Determines the monospace display width of a string in Ruby. Implementation based on EastAsianWidth.txt and other data, 100% in Ruby. It does not rely on the OS vendor (like wcwidth()) to provide an up-to-date method for measuring string width.
Unicode version: 15.0.0 (September 2022)
Supported Rubies: 3.1, 3.0, 2.7
Old Rubies which might still work: 2.6, 2.5, 2.4, 2.3, 2.2, 2.1, 2.0, 1.9
Some features of this library were marked deprecated for a long time and have been removed with Version 2.0:
- Aliases of display_width (…_size, …_length) have been removed
- Auto-loading of string core extension has been removed:
If you are relying on the String#display_width
string extension to be automatically loaded (old behavior), please load it explicitly now:
require "unicode/display_width/string_ext"
You could also change your Gemfile
line to achieve this:
gem "unicode-display_width", require: "unicode/display_width/string_ext"
Guessing the correct space a character will consume on terminals is not easy. There is no single standard. Most implementations combine data from East Asian Width, some General Categories, and hand-picked adjustments.
Further at the top means higher precedence. Please expect changes to this algorithm with every MINOR version update (the X in 1.X.0)!
Width | Characters | Comment |
---|---|---|
X | (user defined) | Overwrites any other values |
-1 | "\b" |
Backspace (total width never below 0) |
0 | "\0" , "\x05" , "\a" , "\n" , "\v" , "\f" , "\r" , "\x0E" , "\x0F" |
C0 control codes that do not change horizontal width |
1 | "\u{00AD}" |
SOFT HYPHEN |
2 | "\u{2E3A}" |
TWO-EM DASH |
3 | "\u{2E3B}" |
THREE-EM DASH |
0 | General Categories: Mn, Me, Cf (non-arabic) | Excludes ARABIC format characters |
0 | "\u{1160}".."\u{11FF}" , "\u{D7B0}".."\u{D7FF}" |
HANGUL JUNGSEONG |
0 | "\u{2060}".."\u{206F}" , "\u{FFF0}".."\u{FFF8}" , "\u{E0000}".."\u{E0FFF}" |
Ignorable ranges |
2 | East Asian Width: F, W | Full-width characters |
2 | "\u{3400}".."\u{4DBF}" , "\u{4E00}".."\u{9FFF}" , "\u{F900}".."\u{FAFF}" , "\u{20000}".."\u{2FFFD}" , "\u{30000}".."\u{3FFFD}" |
Full-width ranges |
1 or 2 | East Asian Width: A | Ambiguous characters, user defined, default: 1 |
1 | All other codepoints | - |
Install the gem with:
$ gem install unicode-display_width
Or add to your Gemfile:
gem 'unicode-display_width'
require 'unicode/display_width'
Unicode::DisplayWidth.of("⚀") # => 1
Unicode::DisplayWidth.of("一") # => 2
The second parameter defines the value returned by characters defined as ambiguous:
Unicode::DisplayWidth.of("·", 1) # => 1
Unicode::DisplayWidth.of("·", 2) # => 2
You can overwrite how to handle specific code points by passing a hash (or even a proc) as third parameter:
Unicode::DisplayWidth.of("a\tb", 1, "\t".ord => 10)) # => tab counted as 10, so result is 12
Emoji width support is included, but in must be activated manually. It will adjust the string's size for modifier and zero-width joiner sequences. You also need to add the unicode-emoji gem to your Gemfile:
gem 'unicode-display_width'
gem 'unicode-emoji'
Enable the emoji string width adjustments by passing emoji: true
as fourth parameter:
Unicode::DisplayWidth.of "🤾🏽♀️" # => 5
Unicode::DisplayWidth.of "🤾🏽♀️", 1, {}, emoji: true # => 2
require 'unicode/display_width/string_ext'
"⚀".display_width # => 1
'一'.display_width # => 2
Version 2.0 introduces a keyword-argument based API, which allows you to save your configuration for later-reuse. This requires an extra line of code, but has the advantage that you'll need to define your string-width options only once:
require 'unicode/display_width'
display_width = Unicode::DisplayWidth.new(
# ambiguous: 1,
overwrite: { "A".ord => 100 },
emoji: true,
)
display_width.of "⚀" # => 1
display_width.of "🤾🏽♀️" # => 2
display_width.of "A" # => 100
Use this one-liner to print out display widths for strings from the command-line:
$ gem install unicode-display_width
$ ruby -r unicode/display_width -e 'puts Unicode::DisplayWidth.of $*[0]' -- "一"
Replace "一" with the actual string to measure
- Python: https://github.com/jquast/wcwidth
- JavaScript: https://github.com/mycoboco/wcwidth.js
- C: https://www.cl.cam.ac.uk/~mgk25/ucs/wcwidth.c
- C for Julia: JuliaStrings/utf8proc#2
- Golang: https://github.com/rivo/uniseg
See unicode-x for more Unicode related micro libraries.
- Copyright (c) 2011, 2015-2022 Jan Lelis, https://janlelis.com, released under the MIT license
- Early versions based on runpaint's unicode-data interface: Copyright (c) 2009 Run Paint Run Run
- Unicode data: https://www.unicode.org/copyright.html#Exhibit1