Function deunicode::deunicode[][src]

pub fn deunicode(s: &str) -> String

This function takes any Unicode string and returns an ASCII transliteration of that string.

Guarantees and Warnings

Here are some guarantees you have when calling deunicode():

  • The String returned will be valid ASCII; the decimal representation of every char in the string will be between 0 and 127, inclusive.
  • Every ASCII character (0x0000 - 0x007F) is mapped to itself.
  • All Unicode characters will translate to a string containing newlines ("\n") or ASCII characters in the range 0x0020 - 0x007E. So for example, no Unicode character will translate to \u{01}. The exception is if the ASCII character itself is passed in, in which case it will be mapped to itself. (So '\u{01}' will be mapped to "\u{01}".)

There are, however, some things you should keep in mind:

  • As stated, some transliterations do produce \n characters.
  • Some Unicode characters transliterate to an empty string, either on purpose or because deunicode does not know about the character.
  • Some Unicode characters are unknown and transliterate to "[?]".
  • Many Unicode characters transliterate to multi-character strings. For example, 北 is transliterated as "Bei ".
  • Han characters are mapped to Mandarin, and will be mostly illegible to Japanese readers.