled.push_str(&line[options.subsequent_indent.len()..]);
+ }
+ }
+
+ unfilled.push_str(&text[trimmed.len()..]);
+ (unfilled, options)
+}
+
+/// Refill a paragraph of wrapped text with a new width.
+///
+/// This function will first use the [`unfill`] function to remove
+/// newlines from the text. Afterwards the text is filled again using
+/// the [`fill`] function.
+///
+/// The `new_width_or_options` argument specify the new width and can
+/// specify other options as well — except for
+/// [`Options::initial_indent`] and [`Options::subsequent_indent`],
+/// which are deduced from `filled_text`.
+///
+/// # Examples
+///
+/// ```
+/// use textwrap::refill;
+///
+/// // Some loosely wrapped text. The "> " prefix is recognized automatically.
+/// let text = "\
+/// > Memory
+/// > safety without garbage
+/// > collection.
+/// ";
+///
+/// assert_eq!(refill(text, 20), "\
+/// > Memory safety
+/// > without garbage
+/// > collection.
+/// ");
+///
+/// assert_eq!(refill(text, 40), "\
+/// > Memory safety without garbage
+/// > collection.
+/// ");
+///
+/// assert_eq!(refill(text, 60), "\
+/// > Memory safety without garbage collection.
+/// ");
+/// ```
+///
+/// You can also reshape bullet points:
+///
+/// ```
+/// use textwrap::refill;
+///
+/// let text = "\
+/// - This is my
+/// list item.
+/// ";
+///
+/// assert_eq!(refill(text, 20), "\
+/// - This is my list
+/// item.
+/// ");
+/// ```
+pub fn refill<'a, Opt>(filled_text: &str, new_width_or_options: Opt) -> String
+where
+ Opt: Into<Options<'a>>,
+{
+ let trimmed = filled_text.trim_end_matches('\n');
+ let (text, options) = unfill(trimmed);
+ let mut new_options = new_width_or_options.into();
+ new_options.initial_indent = options.initial_indent;
+ new_options.subsequent_indent = options.subsequent_indent;
+ let mut refilled = fill(&text, new_options);
+ refilled.push_str(&filled_text[trimmed.len()..]);
+ refilled
+}
+
+/// Wrap a line of text at a given width.
+///
+/// The result is a vector of lines, each line is of type [`Cow<'_,
+/// str>`](Cow), which means that the line will borrow from the input
+/// `&str` if possible. The lines do not have trailing whitespace,
+/// including a final `'\n'`. Please use the [`fill`] function if you
+/// need a [`String`] instead.
+///
+/// The easiest way to use this function is to pass an integer for
+/// `width_or_options`:
+///
+/// ```
+/// use textwrap::wrap;
+///
+/// let lines = wrap("Memory safety without garbage collection.", 15);
+/// assert_eq!(lines, &[
+/// "Memory safety",
+/// "without garbage",
+/// "collection.",
+/// ]);
+/// ```
+///
+/// If you need to customize the wrapping, you can pass an [`Options`]
+/// instead of an `usize`:
+///
+/// ```
+/// use textwrap::{wrap, Options};
+///
+/// let options = Options::new(15)
+/// .initial_indent("- ")
+/// .subsequent_indent(" ");
+/// let lines = wrap("Memory safety without garbage collection.", &options);
+/// assert_eq!(lines, &[
+/// "- Memory safety",
+/// " without",
+/// " garbage",
+/// " collection.",
+/// ]);
+/// ```
+///
+/// # Optimal-Fit Wrapping
+///
+/// By default, `wrap` will try to ensure an even right margin by
+/// finding breaks which avoid short lines. We call this an
+/// “optimal-fit algorithm” since the line breaks are computed by
+/// considering all possible line breaks. The alternative is a
+/// “first-fit algorithm” which simply accumulates words until they no
+/// longer fit on the line.
+///
+/// As an example, using the first-fit algorithm to wrap the famous
+/// Hamlet quote “To be, or not to be: that is the question” in a
+/// narrow column with room for only 10 characters looks like this:
+///
+/// ```
+/// # use textwrap::{WrapAlgorithm::FirstFit, Options, wrap};
+/// #
+/// # let lines = wrap("To be, or not to be: that is the question",
+/// # Options::new(10).wrap_algorithm(FirstFit));
+/// # assert_eq!(lines.join("\n") + "\n", "\
+/// To be, or
+/// not to be:
+/// that is
+/// the
+/// question
+/// # ");
+/// ```
+///
+/// Notice how the second to last line is quite narrow because
+/// “question” was too large to fit? The greedy first-fit algorithm
+/// doesn’t look ahead, so it has no other option than to put
+/// “question” onto its own line.
+///
+/// With the optimal-fit wrapping algorithm, the previous lines are
+/// shortened slightly in order to make the word “is” go into the
+/// second last line:
+///
+/// ```
+/// # #[cfg(feature = "smawk")] {
+/// # use textwrap::{Options, WrapAlgorithm, wrap};
+/// #
+/// # let lines = wrap(
+/// # "To be, or not to be: that is the question",
+/// # Options::new(10).wrap_algorithm(WrapAlgorithm::new_optimal_fit())
+/// # );
+/// # assert_eq!(lines.join("\n") + "\n", "\
+/// To be,
+/// or not to
+/// be: that
+/// is the
+/// question
+/// # "); }
+/// ```
+///
+/// Please see [`WrapAlgorithm`] for details on the choices.
+///
+/// # Examples
+///
+/// The returned iterator yields lines of type `Cow<'_, str>`. If
+/// possible, the wrapped lines will borrow from the input string. As
+/// an example, a hanging indentation, the first line can borrow from
+/// the input, but the subsequent lines become owned strings:
+///
+/// ```
+/// use std::borrow::Cow::{Borrowed, Owned};
+/// use textwrap::{wrap, Options};
+///
+/// let options = Options::new(15).subsequent_indent("....");
+/// let lines = wrap("Wrapping text all day long.", &options);
+/// let annotated = lines
+/// .iter()
+/// .map(|line| match line {
+/// Borrowed(text) => format!("[Borrowed] {}", text),
+/// Owned(text) => format!("[Owned] {}", text),
+/// })
+/// .collect::<Vec<_>>();
+/// assert_eq!(
+/// annotated,
+/// &[
+/// "[Borrowed] Wrapping text",
+/// "[Owned] ....all day",
+/// "[Owned] ....long.",
+/// ]
+/// );
+/// ```
+///
+/// ## Leading and Trailing Whitespace
+///
+/// As a rule, leading whitespace (indentation) is preserved and
+/// trailing whitespace is discarded.
+///
+/// In more details, when wrapping words into lines, words are found
+/// by splitting the input text on space characters. One or more
+/// spaces (shown here as “␣”) are attached to the end of each word:
+///
+/// ```text
+/// "Foo␣␣␣bar␣baz" -> ["Foo␣␣␣", "bar␣", "baz"]
+/// ```
+///
+/// These words are then put into lines. The interword whitespace is
+/// preserved, unless the lines are wrapped so that the `"Foo␣␣␣"`
+/// word falls at the end of a line:
+///
+/// ```
+/// use textwrap::wrap;
+///
+/// assert_eq!(wrap("Foo bar baz", 10), vec!["Foo bar", "baz"]);
+/// assert_eq!(wrap("Foo bar baz", 8), vec!["Foo", "bar baz"]);
+/// ```
+///
+/// Notice how the trailing whitespace is removed in both case: in the
+/// first example, `"bar␣"` becomes `"bar"` and in the second case
+/// `"Foo␣␣␣"` becomes `"Foo"`.
+///
+/// Leading whitespace is preserved when the following word fits on
+/// the first line. To understand this, consider how words are found
+/// in a text with leading spaces:
+///
+/// ```text
+/// "␣␣foo␣bar" -> ["␣␣", "foo␣", "bar"]
+/// ```
+///
+/// When put into lines, the indentation is preserved if `"foo"` fits
+/// on the first line, otherwise you end up with an empty line:
+///
+/// ```
+/// use textwrap::wrap;
+///
+/// assert_eq!(wrap(" foo bar", 8), vec![" foo", "bar"]);
+/// assert_eq!(wrap(" foo bar", 4), vec!["", "foo", "bar"]);
+/// ```
+pub fn wrap<'a, Opt>(text: &str, width_or_options: Opt) -> Vec<Cow<'_, str>>
+where
+ Opt: Into<Options<'a>>,
+{
+ let options = width_or_options.into();
+
+ let initial_width = options
+ .width
+ .saturating_sub(core::display_width(options.initial_indent));
+ let subsequent_width = options
+ .width
+ .saturating_sub(core::display_width(options.subsequent_indent));
+
+ let mut lines = Vec::new();
+ for line in text.split('\n') {
+ let words = options.word_separator.find_words(line);
+ let split_words = word_splitters::split_words(words, &options.word_splitter);
+ let broken_words = if options.break_words {
+ let mut broken_words = core::break_words(split_words, subsequent_width);
+ if !options.initial_indent.is_empty() {
+ // Without this, the first word will always go into
+ // the first line. However, since we break words based
+ // on the _second_ line width, it can be wrong to
+ // unconditionally put the first word onto the first
+ // line. An empty zero-width word fixed this.
+ broken_words.insert(0, core::Word::from(""));
+ }
+ broken_words
+ } else {
+ split_words.collect::<Vec<_>>()
+ };
+
+ let line_widths = [initial_width, subsequent_width];
+ let wrapped_words = options.wrap_algorithm.wrap(&broken_words, &line_widths);
+
+ let mut idx = 0;
+ for words in wrapped_words {
+ let last_word = match words.last() {
+ None => {
+ lines.push(Cow::from(""));
+ continue;
+ }
+ Some(word) => word,
+ };
+
+ // We assume here that all words are contiguous in `line`.
+ // That is, the sum of their lengths should add up to the
+ // length of `line`.
+ let len = words
+ .iter()
+ .map(|word| word.len() + word.whitespace.len())
+ .sum::<usize>()
+ - last_word.whitespace.len();
+
+ // The result is owned if we have indentation, otherwise
+ // we can simply borrow an empty string.
+ let mut result = if lines.is_empty() && !options.initial_indent.is_empty() {
+ Cow::Owned(options.initial_indent.to_owned())
+ } else if !lines.is_empty() && !options.subsequent_indent.is_empty() {
+ Cow::Owned(options.subsequent_indent.to_owned())
+ } else {
+ // We can use an empty string here since string
+ // concatenation for `Cow` preserves a borrowed value
+ // when either side is empty.
+ Cow::from("")
+ };
+
+ result += &line[idx..idx + len];
+
+ if !last_word.penalty.is_empty() {
+ result.to_mut().push_str(last_word.penalty);
+ }
+
+ lines.push(result);
+
+ // Advance by the length of `result`, plus the length of
+ // `last_word.whitespace` -- even if we had a penalty, we
+ // need to skip over the whitespace.
+ idx += len + last_word.whitespace.len();
+ }
+ }
+
+ lines
+}
+
+/// Wrap text into columns with a given total width.
+///
+/// The `left_gap`, `middle_gap` and `right_gap` arguments specify the
+/// strings to insert before, between, and after the columns. The
+/// total width of all columns and all gaps is specified using the
+/// `total_width_or_options` argument. This argument can simply be an
+/// integer if you want to use default settings when wrapping, or it
+/// can be a [`Options`] value if you want to customize the wrapping.
+///
+/// If the columns are narrow, it is recommended to set
+/// [`Options::break_words`] to `true` to prevent words from
+/// protruding into the margins.
+///
+/// The per-column width is computed like this:
+///
+/// ```
+/// # let (left_gap, middle_gap, right_gap) = ("", "", "");
+/// # let columns = 2;
+/// # let options = textwrap::Options::new(80);
+/// let inner_width = options.width
+/// - textwrap::core::display_width(left_gap)
+/// - textwrap::core::display_width(right_gap)
+/// - textwrap::core::display_width(middle_gap) * (columns - 1);
+/// let column_width = inner_width / columns;
+/// ```
+///
+/// The `text` is wrapped using [`wrap`] and the given `options`
+/// argument, but the width is overwritten to the computed
+/// `column_width`.
+///
+/// # Panics
+///
+/// Panics if `columns` is zero.
+///
+/// # Examples
+///
+/// ```
+/// use textwrap::wrap_columns;
+///
+/// let text = "\
+/// This is an example text, which is wrapped into three columns. \
+/// Notice how the final column can be shorter than the others.";
+///
+/// #[cfg(feature = "smawk")]
+/// assert_eq!(wrap_columns(text, 3, 50, "| ", " | ", " |"),
+/// vec!["| This is | into three | column can be |",
+/// "| an example | columns. | shorter than |",
+/// "| text, which | Notice how | the others. |",
+/// "| is wrapped | the final | |"]);
+///
+/// // Without the `smawk` feature, the middle column is a little more uneven:
+/// #[cfg(not(feature = "smawk"))]
+/// assert_eq!(wrap_columns(text, 3, 50, "| ", " | ", " |"),
+/// vec!["| This is an | three | column can be |",
+/// "| example text, | columns. | shorter than |",
+/// "| which is | Notice how | the others. |",
+/// "| wrapped into | the final | |"]);
+pub fn wrap_columns<'a, Opt>(
+ text: &str,
+ columns: usize,
+ total_width_or_options: Opt,
+ left_gap: &str,
+ middle_gap: &str,
+ right_gap: &str,
+) -> Vec<String>
+where
+ Opt: Into<Options<'a>>,
+{
+ assert!(columns > 0);
+
+ let mut options = total_width_or_options.into();
+
+ let inner_width = options
+ .width
+ .saturating_sub(core::display_width(left_gap))
+ .saturating_sub(core::display_width(right_gap))
+ .saturating_sub(core::display_width(middle_gap) * (columns - 1));
+
+ let column_width = std::cmp::max(inner_width / columns, 1);
+ options.width = column_width;
+ let last_column_padding = " ".repeat(inner_width % column_width);
+ let wrapped_lines = wrap(text, options);
+ let lines_per_column =
+ wrapped_lines.len() / columns + usize::from(wrapped_lines.len() % columns > 0);
+ let mut lines = Vec::new();
+ for line_no in 0..lines_per_column {
+ let mut line = String::from(left_gap);
+ for column_no in 0..columns {
+ match wrapped_lines.get(line_no + column_no * lines_per_column) {
+ Some(column_line) => {
+ line.push_str(column_line);
+ line.push_str(&" ".repeat(column_width - core::display_width(column_line)));
+ }
+ None => {
+ line.push_str(&" ".repeat(column_width));
+ }
+ }
+ if column_no == columns - 1 {
+ line.push_str(&last_column_padding);
+ } else {
+ line.push_str(middle_gap);
+ }
+ }
+ line.push_str(right_gap);
+ lines.push(line);
+ }
+
+ lines
+}
+
+/// Fill `text` in-place without reallocating the input string.
+///
+/// This function works by modifying the input string: some `' '`
+/// characters will be replaced by `'\n'` characters. The rest of the
+/// text remains untouched.
+///
+/// Since we can only replace existing whitespace in the input with
+/// `'\n'`, we cannot do hyphenation nor can we split words longer
+/// than the line width. We also need to use `AsciiSpace` as the word
+/// separator since we need `' '` characters between words in order to
+/// replace some of them with a `'\n'`. Indentation is also ruled out.
+/// In other words, `fill_inplace(width)` behaves as if you had called
+/// [`fill`] with these options:
+///
+/// ```
+/// # use textwrap::{core, Options, WordSplitter, WordSeparator, WrapAlgorithm};
+/// # let width = 80;
+/// Options {
+/// width: width,
+/// initial_indent: "",
+/// subsequent_indent: "",
+/// break_words: false,
+/// word_separator: WordSeparator::AsciiSpace,
+/// wrap_algorithm: WrapAlgorithm::FirstFit,
+/// word_splitter: WordSplitter::NoHyphenation,
+/// };
+/// ```
+///
+/// The wrap algorithm is [`WrapAlgorithm::FirstFit`] since this
+/// is the fastest algorithm — and the main reason to use
+/// `fill_inplace` is to get the string broken into newlines as fast
+/// as possible.
+///
+/// A last difference is that (unlike [`fill`]) `fill_inplace` can
+/// leave trailing whitespace on lines. This is because we wrap by
+/// inserting a `'\n'` at the final whitespace in the input string:
+///
+/// ```
+/// let mut text = String::from("Hello World!");
+/// textwrap::fill_inplace(&mut text, 10);
+/// assert_eq!(text, "Hello \nWorld!");
+/// ```
+///
+/// If we didn't do this, the word `World!` would end up being
+/// indented. You can avoid this if you make sure that your input text
+/// has no double spaces.
+///
+/// # Performance
+///
+/// In benchmarks, `fill_inplace` is about twice as fast as [`fill`].
+/// Please see the [`linear`
+/// benchmark](https://github.com/mgeisler/textwrap/blob/master/benches/linear.rs)
+/// for details.
+pub fn fill_inplace(text: &mut String, width: usize) {
+ let mut indices = Vec::new();
+
+ let mut offset = 0;
+ for line in text.split('\n') {
+ let words = WordSeparator::AsciiSpace
+ .find_words(line)
+ .collect::<Vec<_>>();
+ let wrapped_words = wrap_algorithms::wrap_first_fit(&words, &[width as f64]);
+
+ let mut line_offset = offset;
+ for words in &wrapped_words[..wrapped_words.len() - 1] {
+ let line_len = words
+ .iter()
+ .map(|word| word.len() + word.whitespace.len())
+ .sum::<usize>();
+
+ line_offset += line_len;
+ // We've advanced past all ' ' characters -- want to move
+ // one ' ' backwards and insert our '\n' there.
+ indices.push(line_offset - 1);
+ }
+
+ // Advance past entire line, plus the '\n' which was removed
+ // by the split call above.
+ offset += line.len() + 1;
+ }
+
+ let mut bytes = std::mem::take(text).into_bytes();
+ for idx in indices {
+ bytes[idx] = b'\n';
+ }
+ *text = String::from_utf8(bytes).unwrap();
+}
+
+#[cfg(test)]
+mod tests {
+ use super::*;
+
+ #[cfg(feature = "hyphenation")]
+ use hyphenation::{Language, Load, Standard};
+
+ #[test]
+ fn options_agree_with_usize() {
+ let opt_usize = Options::from(42_usize);
+ let opt_options = Options::new(42);
+
+ assert_eq!(opt_usize.width, opt_options.width);
+ assert_eq!(opt_usize.initial_indent, opt_options.initial_indent);
+ assert_eq!(opt_usize.subsequent_indent, opt_options.subsequent_indent);
+ assert_eq!(opt_usize.break_words, opt_options.break_words);
+ assert_eq!(
+ opt_usize.word_splitter.split_points("hello-world"),
+ opt_options.word_splitter.split_points("hello-world")
+ );
+ }
+
+ #[test]
+ fn no_wrap() {
+ assert_eq!(wrap("foo", 10), vec!["foo"]);
+ }
+
+ #[test]
+ fn wrap_simple() {
+ assert_eq!(wrap("foo bar baz", 5), vec!["foo", "bar", "baz"]);
+ }
+
+ #[test]
+ fn to_be_or_not() {
+ assert_eq!(
+ wrap(
+ "To be, or not to be, that is the question.",
+ Options::new(10).wrap_algorithm(WrapAlgorithm::FirstFit)
+ ),
+ vec!["To be, or", "not to be,", "that is", "the", "question."]
+ );
+ }
+
+ #[test]
+ fn multiple_words_on_first_line() {
+ assert_eq!(wrap("foo bar baz", 10), vec!["foo bar", "baz"]);
+ }
+
+ #[test]
+ fn long_word() {
+ assert_eq!(wrap("foo", 0), vec!["f", "o", "o"]);
+ }
+
+ #[test]
+ fn long_words() {
+ assert_eq!(wrap("foo bar", 0), vec!["f", "o", "o", "b", "a", "r"]);
+ }
+
+ #[test]
+ fn max_width() {
+ assert_eq!(wrap("foo bar", usize::MAX), vec!["foo bar"]);
+
+ let text = "Hello there! This is some English text. \
+ It should not be wrapped given the extents below.";
+ assert_eq!(wrap(text, usize::MAX), vec![text]);
+ }
+
+ #[test]
+ fn leading_whitespace() {
+ assert_eq!(wrap(" foo bar", 6), vec![" foo", "bar"]);
+ }
+
+ #[test]
+ fn leading_whitespace_empty_first_line() {
+ // If there is no space for the first word, the first line
+ // will be empty. This is because the string is split into
+ // words like [" ", "foobar ", "baz"], which puts "foobar " on
+ // the second line. We never output trailing whitespace
+ assert_eq!(wrap(" foobar baz", 6), vec!["", "foobar", "baz"]);
+ }
+
+ #[test]
+ fn trailing_whitespace() {
+ // Whitespace is only significant inside a line. After a line
+ // gets too long and is broken, the first word starts in
+ // column zero and is not indented.
+ assert_eq!(wrap("foo bar baz ", 5), vec!["foo", "bar", "baz"]);
+ }
+
+ #[test]
+ fn issue_99() {
+ // We did not reset the in_whitespace flag correctly and did
+ // not handle single-character words after a line break.
+ assert_eq!(
+ wrap("aaabbbccc x yyyzzzwww", 9),
+ vec!["aaabbbccc", "x", "yyyzzzwww"]
+ );
+ }
+
+ #[test]
+ fn issue_129() {
+ // The dash is an em-dash which takes up four bytes. We used
+ // to panic since we tried to index into the character.
+ let options = Options::new(1).word_separator(WordSeparator::AsciiSpace);
+ assert_eq!(wrap("x – x", options), vec!["x", "–", "x"]);
+ }
+
+ #[test]
+ fn wide_character_handling() {
+ assert_eq!(wrap("Hello, World!", 15), vec!["Hello, World!"]);
+ assert_eq!(
+ wrap(
+ "Hello, World!",
+ Options::new(15).word_separator(WordSeparator::AsciiSpace)
+ ),
+ vec!["Hello,", "World!"]
+ );
+
+ // Wide characters are allowed to break if the
+ // unicode-linebreak feature is enabled.
+ #[cfg(feature = "unicode-linebreak")]
+ assert_eq!(
+ wrap(
+ "Hello, World!",
+ Options::new(15).word_separator(WordSeparator::UnicodeBreakProperties)
+ ),
+ vec!["Hello, W", "orld!"]
+ );
+ }
+
+ #[test]
+ fn empty_line_is_indented() {
+ // Previously, indentation was not applied to empty lines.
+ // However, this is somewhat inconsistent and undesirable if
+ // the indentation is something like a border ("| ") which you
+ // want to apply to all lines, empty or not.
+ let options = Options::new(10).initial_indent("!!!");
+ assert_eq!(fill("", &options), "!!!");
+ }
+
+ #[test]
+ fn indent_single_line() {
+ let options = Options::new(10).initial_indent(">>>"); // No trailing space
+ assert_eq!(fill("foo", &options), ">>>foo");
+ }
+
+ #[test]
+ fn indent_first_emoji() {
+ let options = Options::new(10).initial_indent("👉👉");
+ assert_eq!(
+ wrap("x x x x x x x x x x x x x", &options),
+ vec!["👉👉x x x", "x x x x x", "x x x x x"]
+ );
+ }
+
+ #[test]
+ fn indent_multiple_lines() {
+ let options = Options::new(6).initial_indent("* ").subsequent_indent(" ");
+ assert_eq!(
+ wrap("foo bar baz", &options),
+ vec!["* foo", " bar", " baz"]
+ );
+ }
+
+ #[test]
+ fn indent_break_words() {
+ let options = Options::new(5).initial_indent("* ").subsequent_indent(" ");
+ assert_eq!(wrap("foobarbaz", &options), vec!["* foo", " bar", " baz"]);
+ }
+
+ #[test]
+ fn initial_indent_break_words() {
+ // This is a corner-case showing how the long word is broken
+ // according to the width of the subsequent lines. The first
+ // fragment of the word no longer fits on the first line,
+ // which ends up being pure indentation.
+ let options = Options::new(5).initial_indent("-->");
+ assert_eq!(wrap("foobarbaz", &options), vec!["-->", "fooba", "rbaz"]);
+ }
+
+ #[test]
+ fn hyphens() {
+ assert_eq!(wrap("foo-bar", 5), vec!["foo-", "bar"]);
+ }
+
+ #[test]
+ fn trailing_hyphen() {
+ let options = Options::new(5).break_words(false);
+ assert_eq!(wrap("foobar-", &options), vec!["foobar-"]);
+ }
+
+ #[test]
+ fn multiple_hyphens() {
+ assert_eq!(wrap("foo-bar-baz", 5), vec!["foo-", "bar-", "baz"]);
+ }
+
+ #[test]
+ fn hyphens_flag() {
+ let options = Options::new(5).break_words(false);
+ assert_eq!(
+ wrap("The --foo-bar flag.", &options),
+ vec!["The", "--foo-", "bar", "flag."]
+ );
+ }
+
+ #[test]
+ fn repeated_hyphens() {
+ let options = Options::new(4).break_words(false);
+ assert_eq!(wrap("foo--bar", &options), vec!["foo--bar"]);
+ }
+
+ #[test]
+ fn hyphens_alphanumeric() {
+ assert_eq!(wrap("Na2-CH4", 5), vec!["Na2-", "CH4"]);
+ }
+
+ #[test]
+ fn hyphens_non_alphanumeric() {
+ let options = Options::new(5).break_words(false);
+ assert_eq!(wrap("foo(-)bar", &options), vec!["foo(-)bar"]);
+ }
+
+ #[test]
+ fn multiple_splits() {
+ assert_eq!(wrap("foo-bar-baz", 9), vec!["foo-bar-", "baz"]);
+ }
+
+ #[test]
+ fn forced_split() {
+ let options = Options::new(5).break_words(false);
+ assert_eq!(wrap("foobar-baz", &options), vec!["foobar-", "baz"]);
+ }
+
+ #[test]
+ fn multiple_unbroken_words_issue_193() {
+ let options = Options::new(3).break_words(false);
+ assert_eq!(
+ wrap("small large tiny", &options),
+ vec!["small", "large", "tiny"]
+ );
+ assert_eq!(
+ wrap("small large tiny", &options),
+ vec!["small", "large", "tiny"]
+ );
+ }
+
+ #[test]
+ fn very_narrow_lines_issue_193() {
+ let options = Options::new(1).break_words(false);
+ assert_eq!(wrap("fooo x y", &options), vec!["fooo", "x", "y"]);
+ assert_eq!(wrap("fooo x y", &options), vec!["fooo", "x", "y"]);
+ }
+
+ #[test]
+ fn simple_hyphens() {
+ let options = Options::new(8).word_splitter(WordSplitter::HyphenSplitter);
+ assert_eq!(wrap("foo bar-baz", &options), vec!["foo bar-", "baz"]);
+ }
+
+ #[test]
+ fn no_hyphenation() {
+ let options = Options::new(8).word_splitter(WordSplitter::NoHyphenation);
+ assert_eq!(wrap("foo bar-baz", &options), vec!["foo", "bar-baz"]);
+ }
+
+ #[test]
+ #[cfg(feature = "hyphenation")]
+ fn auto_hyphenation_double_hyphenation() {
+ let dictionary = Standard::from_embedded(Language::EnglishUS).unwrap();
+ let options = Options::new(10);
+ assert_eq!(
+ wrap("Internationalization", &options),
+ vec!["Internatio", "nalization"]
+ );
+
+ let options = Options::new(10).word_splitter(WordSplitter::Hyphenation(dictionary));
+ assert_eq!(
+ wrap("Internationalization", &options),
+ vec!["Interna-", "tionaliza-", "tion"]
+ );
+ }
+
+ #[test]
+ #[cfg(feature = "hyphenation")]
+ fn auto_hyphenation_issue_158() {
+ let dictionary = Standard::from_embedded(Language::EnglishUS).unwrap();
+ let options = Options::new(10);
+ assert_eq!(
+ wrap("participation is the key to success", &options),
+ vec!["participat", "ion is", "the key to", "success"]
+ );
+
+ let options = Options::new(10).word_splitter(WordSplitter::Hyphenation(dictionary));
+ assert_eq!(
+ wrap("participation is the key to success", &options),
+ vec!["partici-", "pation is", "the key to", "success"]
+ );
+ }
+
+ #[test]
+ #[cfg(feature = "hyphenation")]
+ fn split_len_hyphenation() {
+ // Test that hyphenation takes the width of the whitespace
+ // into account.
+ let dictionary = Standard::from_embedded(Language::EnglishUS).unwrap();
+ let options = Options::new(15).word_splitter(WordSplitter::Hyphenation(dictionary));
+ assert_eq!(
+ wrap("garbage collection", &options),
+ vec!["garbage col-", "lection"]
+ );
+ }
+
+ #[test]
+ #[cfg(feature = "hyphenation")]
+ fn borrowed_lines() {
+ // Lines that end with an extra hyphen are owned, the final
+ // line is borrowed.
+ use std::borrow::Cow::{Borrowed, Owned};
+ let dictionary = Standard::from_embedded(Language::EnglishUS).unwrap();
+ let options = Options::new(10).word_splitter(WordSplitter::Hyphenation(dictionary));
+ let lines = wrap("Internationalization", &options);
+ assert_eq!(lines, vec!["Interna-", "tionaliza-", "tion"]);
+ if let Borrowed(s) = lines[0] {
+ assert!(false, "should not have been borrowed: {:?}", s);
+ }
+ if let Borrowed(s) = lines[1] {
+ assert!(false, "should not have been borrowed: {:?}", s);
+ }
+ if let Owned(ref s) = lines[2] {
+ assert!(false, "should not have been owned: {:?}", s);
+ }
+ }
+
+ #[test]
+ #[cfg(feature = "hyphenation")]
+ fn auto_hyphenation_with_hyphen() {
+ let dictionary = Standard::from_embedded(Language::EnglishUS).unwrap();
+ let options = Options::new(8).break_words(false);
+ assert_eq!(
+ wrap("over-caffinated", &options),
+ vec!["over-", "caffinated"]
+ );
+
+ let options = options.word_splitter(WordSplitter::Hyphenation(dictionary));
+ assert_eq!(
+ wrap("over-caffinated", &options),
+ vec!["over-", "caffi-", "nated"]
+ );
+ }
+
+ #[test]
+ fn break_words() {
+ assert_eq!(wrap("foobarbaz", 3), vec!["foo", "bar", "baz"]);
+ }
+
+ #[test]
+ fn break_words_wide_characters() {
+ // Even the poor man's version of `ch_width` counts these
+ // characters as wide.
+ let options = Options::new(5).word_separator(WordSeparator::AsciiSpace);
+ assert_eq!(wrap("Hello", options), vec!["He", "ll", "o"]);
+ }
+
+ #[test]
+ fn break_words_zero_width() {
+ assert_eq!(wrap("foobar", 0), vec!["f", "o", "o", "b", "a", "r"]);
+ }
+
+ #[test]
+ fn break_long_first_word() {
+ assert_eq!(wrap("testx y", 4), vec!["test", "x y"]);
+ }
+
+ #[test]
+ fn break_words_line_breaks() {
+ assert_eq!(fill("ab\ncdefghijkl", 5), "ab\ncdefg\nhijkl");
+ assert_eq!(fill("abcdefgh\nijkl", 5), "abcde\nfgh\nijkl");
+ }
+
+ #[test]
+ fn break_words_empty_lines() {
+ assert_eq!(
+ fill("foo\nbar", &Options::new(2).break_words(false)),
+ "foo\nbar"
+ );
+ }
+
+ #[test]
+ fn preserve_line_breaks() {
+ assert_eq!(fill("", 80), "");
+ assert_eq!(fill("\n", 80), "\n");
+ assert_eq!(fill("\n\n\n", 80), "\n\n\n");
+ assert_eq!(fill("test\n", 80), "test\n");
+ assert_eq!(fill("test\n\na\n\n", 80), "test\n\na\n\n");
+ assert_eq!(
+ fill(
+ "1 3 5 7\n1 3 5 7",
+ Options::new(7).wrap_algorithm(WrapAlgorithm::FirstFit)
+ ),
+ "1 3 5 7\n1 3 5 7"
+ );
+ assert_eq!(
+ fill(
+ "1 3 5 7\n1 3 5 7",
+ Options::new(5).wrap_algorithm(WrapAlgorithm::FirstFit)
+ ),
+ "1 3 5\n7\n1 3 5\n7"
+ );
+ }
+
+ #[test]
+ fn preserve_line_breaks_with_whitespace() {
+ assert_eq!(fill(" ", 80), "");
+ assert_eq!(fill(" \n ", 80), "\n");
+ assert_eq!(fill(" \n \n \n ", 80), "\n\n\n");
+ }
+
+ #[test]
+ fn non_breaking_space() {
+ let options = Options::new(5).break_words(false);
+ assert_eq!(fill("foo bar baz", &options), "foo bar baz");
+ }
+
+ #[test]
+ fn non_breaking_hyphen() {
+ let options = Options::new(5).break_words(false);
+ assert_eq!(fill("foo‑bar‑baz", &options), "foo‑bar‑baz");
+ }
+
+ #[test]
+ fn fill_simple() {
+ assert_eq!(fill("foo bar baz", 10), "foo bar\nbaz");
+ }
+
+ #[test]
+ fn fill_colored_text() {
+ // The words are much longer than 6 bytes, but they remain
+ // intact after filling the text.
+ let green_hello = "\u{1b}[0m\u{1b}[32mHello\u{1b}[0m";
+ let blue_world = "\u{1b}[0m\u{1b}[34mWorld!\u{1b}[0m";
+ assert_eq!(
+ fill(&(String::from(green_hello) + " " + &blue_world), 6),
+ String::from(green_hello) + "\n" + &blue_world
+ );
+ }
+
+ #[test]
+ fn fill_unicode_boundary() {
+ // https://github.com/mgeisler/textwrap/issues/390
+ fill("\u{1b}!Ͽ", 10);
+ }
+
+ #[test]
+ fn fill_inplace_empty() {
+ let mut text = String::from("");
+ fill_inplace(&mut text, 80);
+ assert_eq!(text, "");
+ }
+
+ #[test]
+ fn fill_inplace_simple() {
+ let mut text = String::from("foo bar baz");
+ fill_inplace(&mut text, 10);
+ assert_eq!(text, "foo bar\nbaz");
+ }
+
+ #[test]
+ fn fill_inplace_multiple_lines() {
+ let mut text = String::from("Some text to wrap over multiple lines");
+ fill_inplace(&mut text, 12);
+ assert_eq!(text, "Some text to\nwrap over\nmultiple\nlines");
+ }
+
+ #[test]
+ fn fill_inplace_long_word() {
+ let mut text = String::from("Internationalization is hard");
+ fill_inplace(&mut text, 10);
+ assert_eq!(text, "Internationalization\nis hard");
+ }
+
+ #[test]
+ fn fill_inplace_no_hyphen_splitting() {
+ let mut text = String::from("A well-chosen example");
+ fill_inplace(&mut text, 10);
+ assert_eq!(text, "A\nwell-chosen\nexample");
+ }
+
+ #[test]
+ fn fill_inplace_newlines() {
+ let mut text = String::from("foo bar\n\nbaz\n\n\n");
+ fill_inplace(&mut text, 10);
+ assert_eq!(text, "foo bar\n\nbaz\n\n\n");
+ }
+
+ #[test]
+ fn fill_inplace_newlines_reset_line_width() {
+ let mut text = String::from("1 3 5\n1 3 5 7 9\n1 3 5 7 9 1 3");
+ fill_inplace(&mut text, 10);
+ assert_eq!(text, "1 3 5\n1 3 5 7 9\n1 3 5 7 9\n1 3");
+ }
+
+ #[test]
+ fn fill_inplace_leading_whitespace() {
+ let mut text = String::from(" foo bar baz");
+ fill_inplace(&mut text, 10);
+ assert_eq!(text, " foo bar\nbaz");
+ }
+
+ #[test]
+ fn fill_inplace_trailing_whitespace() {
+ let mut text = String::from("foo bar baz ");
+ fill_inplace(&mut text, 10);
+ assert_eq!(text, "foo bar\nbaz ");
+ }
+
+ #[test]
+ fn fill_inplace_interior_whitespace() {
+ // To avoid an unwanted indentation of "baz", it is important
+ // to replace the final ' ' with '\n'.
+ let mut text = String::from("foo bar baz");
+ fill_inplace(&mut text, 10);
+ assert_eq!(text, "foo bar \nbaz");
+ }
+
+ #[test]
+ fn unfill_simple() {
+ let (text, options) = unfill("foo\nbar");
+ assert_eq!(text, "foo bar");
+ assert_eq!(options.width, 3);
+ }
+
+ #[test]
+ fn unfill_trailing_newlines() {
+ let (text, options) = unfill("foo\nbar\n\n\n");
+ assert_eq!(text, "foo bar\n\n\n");
+ assert_eq!(options.width, 3);
+ }
+
+ #[test]
+ fn unfill_initial_indent() {
+ let (text, options) = unfill(" foo\nbar\nbaz");
+ assert_eq!(text, "foo bar baz");
+ assert_eq!(options.width, 5);
+ assert_eq!(options.initial_indent, " ");
+ }
+
+ #[test]
+ fn unfill_differing_indents() {
+ let (text, options) = unfill(" foo\n bar\n baz");
+ assert_eq!(text, "foo bar baz");
+ assert_eq!(options.width, 7);
+ assert_eq!(options.initial_indent, " ");
+ assert_eq!(options.subsequent_indent, " ");
+ }
+
+ #[test]
+ fn unfill_list_item() {
+ let (text, options) = unfill("* foo\n bar\n baz");
+ assert_eq!(text, "foo bar baz");
+ assert_eq!(options.width, 5);
+ assert_eq!(options.initial_indent, "* ");
+ assert_eq!(options.subsequent_indent, " ");
+ }
+
+ #[test]
+ fn unfill_multiple_char_prefix() {
+ let (text, options) = unfill(" // foo bar\n // baz\n // quux");
+ assert_eq!(text, "foo bar baz quux");
+ assert_eq!(options.width, 14);
+ assert_eq!(options.initial_indent, " // ");
+ assert_eq!(options.subsequent_indent, " // ");
+ }
+
+ #[test]
+ fn unfill_block_quote() {
+ let (text, options) = unfill("> foo\n> bar\n> baz");
+ assert_eq!(text, "foo bar baz");
+ assert_eq!(options.width, 5);
+ assert_eq!(options.initial_indent, "> ");
+ assert_eq!(options.subsequent_indent, "> ");
+ }
+
+ #[test]
+ fn unfill_whitespace() {
+ assert_eq!(unfill("foo bar").0, "foo bar");
+ }
+
+ #[test]
+ fn wrap_columns_empty_text() {
+ assert_eq!(wrap_columns("", 1, 10, "| ", "", " |"), vec!["| |"]);
+ }
+
+ #[test]
+ fn wrap_columns_single_column() {
+ assert_eq!(
+ wrap_columns("Foo", 3, 30, "| ", " | ", " |"),
+ vec!["| Foo | | |"]
+ );
+ }
+
+ #[test]
+ fn wrap_columns_uneven_columns() {
+ // The gaps take up a total of 5 columns, so the columns are
+ // (21 - 5)/4 = 4 columns wide:
+ assert_eq!(
+ wrap_columns("Foo Bar Baz Quux", 4, 21, "|", "|", "|"),
+ vec!["|Foo |Bar |Baz |Quux|"]
+ );
+ // As the total width increases, the last column absorbs the
+ // excess width:
+ assert_eq!(
+ wrap_columns("Foo Bar Baz Quux", 4, 24, "|", "|", "|"),
+ vec!["|Foo |Bar |Baz |Quux |"]
+ );
+ // Finally, when the width is 25, the columns can be resized
+ // to a width of (25 - 5)/4 = 5 columns:
+ assert_eq!(
+ wrap_columns("Foo Bar Baz Quux", 4, 25, "|", "|", "|"),
+ vec!["|Foo |Bar |Baz |Quux |"]
+ );
+ }
+
+ #[test]
+ #[cfg(feature = "unicode-width")]
+ fn wrap_columns_with_emojis() {
+ assert_eq!(
+ wrap_columns(
+ "Words and a few emojis 😍 wrapped in ⓶ columns",
+ 2,
+ 30,
+ "✨ ",
+ " ⚽ ",
+ " 👀"
+ ),
+ vec![
+ "✨ Words ⚽ wrapped in 👀",
+ "✨ and a few ⚽ ⓶ columns 👀",
+ "✨ emojis 😍 ⚽ 👀"
+ ]
+ );
+ }
+
+ #[test]
+ fn wrap_columns_big_gaps() {
+ // The column width shrinks to 1 because the gaps take up all
+ // the space.
+ assert_eq!(
+ wrap_columns("xyz", 2, 10, "----> ", " !!! ", " <----"),
+ vec![
+ "----> x !!! z <----", //
+ "----> y !!! <----"
+ ]
+ );
+ }
+
+ #[test]
+ #[should_panic]
+ fn wrap_columns_panic_with_zero_columns() {
+ wrap_columns("", 0, 10, "", "", "");
+ }
+}
diff --git a/vendor/textwrap/src/word_separators.rs b/vendor/textwrap/src/word_separators.rs
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..25adf31
--- /dev/null
+++ b/vendor/textwrap/src/word_separators.rs
@@ -0,0 +1,428 @@
+//! Functionality for finding words.
+//!
+//! In order to wrap text, we need to know where the legal break
+//! points are, i.e., where the words of the text are. This means that
+//! we need to define what a "word" is.
+//!
+//! A simple approach is to simply split the text on whitespace, but
+//! this does not work for East-Asian languages such as Chinese or
+//! Japanese where there are no spaces between words. Breaking a long
+//! sequence of emojis is another example where line breaks might be
+//! wanted even if there are no whitespace to be found.
+//!
+//! The [`WordSeparator`] trait is responsible for determining where
+//! there words are in a line of text. Please refer to the trait and
+//! the structs which implement it for more information.
+
+#[cfg(feature = "unicode-linebreak")]
+use crate::core::skip_ansi_escape_sequence;
+use crate::core::Word;
+
+/// Describes where words occur in a line of text.
+///
+/// The simplest approach is say that words are separated by one or
+/// more ASCII spaces (`' '`). This works for Western languages
+/// without emojis. A more complex approach is to use the Unicode line
+/// breaking algorithm, which finds break points in non-ASCII text.
+///
+/// The line breaks occur between words, please see
+/// [`WordSplitter`](crate::WordSplitter) for options of how to handle
+/// hyphenation of individual words.
+///
+/// # Examples
+///
+/// ```
+/// use textwrap::core::Word;
+/// use textwrap::WordSeparator::AsciiSpace;
+///
+/// let words = AsciiSpace.find_words("Hello World!").collect::<Vec<_>>();
+/// assert_eq!(words, vec![Word::from("Hello "), Word::from("World!")]);
+/// ```
+#[derive(Clone, Copy)]
+pub enum WordSeparator {
+ /// Find words by splitting on runs of `' '` characters.
+ ///
+ /// # Examples
+ ///
+ /// ```
+ /// use textwrap::core::Word;
+ /// use textwrap::WordSeparator::AsciiSpace;
+ ///
+ /// let words = AsciiSpace.find_words("Hello World!").collect::<Vec<_>>();
+ /// assert_eq!(words, vec![Word::from("Hello "),
+ /// Word::from("World!")]);
+ /// ```
+ AsciiSpace,
+
+ /// Split `line` into words using Unicode break properties.
+ ///
+ /// This word separator uses the Unicode line breaking algorithm
+ /// described in [Unicode Standard Annex
+ /// #14](https://www.unicode.org/reports/tr14/) to find legal places
+ /// to break lines. There is a small difference in that the U+002D
+ /// (Hyphen-Minus) and U+00AD (Soft Hyphen) don’t create a line break:
+ /// to allow a line break at a hyphen, use
+ /// [`WordSplitter::HyphenSplitter`](crate::WordSplitter::HyphenSplitter).
+ /// Soft hyphens are not currently supported.
+ ///
+ /// # Examples
+ ///
+ /// Unlike [`WordSeparator::AsciiSpace`], the Unicode line
+ /// breaking algorithm will find line break opportunities between
+ /// some characters with no intervening whitespace:
+ ///
+ /// ```
+ /// #[cfg(feature = "unicode-linebreak")] {
+ /// use textwrap::core::Word;
+ /// use textwrap::WordSeparator::UnicodeBreakProperties;
+ ///
+ /// assert_eq!(UnicodeBreakProperties.find_words("Emojis: 😂😍").collect::<Vec<_>>(),
+ /// vec![Word::from("Emojis: "),
+ /// Word::from("😂"),
+ /// Word::from("😍")]);
+ ///
+ /// assert_eq!(UnicodeBreakProperties.find_words("CJK: 你好").collect::<Vec<_>>(),
+ /// vec![Word::from("CJK: "),
+ /// Word::from("你"),
+ /// Word::from("好")]);
+ /// }
+ /// ```
+ ///
+ /// A U+2060 (Word Joiner) character can be inserted if you want to
+ /// manually override the defaults and keep the characters together:
+ ///
+ /// ```
+ /// #[cfg(feature = "unicode-linebreak")] {
+ /// use textwrap::core::Word;
+ /// use textwrap::WordSeparator::UnicodeBreakProperties;
+ ///
+ /// assert_eq!(UnicodeBreakProperties.find_words("Emojis: 😂\u{2060}😍").collect::<Vec<_>>(),
+ /// vec![Word::from("Emojis: "),
+ /// Word::from("😂\u{2060}😍")]);
+ /// }
+ /// ```
+ ///
+ /// The Unicode line breaking algorithm will also automatically
+ /// suppress break breaks around certain punctuation characters::
+ ///
+ /// ```
+ /// #[cfg(feature = "unicode-linebreak")] {
+ /// use textwrap::core::Word;
+ /// use textwrap::WordSeparator::UnicodeBreakProperties;
+ ///
+ /// assert_eq!(UnicodeBreakProperties.find_words("[ foo ] bar !").collect::<Vec<_>>(),
+ /// vec![Word::from("[ foo ] "),
+ /// Word::from("bar !")]);
+ /// }
+ /// ```
+ #[cfg(feature = "unicode-linebreak")]
+ UnicodeBreakProperties,
+
+ /// Find words using a custom word separator
+ Custom(fn(line: &str) -> Box<dyn Iterator<Item = Word<'_>> + '_>),
+}
+
+impl std::fmt::Debug for WordSeparator {
+ fn fmt(&self, f: &mut std::fmt::Formatter<'_>) -> std::fmt::Result {
+ match self {
+ WordSeparator::AsciiSpace => f.write_str("AsciiSpace"),
+ #[cfg(feature = "unicode-linebreak")]
+ WordSeparator::UnicodeBreakProperties => f.write_str("UnicodeBreakProperties"),
+ WordSeparator::Custom(_) => f.write_str("Custom(...)"),
+ }
+ }
+}
+
+impl WordSeparator {
+ // This function should really return impl Iterator<Item = Word>, but
+ // this isn't possible until Rust supports higher-kinded types:
+ // https://github.com/rust-lang/rfcs/blob/master/text/1522-conservative-impl-trait.md
+ /// Find all words in `line`.
+ pub fn find_words<'a>(&self, line: &'a str) -> Box<dyn Iterator<Item = Word<'a>> + 'a> {
+ match self {
+ WordSeparator::AsciiSpace => find_words_ascii_space(line),
+ #[cfg(feature = "unicode-linebreak")]
+ WordSeparator::UnicodeBreakProperties => find_words_unicode_break_properties(line),
+ WordSeparator::Custom(func) => func(line),
+ }
+ }
+}
+
+fn find_words_ascii_space<'a>(line: &'a str) -> Box<dyn Iterator<Item = Word<'a>> + 'a> {
+ let mut start = 0;
+ let mut in_whitespace = false;
+ let mut char_indices = line.char_indices();
+
+ Box::new(std::iter::from_fn(move || {
+ // for (idx, ch) in char_indices does not work, gives this
+ // error:
+ //
+ // > cannot move out of `char_indices`, a captured variable in
+ // > an `FnMut` closure
+ #[allow(clippy::while_let_on_iterator)]
+ while let Some((idx, ch)) = char_indices.next() {
+ if in_whitespace && ch != ' ' {
+ let word = Word::from(&line[start..idx]);
+ start = idx;
+ in_whitespace = ch == ' ';
+ return Some(word);
+ }
+
+ in_whitespace = ch == ' ';
+ }
+
+ if start < line.len() {
+ let word = Word::from(&line[start..]);
+ start = line.len();
+ return Some(word);
+ }
+
+ None
+ }))
+}
+
+// Strip all ANSI escape sequences from `text`.
+#[cfg(feature = "unicode-linebreak")]
+fn strip_ansi_escape_sequences(text: &str) -> String {
+ let mut result = String::with_capacity(text.len());
+
+ let mut chars = text.chars();
+ while let Some(ch) = chars.next() {
+ if skip_ansi_escape_sequence(ch, &mut chars) {
+ continue;
+ }
+ result.push(ch);
+ }
+
+ result
+}
+
+/// Soft hyphen, also knows as a “shy hyphen”. Should show up as ‘-’
+/// if a line is broken at this point, and otherwise be invisible.
+/// Textwrap does not currently support breaking words at soft
+/// hyphens.
+#[cfg(feature = "unicode-linebreak")]
+const SHY: char = '\u{00ad}';
+
+/// Find words in line. ANSI escape sequences are ignored in `line`.
+#[cfg(feature = "unicode-linebreak")]
+fn find_words_unicode_break_properties<'a>(
+ line: &'a str,
+) -> Box<dyn Iterator<Item = Word<'a>> + 'a> {
+ // Construct an iterator over (original index, stripped index)
+ // tuples. We find the Unicode linebreaks on a stripped string,
+ // but we need the original indices so we can form words based on
+ // the original string.
+ let mut last_stripped_idx = 0;
+ let mut char_indices = line.char_indices();
+ let mut idx_map = std::iter::from_fn(move || match char_indices.next() {
+ Some((orig_idx, ch)) => {
+ let stripped_idx = last_stripped_idx;
+ if !skip_ansi_escape_sequence(ch, &mut char_indices.by_ref().map(|(_, ch)| ch)) {
+ last_stripped_idx += ch.len_utf8();
+ }
+ Some((orig_idx, stripped_idx))
+ }
+ None => None,
+ });
+
+ let stripped = strip_ansi_escape_sequences(line);
+ let mut opportunities = unicode_linebreak::linebreaks(&stripped)
+ .filter(|(idx, _)| {
+ #[allow(clippy::match_like_matches_macro)]
+ match &stripped[..*idx].chars().next_back() {
+ // We suppress breaks at ‘-’ since we want to control
+ // this via the WordSplitter.
+ Some('-') => false,
+ // Soft hyphens are currently not supported since we
+ // require all `Word` fragments to be continuous in
+ // the input string.
+ Some(SHY) => false,
+ // Other breaks should be fine!
+ _ => true,
+ }
+ })
+ .collect::<Vec<_>>()
+ .into_iter();
+
+ // Remove final break opportunity, we will add it below using
+ // &line[start..]; This ensures that we correctly include a
+ // trailing ANSI escape sequence.
+ opportunities.next_back();
+
+ let mut start = 0;
+ Box::new(std::iter::from_fn(move || {
+ #[allow(clippy::while_let_on_iterator)]
+ while let Some((idx, _)) = opportunities.next() {
+ if let Some((orig_idx, _)) = idx_map.find(|&(_, stripped_idx)| stripped_idx == idx) {
+ let word = Word::from(&line[start..orig_idx]);
+ start = orig_idx;
+ return Some(word);
+ }
+ }
+
+ if start < line.len() {
+ let word = Word::from(&line[start..]);
+ start = line.len();
+ return Some(word);
+ }
+
+ None
+ }))
+}
+
+#[cfg(test)]
+mod tests {
+ use super::WordSeparator::*;
+ use super::*;
+
+ // Like assert_eq!, but the left expression is an iterator.
+ macro_rules! assert_iter_eq {
+ ($left:expr, $right:expr) => {
+ assert_eq!($left.collect::<Vec<_>>(), $right);
+ };
+ }
+
+ fn to_words<'a>(words: Vec<&'a str>) -> Vec<Word<'a>> {
+ words.into_iter().map(|w: &str| Word::from(&w)).collect()
+ }
+
+ macro_rules! test_find_words {
+ ($ascii_name:ident,
+ $unicode_name:ident,
+ $([ $line:expr, $ascii_words:expr, $unicode_words:expr ]),+) => {
+ #[test]
+ fn $ascii_name() {
+ $(
+ let expected_words = to_words($ascii_words.to_vec());
+ let actual_words = WordSeparator::AsciiSpace
+ .find_words($line)
+ .collect::<Vec<_>>();
+ assert_eq!(actual_words, expected_words, "Line: {:?}", $line);
+ )+
+ }
+
+ #[test]
+ #[cfg(feature = "unicode-linebreak")]
+ fn $unicode_name() {
+ $(
+ let expected_words = to_words($unicode_words.to_vec());
+ let actual_words = WordSeparator::UnicodeBreakProperties
+ .find_words($line)
+ .collect::<Vec<_>>();
+ assert_eq!(actual_words, expected_words, "Line: {:?}", $line);
+ )+
+ }
+ };
+ }
+
+ test_find_words!(ascii_space_empty, unicode_empty, ["", [], []]);
+
+ test_find_words!(
+ ascii_single_word,
+ unicode_single_word,
+ ["foo", ["foo"], ["foo"]]
+ );
+
+ test_find_words!(
+ ascii_two_words,
+ unicode_two_words,
+ ["foo bar", ["foo ", "bar"], ["foo ", "bar"]]
+ );
+
+ test_find_words!(
+ ascii_multiple_words,
+ unicode_multiple_words,
+ ["foo bar", ["foo ", "bar"], ["foo ", "bar"]],
+ ["x y z", ["x ", "y ", "z"], ["x ", "y ", "z"]]
+ );
+
+ test_find_words!(
+ ascii_only_whitespace,
+ unicode_only_whitespace,
+ [" ", [" "], [" "]],
+ [" ", [" "], [" "]]
+ );
+
+ test_find_words!(
+ ascii_inter_word_whitespace,
+ unicode_inter_word_whitespace,
+ ["foo bar", ["foo ", "bar"], ["foo ", "bar"]]
+ );
+
+ test_find_words!(
+ ascii_trailing_whitespace,
+ unicode_trailing_whitespace,
+ ["foo ", ["foo "], ["foo "]]
+ );
+
+ test_find_words!(
+ ascii_leading_whitespace,
+ unicode_leading_whitespace,
+ [" foo", [" ", "foo"], [" ", "foo"]]
+ );
+
+ test_find_words!(
+ ascii_multi_column_char,
+ unicode_multi_column_char,
+ ["\u{1f920}", ["\u{1f920}"], ["\u{1f920}"]] // cowboy emoji 🤠
+ );
+
+ test_find_words!(
+ ascii_hyphens,
+ unicode_hyphens,
+ ["foo-bar", ["foo-bar"], ["foo-bar"]],
+ ["foo- bar", ["foo- ", "bar"], ["foo- ", "bar"]],
+ ["foo - bar", ["foo ", "- ", "bar"], ["foo ", "- ", "bar"]],
+ ["foo -bar", ["foo ", "-bar"], ["foo ", "-bar"]]
+ );
+
+ test_find_words!(
+ ascii_newline,
+ unicode_newline,
+ ["foo\nbar", ["foo\nbar"], ["foo\n", "bar"]]
+ );
+
+ test_find_words!(
+ ascii_tab,
+ unicode_tab,
+ ["foo\tbar", ["foo\tbar"], ["foo\t", "bar"]]
+ );
+
+ test_find_words!(
+ ascii_non_breaking_space,
+ unicode_non_breaking_space,
+ ["foo\u{00A0}bar", ["foo\u{00A0}bar"], ["foo\u{00A0}bar"]]
+ );
+
+ #[test]
+ #[cfg(unix)]
+ fn find_words_colored_text() {
+ use termion::color::{Blue, Fg, Green, Reset};
+
+ let green_hello = format!("{}Hello{} ", Fg(Green), Fg(Reset));
+ let blue_world = format!("{}World!{}", Fg(Blue), Fg(Reset));
+ assert_iter_eq!(
+ AsciiSpace.find_words(&format!("{}{}", green_hello, blue_world)),
+ vec![Word::from(&green_hello), Word::from(&blue_world)]
+ );
+
+ #[cfg(feature = "unicode-linebreak")]
+ assert_iter_eq!(
+ UnicodeBreakProperties.find_words(&format!("{}{}", green_hello, blue_world)),
+ vec![Word::from(&green_hello), Word::from(&blue_world)]
+ );
+ }
+
+ #[test]
+ fn find_words_color_inside_word() {
+ let text = "foo\u{1b}[0m\u{1b}[32mbar\u{1b}[0mbaz";
+ assert_iter_eq!(AsciiSpace.find_words(&text), vec![Word::from(text)]);
+
+ #[cfg(feature = "unicode-linebreak")]
+ assert_iter_eq!(
+ UnicodeBreakProperties.find_words(&text),
+ vec![Word::from(text)]
+ );
+ }
+}
diff --git a/vendor/textwrap/src/word_splitters.rs b/vendor/textwrap/src/word_splitters.rs
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..69e246f
--- /dev/null
+++ b/vendor/textwrap/src/word_splitters.rs
@@ -0,0 +1,314 @@
+//! Word splitting functionality.
+//!
+//! To wrap text into lines, long words sometimes need to be split
+//! across lines. The [`WordSplitter`] enum defines this
+//! functionality.
+
+use crate::core::{display_width, Word};
+
+/// The `WordSplitter` enum describes where words can be split.
+///
+/// If the textwrap crate has been compiled with the `hyphenation`
+/// Cargo feature enabled, you will find a
+/// [`WordSplitter::Hyphenation`] variant. Use this struct for
+/// language-aware hyphenation:
+///
+/// ```
+/// #[cfg(feature = "hyphenation")] {
+/// use hyphenation::{Language, Load, Standard};
+/// use textwrap::{wrap, Options, WordSplitter};
+///
+/// let text = "Oxidation is the loss of electrons.";
+/// let dictionary = Standard::from_embedded(Language::EnglishUS).unwrap();
+/// let options = Options::new(8).word_splitter(WordSplitter::Hyphenation(dictionary));
+/// assert_eq!(wrap(text, &options), vec!["Oxida-",
+/// "tion is",
+/// "the loss",
+/// "of elec-",
+/// "trons."]);
+/// }
+/// ```
+///
+/// Please see the documentation for the [hyphenation] crate for more
+/// details.
+///
+/// [hyphenation]: https://docs.rs/hyphenation/
+#[derive(Clone)]
+pub enum WordSplitter {
+ /// Use this as a [`Options.word_splitter`] to avoid any kind of
+ /// hyphenation:
+ ///
+ /// ```
+ /// use textwrap::{wrap, Options, WordSplitter};
+ ///
+ /// let options = Options::new(8).word_splitter(WordSplitter::NoHyphenation);
+ /// assert_eq!(wrap("foo bar-baz", &options),
+ /// vec!["foo", "bar-baz"]);
+ /// ```
+ ///
+ /// [`Options.word_splitter`]: super::Options::word_splitter
+ NoHyphenation,
+
+ /// `HyphenSplitter` is the default `WordSplitter` used by
+ /// [`Options::new`](super::Options::new). It will split words on
+ /// existing hyphens in the word.
+ ///
+ /// It will only use hyphens that are surrounded by alphanumeric
+ /// characters, which prevents a word like `"--foo-bar"` from
+ /// being split into `"--"` and `"foo-bar"`.
+ ///
+ /// # Examples
+ ///
+ /// ```
+ /// use textwrap::WordSplitter;
+ ///
+ /// assert_eq!(WordSplitter::HyphenSplitter.split_points("--foo-bar"),
+ /// vec![6]);
+ /// ```
+ HyphenSplitter,
+
+ /// Use a custom function as the word splitter.
+ ///
+ /// This varian lets you implement a custom word splitter using
+ /// your own function.
+ ///
+ /// # Examples
+ ///
+ /// ```
+ /// use textwrap::WordSplitter;
+ ///
+ /// fn split_at_underscore(word: &str) -> Vec<usize> {
+ /// word.match_indices('_').map(|(idx, _)| idx + 1).collect()
+ /// }
+ ///
+ /// let word_splitter = WordSplitter::Custom(split_at_underscore);
+ /// assert_eq!(word_splitter.split_points("a_long_identifier"),
+ /// vec![2, 7]);
+ /// ```
+ Custom(fn(word: &str) -> Vec<usize>),
+
+ /// A hyphenation dictionary can be used to do language-specific
+ /// hyphenation using patterns from the [hyphenation] crate.
+ ///
+ /// **Note:** Only available when the `hyphenation` Cargo feature is
+ /// enabled.
+ ///
+ /// [hyphenation]: https://docs.rs/hyphenation/
+ #[cfg(feature = "hyphenation")]
+ Hyphenation(hyphenation::Standard),
+}
+
+impl std::fmt::Debug for WordSplitter {
+ fn fmt(&self, f: &mut std::fmt::Formatter<'_>) -> std::fmt::Result {
+ match self {
+ WordSplitter::NoHyphenation => f.write_str("NoHyphenation"),
+ WordSplitter::HyphenSplitter => f.write_str("HyphenSplitter"),
+ WordSplitter::Custom(_) => f.write_str("Custom(...)"),
+ #[cfg(feature = "hyphenation")]
+ WordSplitter::Hyphenation(dict) => write!(f, "Hyphenation({})", dict.language()),
+ }
+ }
+}
+
+impl PartialEq<WordSplitter> for WordSplitter {
+ fn eq(&self, other: &WordSplitter) -> bool {
+ match (self, other) {
+ (WordSplitter::NoHyphenation, WordSplitter::NoHyphenation) => true,
+ (WordSplitter::HyphenSplitter, WordSplitter::HyphenSplitter) => true,
+ #[cfg(feature = "hyphenation")]
+ (WordSplitter::Hyphenation(this_dict), WordSplitter::Hyphenation(other_dict)) => {
+ this_dict.language() == other_dict.language()
+ }
+ (_, _) => false,
+ }
+ }
+}
+
+impl WordSplitter {
+ /// Return all possible indices where `word` can be split.
+ ///
+ /// The indices are in the range `0..word.len()`. They point to
+ /// the index _after_ the split point, i.e., after `-` if
+ /// splitting on hyphens. This way, `word.split_at(idx)` will
+ /// break the word into two well-formed pieces.
+ ///
+ /// # Examples
+ ///
+ /// ```
+ /// use textwrap::WordSplitter;
+ /// assert_eq!(WordSplitter::NoHyphenation.split_points("cannot-be-split"), vec![]);
+ /// assert_eq!(WordSplitter::HyphenSplitter.split_points("can-be-split"), vec![4, 7]);
+ /// assert_eq!(WordSplitter::Custom(|word| vec![word.len()/2]).split_points("middle"), vec![3]);
+ /// ```
+ pub fn split_points(&self, word: &str) -> Vec<usize> {
+ match self {
+ WordSplitter::NoHyphenation => Vec::new(),
+ WordSplitter::HyphenSplitter => {
+ let mut splits = Vec::new();
+
+ for (idx, _) in word.match_indices('-') {
+ // We only use hyphens that are surrounded by alphanumeric
+ // characters. This is to avoid splitting on repeated hyphens,
+ // such as those found in --foo-bar.
+ let prev = word[..idx].chars().next_back();
+ let next = word[idx + 1..].chars().next();
+
+ if prev.filter(|ch| ch.is_alphanumeric()).is_some()
+ && next.filter(|ch| ch.is_alphanumeric()).is_some()
+ {
+ splits.push(idx + 1); // +1 due to width of '-'.
+ }
+ }
+
+ splits
+ }
+ WordSplitter::Custom(splitter_func) => splitter_func(word),
+ #[cfg(feature = "hyphenation")]
+ WordSplitter::Hyphenation(dictionary) => {
+ use hyphenation::Hyphenator;
+ dictionary.hyphenate(word).breaks
+ }
+ }
+ }
+}
+
+/// Split words into smaller words according to the split points given
+/// by `word_splitter`.
+///
+/// Note that we split all words, regardless of their length. This is
+/// to more cleanly separate the business of splitting (including
+/// automatic hyphenation) from the business of word wrapping.
+pub fn split_words<'a, I>(
+ words: I,
+ word_splitter: &'a WordSplitter,
+) -> impl Iterator<Item = Word<'a>>
+where
+ I: IntoIterator<Item = Word<'a>>,
+{
+ words.into_iter().flat_map(move |word| {
+ let mut prev = 0;
+ let mut split_points = word_splitter.split_points(&word).into_iter();
+ std::iter::from_fn(move || {
+ if let Some(idx) = split_points.next() {
+ let need_hyphen = !word[..idx].ends_with('-');
+ let w = Word {
+ word: &word.word[prev..idx],
+ width: display_width(&word[prev..idx]),
+ whitespace: "",
+ penalty: if need_hyphen { "-" } else { "" },
+ };
+ prev = idx;
+ return Some(w);
+ }
+
+ if prev < word.word.len() || prev == 0 {
+ let w = Word {
+ word: &word.word[prev..],
+ width: display_width(&word[prev..]),
+ whitespace: word.whitespace,
+ penalty: word.penalty,
+ };
+ prev = word.word.len() + 1;
+ return Some(w);
+ }
+
+ None
+ })
+ })
+}
+
+#[cfg(test)]
+mod tests {
+ use super::*;
+
+ // Like assert_eq!, but the left expression is an iterator.
+ macro_rules! assert_iter_eq {
+ ($left:expr, $right:expr) => {
+ assert_eq!($left.collect::<Vec<_>>(), $right);
+ };
+ }
+
+ #[test]
+ fn split_words_no_words() {
+ assert_iter_eq!(split_words(vec![], &WordSplitter::HyphenSplitter), vec![]);
+ }
+
+ #[test]
+ fn split_words_empty_word() {
+ assert_iter_eq!(
+ split_words(vec![Word::from(" ")], &WordSplitter::HyphenSplitter),
+ vec![Word::from(" ")]
+ );
+ }
+
+ #[test]
+ fn split_words_single_word() {
+ assert_iter_eq!(
+ split_words(vec![Word::from("foobar")], &WordSplitter::HyphenSplitter),
+ vec![Word::from("foobar")]
+ );
+ }
+
+ #[test]
+ fn split_words_hyphen_splitter() {
+ assert_iter_eq!(
+ split_words(vec![Word::from("foo-bar")], &WordSplitter::HyphenSplitter),
+ vec![Word::from("foo-"), Word::from("bar")]
+ );
+ }
+
+ #[test]
+ fn split_words_no_hyphenation() {
+ assert_iter_eq!(
+ split_words(vec![Word::from("foo-bar")], &WordSplitter::NoHyphenation),
+ vec![Word::from("foo-bar")]
+ );
+ }
+
+ #[test]
+ fn split_words_adds_penalty() {
+ let fixed_split_point = |_: &str| vec![3];
+
+ assert_iter_eq!(
+ split_words(
+ vec![Word::from("foobar")].into_iter(),
+ &WordSplitter::Custom(fixed_split_point)
+ ),
+ vec![
+ Word {
+ word: "foo",
+ width: 3,
+ whitespace: "",
+ penalty: "-"
+ },
+ Word {
+ word: "bar",
+ width: 3,
+ whitespace: "",
+ penalty: ""
+ }
+ ]
+ );
+
+ assert_iter_eq!(
+ split_words(
+ vec![Word::from("fo-bar")].into_iter(),
+ &WordSplitter::Custom(fixed_split_point)
+ ),
+ vec![
+ Word {
+ word: "fo-",
+ width: 3,
+ whitespace: "",
+ penalty: ""
+ },
+ Word {
+ word: "bar",
+ width: 3,
+ whitespace: "",
+ penalty: ""
+ }
+ ]
+ );
+ }
+}
diff --git a/vendor/textwrap/src/wrap_algorithms.rs b/vendor/textwrap/src/wrap_algorithms.rs
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..5ca49c3
--- /dev/null
+++ b/vendor/textwrap/src/wrap_algorithms.rs
@@ -0,0 +1,381 @@
+//! Word wrapping algorithms.
+//!
+//! After a text has been broken into words (or [`Fragment`]s), one
+//! now has to decide how to break the fragments into lines. The
+//! simplest algorithm for this is implemented by [`wrap_first_fit`]:
+//! it uses no look-ahead and simply adds fragments to the line as
+//! long as they fit. However, this can lead to poor line breaks if a
+//! large fragment almost-but-not-quite fits on a line. When that
+//! happens, the fragment is moved to the next line and it will leave
+//! behind a large gap. A more advanced algorithm, implemented by
+//! [`wrap_optimal_fit`], will take this into account. The optimal-fit
+//! algorithm considers all possible line breaks and will attempt to
+//! minimize the gaps left behind by overly short lines.
+//!
+//! While both algorithms run in linear time, the first-fit algorithm
+//! is about 4 times faster than the optimal-fit algorithm.
+
+#[cfg(feature = "smawk")]
+mod optimal_fit;
+#[cfg(feature = "smawk")]
+pub use optimal_fit::{wrap_optimal_fit, OverflowError, Penalties};
+
+use crate::core::{Fragment, Word};
+
+/// Describes how to wrap words into lines.
+///
+/// The simplest approach is to wrap words one word at a time and
+/// accept the first way of wrapping which fit
+/// ([`WrapAlgorithm::FirstFit`]). If the `smawk` Cargo feature is
+/// enabled, a more complex algorithm is available which will look at
+/// an entire paragraph at a time in order to find optimal line breaks
+/// ([`WrapAlgorithm::OptimalFit`]).
+#[derive(Clone, Copy)]
+pub enum WrapAlgorithm {
+ /// Wrap words using a fast and simple algorithm.
+ ///
+ /// This algorithm uses no look-ahead when finding line breaks.
+ /// Implemented by [`wrap_first_fit`], please see that function for
+ /// details and examples.
+ FirstFit,
+
+ /// Wrap words using an advanced algorithm with look-ahead.
+ ///
+ /// This wrapping algorithm considers the entire paragraph to find
+ /// optimal line breaks. When wrapping text, "penalties" are
+ /// assigned to line breaks based on the gaps left at the end of
+ /// lines. See [`Penalties`] for details.
+ ///
+ /// The underlying wrapping algorithm is implemented by
+ /// [`wrap_optimal_fit`], please see that function for examples.
+ ///
+ /// **Note:** Only available when the `smawk` Cargo feature is
+ /// enabled.
+ #[cfg(feature = "smawk")]
+ OptimalFit(Penalties),
+
+ /// Custom wrapping function.
+ ///
+ /// Use this if you want to implement your own wrapping algorithm.
+ /// The function can freely decide how to turn a slice of
+ /// [`Word`]s into lines.
+ ///
+ /// # Example
+ ///
+ /// ```
+ /// use textwrap::core::Word;
+ /// use textwrap::{wrap, Options, WrapAlgorithm};
+ ///
+ /// fn stair<'a, 'b>(words: &'b [Word<'a>], _: &'b [usize]) -> Vec<&'b [Word<'a>]> {
+ /// let mut lines = Vec::new();
+ /// let mut step = 1;
+ /// let mut start_idx = 0;
+ /// while start_idx + step <= words.len() {
+ /// lines.push(&words[start_idx .. start_idx+step]);
+ /// start_idx += step;
+ /// step += 1;
+ /// }
+ /// lines
+ /// }
+ ///
+ /// let options = Options::new(10).wrap_algorithm(WrapAlgorithm::Custom(stair));
+ /// assert_eq!(wrap("First, second, third, fourth, fifth, sixth", options),
+ /// vec!["First,",
+ /// "second, third,",
+ /// "fourth, fifth, sixth"]);
+ /// ```
+ Custom(for<'a, 'b> fn(words: &'b [Word<'a>], line_widths: &'b [usize]) -> Vec<&'b [Word<'a>]>),
+}
+
+impl std::fmt::Debug for WrapAlgorithm {
+ fn fmt(&self, f: &mut std::fmt::Formatter<'_>) -> std::fmt::Result {
+ match self {
+ WrapAlgorithm::FirstFit => f.write_str("FirstFit"),
+ #[cfg(feature = "smawk")]
+ WrapAlgorithm::OptimalFit(penalties) => write!(f, "OptimalFit({:?})", penalties),
+ WrapAlgorithm::Custom(_) => f.write_str("Custom(...)"),
+ }
+ }
+}
+
+impl WrapAlgorithm {
+ /// Create new wrap algorithm.
+ ///
+ /// The best wrapping algorithm is used by default, i.e.,
+ /// [`WrapAlgorithm::OptimalFit`] if available, otherwise
+ /// [`WrapAlgorithm::FirstFit`].
+ pub const fn new() -> Self {
+ #[cfg(not(feature = "smawk"))]
+ {
+ WrapAlgorithm::FirstFit
+ }
+
+ #[cfg(feature = "smawk")]
+ {
+ WrapAlgorithm::new_optimal_fit()
+ }
+ }
+
+ /// New [`WrapAlgorithm::OptimalFit`] with default penalties. This
+ /// works well for monospace text.
+ ///
+ /// **Note:** Only available when the `smawk` Cargo feature is
+ /// enabled.
+ #[cfg(feature = "smawk")]
+ pub const fn new_optimal_fit() -> Self {
+ WrapAlgorithm::OptimalFit(Penalties::new())
+ }
+
+ /// Wrap words according to line widths.
+ ///
+ /// The `line_widths` slice gives the target line width for each
+ /// line (the last slice element is repeated as necessary). This
+ /// can be used to implement hanging indentation.
+ #[inline]
+ pub fn wrap<'a, 'b>(
+ &self,
+ words: &'b [Word<'a>],
+ line_widths: &'b [usize],
+ ) -> Vec<&'b [Word<'a>]> {
+ // Every integer up to 2u64.pow(f64::MANTISSA_DIGITS) = 2**53
+ // = 9_007_199_254_740_992 can be represented without loss by
+ // a f64. Larger line widths will be rounded to the nearest
+ // representable number.
+ let f64_line_widths = line_widths.iter().map(|w| *w as f64).collect::<Vec<_>>();
+
+ match self {
+ WrapAlgorithm::FirstFit => wrap_first_fit(words, &f64_line_widths),
+
+ #[cfg(feature = "smawk")]
+ WrapAlgorithm::OptimalFit(penalties) => {
+ // The computation cannnot overflow when the line
+ // widths are restricted to usize.
+ wrap_optimal_fit(words, &f64_line_widths, penalties).unwrap()
+ }
+
+ WrapAlgorithm::Custom(func) => func(words, line_widths),
+ }
+ }
+}
+
+impl Default for WrapAlgorithm {
+ fn default() -> Self {
+ WrapAlgorithm::new()
+ }
+}
+
+/// Wrap abstract fragments into lines with a first-fit algorithm.
+///
+/// The `line_widths` slice gives the target line width for each line
+/// (the last slice element is repeated as necessary). This can be
+/// used to implement hanging indentation.
+///
+/// The fragments must already have been split into the desired
+/// widths, this function will not (and cannot) attempt to split them
+/// further when arranging them into lines.
+///
+/// # First-Fit Algorithm
+///
+/// This implements a simple “greedy” algorithm: accumulate fragments
+/// one by one and when a fragment no longer fits, start a new line.
+/// There is no look-ahead, we simply take first fit of the fragments
+/// we find.
+///
+/// While fast and predictable, this algorithm can produce poor line
+/// breaks when a long fragment is moved to a new line, leaving behind
+/// a large gap:
+///
+/// ```
+/// use textwrap::core::Word;
+/// use textwrap::wrap_algorithms::wrap_first_fit;
+/// use textwrap::WordSeparator;
+///
+/// // Helper to convert wrapped lines to a Vec<String>.
+/// fn lines_to_strings(lines: Vec<&[Word<'_>]>) -> Vec<String> {
+/// lines.iter().map(|line| {
+/// line.iter().map(|word| &**word).collect::<Vec<_>>().join(" ")
+/// }).collect::<Vec<_>>()
+/// }
+///
+/// let text = "These few words will unfortunately not wrap nicely.";
+/// let words = WordSeparator::AsciiSpace.find_words(text).collect::<Vec<_>>();
+/// assert_eq!(lines_to_strings(wrap_first_fit(&words, &[15.0])),
+/// vec!["These few words",
+/// "will", // <-- short line
+/// "unfortunately",
+/// "not wrap",
+/// "nicely."]);
+///
+/// // We can avoid the short line if we look ahead:
+/// #[cfg(feature = "smawk")]
+/// use textwrap::wrap_algorithms::{wrap_optimal_fit, Penalties};
+/// #[cfg(feature = "smawk")]
+/// assert_eq!(lines_to_strings(wrap_optimal_fit(&words, &[15.0], &Penalties::new()).unwrap()),
+/// vec!["These few",
+/// "words will",
+/// "unfortunately",
+/// "not wrap",
+/// "nicely."]);
+/// ```
+///
+/// The [`wrap_optimal_fit`] function was used above to get better
+/// line breaks. It uses an advanced algorithm which tries to avoid
+/// short lines. This function is about 4 times faster than
+/// [`wrap_optimal_fit`].
+///
+/// # Examples
+///
+/// Imagine you're building a house site and you have a number of
+/// tasks you need to execute. Things like pour foundation, complete
+/// framing, install plumbing, electric cabling, install insulation.
+///
+/// The construction workers can only work during daytime, so they
+/// need to pack up everything at night. Because they need to secure
+/// their tools and move machines back to the garage, this process
+/// takes much more time than the time it would take them to simply
+/// switch to another task.
+///
+/// You would like to make a list of tasks to execute every day based
+/// on your estimates. You can model this with a program like this:
+///
+/// ```
+/// use textwrap::core::{Fragment, Word};
+/// use textwrap::wrap_algorithms::wrap_first_fit;
+///
+/// #[derive(Debug)]
+/// struct Task<'a> {
+/// name: &'a str,
+/// hours: f64, // Time needed to complete task.
+/// sweep: f64, // Time needed for a quick sweep after task during the day.
+/// cleanup: f64, // Time needed for full cleanup if day ends with this task.
+/// }
+///
+/// impl Fragment for Task<'_> {
+/// fn width(&self) -> f64 { self.hours }
+/// fn whitespace_width(&self) -> f64 { self.sweep }
+/// fn penalty_width(&self) -> f64 { self.cleanup }
+/// }
+///
+/// // The morning tasks
+/// let tasks = vec![
+/// Task { name: "Foundation", hours: 4.0, sweep: 2.0, cleanup: 3.0 },
+/// Task { name: "Framing", hours: 3.0, sweep: 1.0, cleanup: 2.0 },
+/// Task { name: "Plumbing", hours: 2.0, sweep: 2.0, cleanup: 2.0 },
+/// Task { name: "Electrical", hours: 2.0, sweep: 1.0, cleanup: 2.0 },
+/// Task { name: "Insulation", hours: 2.0, sweep: 1.0, cleanup: 2.0 },
+/// Task { name: "Drywall", hours: 3.0, sweep: 1.0, cleanup: 2.0 },
+/// Task { name: "Floors", hours: 3.0, sweep: 1.0, cleanup: 2.0 },
+/// Task { name: "Countertops", hours: 1.0, sweep: 1.0, cleanup: 2.0 },
+/// Task { name: "Bathrooms", hours: 2.0, sweep: 1.0, cleanup: 2.0 },
+/// ];
+///
+/// // Fill tasks into days, taking `day_length` into account. The
+/// // output shows the hours worked per day along with the names of
+/// // the tasks for that day.
+/// fn assign_days<'a>(tasks: &[Task<'a>], day_length: f64) -> Vec<(f64, Vec<&'a str>)> {
+/// let mut days = Vec::new();
+/// // Assign tasks to days. The assignment is a vector of slices,
+/// // with a slice per day.
+/// let assigned_days: Vec<&[Task<'a>]> = wrap_first_fit(&tasks, &[day_length]);
+/// for day in assigned_days.iter() {
+/// let last = day.last().unwrap();
+/// let work_hours: f64 = day.iter().map(|t| t.hours + t.sweep).sum();
+/// let names = day.iter().map(|t| t.name).collect::<Vec<_>>();
+/// days.push((work_hours - last.sweep + last.cleanup, names));
+/// }
+/// days
+/// }
+///
+/// // With a single crew working 8 hours a day:
+/// assert_eq!(
+/// assign_days(&tasks, 8.0),
+/// [
+/// (7.0, vec!["Foundation"]),
+/// (8.0, vec!["Framing", "Plumbing"]),
+/// (7.0, vec!["Electrical", "Insulation"]),
+/// (5.0, vec!["Drywall"]),
+/// (7.0, vec!["Floors", "Countertops"]),
+/// (4.0, vec!["Bathrooms"]),
+/// ]
+/// );
+///
+/// // With two crews working in shifts, 16 hours a day:
+/// assert_eq!(
+/// assign_days(&tasks, 16.0),
+/// [
+/// (14.0, vec!["Foundation", "Framing", "Plumbing"]),
+/// (15.0, vec!["Electrical", "Insulation", "Drywall", "Floors"]),
+/// (6.0, vec!["Countertops", "Bathrooms"]),
+/// ]
+/// );
+/// ```
+///
+/// Apologies to anyone who actually knows how to build a house and
+/// knows how long each step takes :-)
+pub fn wrap_first_fit<'a, 'b, T: Fragment>(
+ fragments: &'a [T],
+ line_widths: &'b [f64],
+) -> Vec<&'a [T]> {
+ // The final line width is used for all remaining lines.
+ let default_line_width = line_widths.last().copied().unwrap_or(0.0);
+ let mut lines = Vec::new();
+ let mut start = 0;
+ let mut width = 0.0;
+
+ for (idx, fragment) in fragments.iter().enumerate() {
+ let line_width = line_widths
+ .get(lines.len())
+ .copied()
+ .unwrap_or(default_line_width);
+ if width + fragment.width() + fragment.penalty_width() > line_width && idx > start {
+ lines.push(&fragments[start..idx]);
+ start = idx;
+ width = 0.0;
+ }
+ width += fragment.width() + fragment.whitespace_width();
+ }
+ lines.push(&fragments[start..]);
+ lines
+}
+
+#[cfg(test)]
+mod tests {
+ use super::*;
+
+ #[derive(Debug, PartialEq)]
+ struct Word(f64);
+
+ #[rustfmt::skip]
+ impl Fragment for Word {
+ fn width(&self) -> f64 { self.0 }
+ fn whitespace_width(&self) -> f64 { 1.0 }
+ fn penalty_width(&self) -> f64 { 0.0 }
+ }
+
+ #[test]
+ fn wrap_string_longer_than_f64() {
+ let words = vec![
+ Word(1e307),
+ Word(2e307),
+ Word(3e307),
+ Word(4e307),
+ Word(5e307),
+ Word(6e307),
+ ];
+ // Wrap at just under f64::MAX (~19e307). The tiny
+ // whitespace_widths disappear because of loss of precision.
+ assert_eq!(
+ wrap_first_fit(&words, &[15e307]),
+ &[
+ vec![
+ Word(1e307),
+ Word(2e307),
+ Word(3e307),
+ Word(4e307),
+ Word(5e307)
+ ],
+ vec![Word(6e307)]
+ ]
+ );
+ }
+}
diff --git a/vendor/textwrap/src/wrap_algorithms/optimal_fit.rs b/vendor/textwrap/src/wrap_algorithms/optimal_fit.rs
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..0625e28
--- /dev/null
+++ b/vendor/textwrap/src/wrap_algorithms/optimal_fit.rs
@@ -0,0 +1,433 @@
+use std::cell::RefCell;
+
+use crate::core::Fragment;
+
+/// Penalties for
+/// [`WrapAlgorithm::OptimalFit`](crate::WrapAlgorithm::OptimalFit)
+/// and [`wrap_optimal_fit`].
+///
+/// This wrapping algorithm in [`wrap_optimal_fit`] considers the
+/// entire paragraph to find optimal line breaks. When wrapping text,
+/// "penalties" are assigned to line breaks based on the gaps left at
+/// the end of lines. The penalties are given by this struct, with
+/// [`Penalties::default`] assigning penalties that work well for
+/// monospace text.
+///
+/// If you are wrapping proportional text, you are advised to assign
+/// your own penalties according to your font size. See the individual
+/// penalties below for details.
+///
+/// **Note:** Only available when the `smawk` Cargo feature is
+/// enabled.
+#[derive(Clone, Copy, Debug)]
+pub struct Penalties {
+ /// Per-line penalty. This is added for every line, which makes it
+ /// expensive to output more lines than the minimum required.
+ pub nline_penalty: usize,
+
+ /// Per-character cost for lines that overflow the target line width.
+ ///
+ /// With a default value of 50², every single character costs as
+ /// much as leaving a gap of 50 characters behind. This is because
+ /// we assign as cost of `gap * gap` to a short line. When
+ /// wrapping monospace text, we can overflow the line by 1
+ /// character in extreme cases:
+ ///
+ /// ```
+ /// use textwrap::core::Word;
+ /// use textwrap::wrap_algorithms::{wrap_optimal_fit, Penalties};
+ ///
+ /// let short = "foo ";
+ /// let long = "x".repeat(50);
+ /// let length = (short.len() + long.len()) as f64;
+ /// let fragments = vec![Word::from(short), Word::from(&long)];
+ /// let penalties = Penalties::new();
+ ///
+ /// // Perfect fit, both words are on a single line with no overflow.
+ /// let wrapped = wrap_optimal_fit(&fragments, &[length], &penalties).unwrap();
+ /// assert_eq!(wrapped, vec![&[Word::from(short), Word::from(&long)]]);
+ ///
+ /// // The words no longer fit, yet we get a single line back. While
+ /// // the cost of overflow (`1 * 2500`) is the same as the cost of the
+ /// // gap (`50 * 50 = 2500`), the tie is broken by `nline_penalty`
+ /// // which makes it cheaper to overflow than to use two lines.
+ /// let wrapped = wrap_optimal_fit(&fragments, &[length - 1.0], &penalties).unwrap();
+ /// assert_eq!(wrapped, vec![&[Word::from(short), Word::from(&long)]]);
+ ///
+ /// // The cost of overflow would be 2 * 2500, whereas the cost of
+ /// // the gap is only `49 * 49 + nline_penalty = 2401 + 1000 =
+ /// // 3401`. We therefore get two lines.
+ /// let wrapped = wrap_optimal_fit(&fragments, &[length - 2.0], &penalties).unwrap();
+ /// assert_eq!(wrapped, vec![&[Word::from(short)],
+ /// &[Word::from(&long)]]);
+ /// ```
+ ///
+ /// This only happens if the overflowing word is 50 characters
+ /// long _and_ if the word overflows the line by exactly one
+ /// character. If it overflows by more than one character, the
+ /// overflow penalty will quickly outgrow the cost of the gap, as
+ /// seen above.
+ pub overflow_penalty: usize,
+
+ /// When should the a single word on the last line be considered
+ /// "too short"?
+ ///
+ /// If the last line of the text consist of a single word and if
+ /// this word is shorter than `1 / short_last_line_fraction` of
+ /// the line width, then the final line will be considered "short"
+ /// and `short_last_line_penalty` is added as an extra penalty.
+ ///
+ /// The effect of this is to avoid a final line consisting of a
+ /// single small word. For example, with a
+ /// `short_last_line_penalty` of 25 (the default), a gap of up to
+ /// 5 columns will be seen as more desirable than having a final
+ /// short line.
+ ///
+ /// ## Examples
+ ///
+ /// ```
+ /// use textwrap::{wrap, wrap_algorithms, Options, WrapAlgorithm};
+ ///
+ /// let text = "This is a demo of the short last line penalty.";
+ ///
+ /// // The first-fit algorithm leaves a single short word on the last line:
+ /// assert_eq!(wrap(text, Options::new(37).wrap_algorithm(WrapAlgorithm::FirstFit)),
+ /// vec!["This is a demo of the short last line",
+ /// "penalty."]);
+ ///
+ /// #[cfg(feature = "smawk")] {
+ /// let mut penalties = wrap_algorithms::Penalties::new();
+ ///
+ /// // Since "penalty." is shorter than 25% of the line width, the
+ /// // optimal-fit algorithm adds a penalty of 25. This is enough
+ /// // to move "line " down:
+ /// assert_eq!(wrap(text, Options::new(37).wrap_algorithm(WrapAlgorithm::OptimalFit(penalties))),
+ /// vec!["This is a demo of the short last",
+ /// "line penalty."]);
+ ///
+ /// // We can change the meaning of "short" lines. Here, only words
+ /// // shorter than 1/10th of the line width will be considered short:
+ /// penalties.short_last_line_fraction = 10;
+ /// assert_eq!(wrap(text, Options::new(37).wrap_algorithm(WrapAlgorithm::OptimalFit(penalties))),
+ /// vec!["This is a demo of the short last line",
+ /// "penalty."]);
+ ///
+ /// // If desired, the penalty can also be disabled:
+ /// penalties.short_last_line_fraction = 4;
+ /// penalties.short_last_line_penalty = 0;
+ /// assert_eq!(wrap(text, Options::new(37).wrap_algorithm(WrapAlgorithm::OptimalFit(penalties))),
+ /// vec!["This is a demo of the short last line",
+ /// "penalty."]);
+ /// }
+ /// ```
+ pub short_last_line_fraction: usize,
+
+ /// Penalty for a last line with a single short word.
+ ///
+ /// Set this to zero if you do not want to penalize short last lines.
+ pub short_last_line_penalty: usize,
+
+ /// Penalty for lines ending with a hyphen.
+ pub hyphen_penalty: usize,
+}
+
+impl Penalties {
+ /// Default penalties for monospace text.
+ ///
+ /// The penalties here work well for monospace text. This is
+ /// because they expect the gaps at the end of lines to be roughly
+ /// in the range `0..100`. If the gaps are larger, the
+ /// `overflow_penalty` and `hyphen_penalty` become insignificant.
+ pub const fn new() -> Self {
+ Penalties {
+ nline_penalty: 1000,
+ overflow_penalty: 50 * 50,
+ short_last_line_fraction: 4,
+ short_last_line_penalty: 25,
+ hyphen_penalty: 25,
+ }
+ }
+}
+
+impl Default for Penalties {
+ fn default() -> Self {
+ Self::new()
+ }
+}
+
+/// Cache for line numbers. This is necessary to avoid a O(n**2)
+/// behavior when computing line numbers in [`wrap_optimal_fit`].
+struct LineNumbers {
+ line_numbers: RefCell<Vec<usize>>,
+}
+
+impl LineNumbers {
+ fn new(size: usize) -> Self {
+ let mut line_numbers = Vec::with_capacity(size);
+ line_numbers.push(0);
+ LineNumbers {
+ line_numbers: RefCell::new(line_numbers),
+ }
+ }
+
+ fn get<T>(&self, i: usize, minima: &[(usize, T)]) -> usize {
+ while self.line_numbers.borrow_mut().len() < i + 1 {
+ let pos = self.line_numbers.borrow().len();
+ let line_number = 1 + self.get(minima[pos].0, minima);
+ self.line_numbers.borrow_mut().push(line_number);
+ }
+
+ self.line_numbers.borrow()[i]
+ }
+}
+
+/// Overflow error during the [`wrap_optimal_fit`] computation.
+#[derive(Debug, PartialEq, Eq)]
+pub struct OverflowError;
+
+impl std::fmt::Display for OverflowError {
+ fn fmt(&self, f: &mut std::fmt::Formatter<'_>) -> std::fmt::Result {
+ write!(f, "wrap_optimal_fit cost computation overflowed")
+ }
+}
+
+impl std::error::Error for OverflowError {}
+
+/// Wrap abstract fragments into lines with an optimal-fit algorithm.
+///
+/// The `line_widths` slice gives the target line width for each line
+/// (the last slice element is repeated as necessary). This can be
+/// used to implement hanging indentation.
+///
+/// The fragments must already have been split into the desired
+/// widths, this function will not (and cannot) attempt to split them
+/// further when arranging them into lines.
+///
+/// # Optimal-Fit Algorithm
+///
+/// The algorithm considers all possible break points and picks the
+/// breaks which minimizes the gaps at the end of each line. More
+/// precisely, the algorithm assigns a cost or penalty to each break
+/// point, determined by `cost = gap * gap` where `gap = target_width -
+/// line_width`. Shorter lines are thus penalized more heavily since
+/// they leave behind a larger gap.
+///
+/// We can illustrate this with the text “To be, or not to be: that is
+/// the question”. We will be wrapping it in a narrow column with room
+/// for only 10 characters. The [greedy
+/// algorithm](super::wrap_first_fit) will produce these lines, each
+/// annotated with the corresponding penalty:
+///
+/// ```text
+/// "To be, or" 1² = 1
+/// "not to be:" 0² = 0
+/// "that is" 3² = 9
+/// "the" 7² = 49
+/// "question" 2² = 4
+/// ```
+///
+/// We see that line four with “the” leaves a gap of 7 columns, which
+/// gives it a penalty of 49. The sum of the penalties is 63.
+///
+/// There are 10 words, which means that there are `2_u32.pow(9)` or
+/// 512 different ways to typeset it. We can compute
+/// the sum of the penalties for each possible line break and search
+/// for the one with the lowest sum:
+///
+/// ```text
+/// "To be," 4² = 16
+/// "or not to" 1² = 1
+/// "be: that" 2² = 4
+/// "is the" 4² = 16
+/// "question" 2² = 4
+/// ```
+///
+/// The sum of the penalties is 41, which is better than what the
+/// greedy algorithm produced.
+///
+/// Searching through all possible combinations would normally be
+/// prohibitively slow. However, it turns out that the problem can be
+/// formulated as the task of finding column minima in a cost matrix.
+/// This matrix has a special form (totally monotone) which lets us
+/// use a [linear-time algorithm called
+/// SMAWK](https://lib.rs/crates/smawk) to find the optimal break
+/// points.
+///
+/// This means that the time complexity remains O(_n_) where _n_ is
+/// the number of words. Compared to
+/// [`wrap_first_fit`](super::wrap_first_fit), this function is about
+/// 4 times slower.
+///
+/// The optimization of per-line costs over the entire paragraph is
+/// inspired by the line breaking algorithm used in TeX, as described
+/// in the 1981 article [_Breaking Paragraphs into
+/// Lines_](http://www.eprg.org/G53DOC/pdfs/knuth-plass-breaking.pdf)
+/// by Knuth and Plass. The implementation here is based on [Python
+/// code by David
+/// Eppstein](https://github.com/jfinkels/PADS/blob/master/pads/wrap.py).
+///
+/// # Errors
+///
+/// In case of an overflow during the cost computation, an `Err` is
+/// returned. Overflows happens when fragments or lines have infinite
+/// widths (`f64::INFINITY`) or if the widths are so large that the
+/// gaps at the end of lines have sizes larger than `f64::MAX.sqrt()`
+/// (approximately 1e154):
+///
+/// ```
+/// use textwrap::core::Fragment;
+/// use textwrap::wrap_algorithms::{wrap_optimal_fit, OverflowError, Penalties};
+///
+/// #[derive(Debug, PartialEq)]
+/// struct Word(f64);
+///
+/// impl Fragment for Word {
+/// fn width(&self) -> f64 { self.0 }
+/// fn whitespace_width(&self) -> f64 { 1.0 }
+/// fn penalty_width(&self) -> f64 { 0.0 }
+/// }
+///
+/// // Wrapping overflows because 1e155 * 1e155 = 1e310, which is
+/// // larger than f64::MAX:
+/// assert_eq!(wrap_optimal_fit(&[Word(0.0), Word(0.0)], &[1e155], &Penalties::default()),
+/// Err(OverflowError));
+/// ```
+///
+/// When using fragment widths and line widths which fit inside an
+/// `u64`, overflows cannot happen. This means that fragments derived
+/// from a `&str` cannot cause overflows.
+///
+/// **Note:** Only available when the `smawk` Cargo feature is
+/// enabled.
+pub fn wrap_optimal_fit<'a, 'b, T: Fragment>(
+ fragments: &'a [T],
+ line_widths: &'b [f64],
+ penalties: &'b Penalties,
+) -> Result<Vec<&'a [T]>, OverflowError> {
+ // The final line width is used for all remaining lines.
+ let default_line_width = line_widths.last().copied().unwrap_or(0.0);
+ let mut widths = Vec::with_capacity(fragments.len() + 1);
+ let mut width = 0.0;
+ widths.push(width);
+ for fragment in fragments {
+ width += fragment.width() + fragment.whitespace_width();
+ widths.push(width);
+ }
+
+ let line_numbers = LineNumbers::new(fragments.len());
+
+ let minima = smawk::online_column_minima(0.0, widths.len(), |minima, i, j| {
+ // Line number for fragment `i`.
+ let line_number = line_numbers.get(i, minima);
+ let line_width = line_widths
+ .get(line_number)
+ .copied()
+ .unwrap_or(default_line_width);
+ let target_width = line_width.max(1.0);
+
+ // Compute the width of a line spanning fragments[i..j] in
+ // constant time. We need to adjust widths[j] by subtracting
+ // the whitespace of fragment[j-1] and then add the penalty.
+ let line_width = widths[j] - widths[i] - fragments[j - 1].whitespace_width()
+ + fragments[j - 1].penalty_width();
+
+ // We compute cost of the line containing fragments[i..j]. We
+ // start with values[i].1, which is the optimal cost for
+ // breaking before fragments[i].
+ //
+ // First, every extra line cost NLINE_PENALTY.
+ let mut cost = minima[i].1 + penalties.nline_penalty as f64;
+
+ // Next, we add a penalty depending on the line length.
+ if line_width > target_width {
+ // Lines that overflow get a hefty penalty.
+ let overflow = line_width - target_width;
+ cost += overflow * penalties.overflow_penalty as f64;
+ } else if j < fragments.len() {
+ // Other lines (except for the last line) get a milder
+ // penalty which depend on the size of the gap.
+ let gap = target_width - line_width;
+ cost += gap * gap;
+ } else if i + 1 == j
+ && line_width < target_width / penalties.short_last_line_fraction as f64
+ {
+ // The last line can have any size gap, but we do add a
+ // penalty if the line is very short (typically because it
+ // contains just a single word).
+ cost += penalties.short_last_line_penalty as f64;
+ }
+
+ // Finally, we discourage hyphens.
+ if fragments[j - 1].penalty_width() > 0.0 {
+ // TODO: this should use a penalty value from the fragment
+ // instead.
+ cost += penalties.hyphen_penalty as f64;
+ }
+
+ cost
+ });
+
+ for (_, cost) in &minima {
+ if cost.is_infinite() {
+ return Err(OverflowError);
+ }
+ }
+
+ let mut lines = Vec::with_capacity(line_numbers.get(fragments.len(), &minima));
+ let mut pos = fragments.len();
+ loop {
+ let prev = minima[pos].0;
+ lines.push(&fragments[prev..pos]);
+ pos = prev;
+ if pos == 0 {
+ break;
+ }
+ }
+
+ lines.reverse();
+ Ok(lines)
+}
+
+#[cfg(test)]
+mod tests {
+ use super::*;
+
+ #[derive(Debug, PartialEq)]
+ struct Word(f64);
+
+ #[rustfmt::skip]
+ impl Fragment for Word {
+ fn width(&self) -> f64 { self.0 }
+ fn whitespace_width(&self) -> f64 { 1.0 }
+ fn penalty_width(&self) -> f64 { 0.0 }
+ }
+
+ #[test]
+ fn wrap_fragments_with_infinite_widths() {
+ let words = vec![Word(f64::INFINITY)];
+ assert_eq!(
+ wrap_optimal_fit(&words, &[0.0], &Penalties::default()),
+ Err(OverflowError)
+ );
+ }
+
+ #[test]
+ fn wrap_fragments_with_huge_widths() {
+ let words = vec![Word(1e200), Word(1e250), Word(1e300)];
+ assert_eq!(
+ wrap_optimal_fit(&words, &[1e300], &Penalties::default()),
+ Err(OverflowError)
+ );
+ }
+
+ #[test]
+ fn wrap_fragments_with_large_widths() {
+ // The gaps will be of the sizes between 1e25 and 1e75. This
+ // makes the `gap * gap` cost fit comfortably in a f64.
+ let words = vec![Word(1e25), Word(1e50), Word(1e75)];
+ assert_eq!(
+ wrap_optimal_fit(&words, &[1e100], &Penalties::default()),
+ Ok(vec![&vec![Word(1e25), Word(1e50), Word(1e75)][..]])
+ );
+ }
+}