Struct hyper::LanguageTag [] [src]

pub struct LanguageTag {
    pub language: Option<String>,
    pub extlangs: Vec<String>,
    pub script: Option<String>,
    pub region: Option<String>,
    pub variants: Vec<String>,
    pub extensions: BTreeMap<u8, Vec<String>>,
    pub privateuse: Vec<String>,
}

A language tag as described in BCP47.

Language tags are used to help identify languages, whether spoken, written, signed, or otherwise signaled, for the purpose of communication. This includes constructed and artificial languages but excludes languages not intended primarily for human communication, such as programming languages.

Fields

language

Language subtags are used to indicate the language, ignoring all other aspects such as script, region or spefic invariants.

extlangs

Extended language subtags are used to identify certain specially selected languages that, for various historical and compatibility reasons, are closely identified with or tagged using an existing primary language subtag.

script

Script subtags are used to indicate the script or writing system variations that distinguish the written forms of a language or its dialects.

region

Region subtags are used to indicate linguistic variations associated with or appropriate to a specific country, territory, or region. Typically, a region subtag is used to indicate variations such as regional dialects or usage, or region-specific spelling conventions. It can also be used to indicate that content is expressed in a way that is appropriate for use throughout a region, for instance, Spanish content tailored to be useful throughout Latin America.

variants

Variant subtags are used to indicate additional, well-recognized variations that define a language or its dialects that are not covered by other available subtags.

extensions

Extensions provide a mechanism for extending language tags for use in various applications. They are intended to identify information that is commonly used in association with languages or language tags but that is not part of language identification.

privateuse

Private use subtags are used to indicate distinctions in language that are important in a given context by private agreement.

Methods

impl LanguageTag

fn matches(&self, other: &LanguageTag) -> bool

Matches language tags. The first language acts as a language range, the second one is used as a normal language tag. None fields in the language range are ignored. If the language tag has more extlangs than the range these extlangs are ignored. Matches are case-insensitive. * in language ranges are represented using None values. The language range * that matches language tags is created by the default language tag: let wildcard: LanguageTag = Default::default();.

For example the range en-GB matches only en-GB and en-Arab-GB but not en. The range en matches all language tags starting with en including en, en-GB, en-Arab and en-Arab-GB.

Panics

If the language range has extensions or private use tags.

Examples

let range_italian = langtag!(it);
let tag_german = langtag!(de);
let tag_italian_switzerland = langtag!(it;;;CH);
assert!(!range_italian.matches(&tag_german));
assert!(range_italian.matches(&tag_italian_switzerland));

let range_spanish_brazil = langtag!(es;;;BR);
let tag_spanish = langtag!(es);
assert!(!range_spanish_brazil.matches(&tag_spanish));

fn is_language_range(&self) -> bool

Checks if it is a language range, meaning that there are no extension and privateuse tags.

fn canonicalize(&self) -> LanguageTag

Todo

Trait Implementations

impl PartialEq<LanguageTag> for LanguageTag

fn eq(&self, other: &LanguageTag) -> bool

fn ne(&self, other: &Rhs) -> bool

impl FromStr for LanguageTag

type Err = Error

fn from_str(s: &str) -> Result<LanguageTag, Error>

impl Display for LanguageTag

fn fmt(&self, f: &mut Formatter) -> Result<(), Error>

Derived Implementations

impl Clone for LanguageTag

fn clone(&self) -> LanguageTag

fn clone_from(&mut self, source: &Self)

impl Eq for LanguageTag

impl Default for LanguageTag

fn default() -> LanguageTag

impl Debug for LanguageTag

fn fmt(&self, __arg_0: &mut Formatter) -> Result<(), Error>