/** \page dw-line-breaking Changes in Line-Breaking and Hyphenation
<div style="border: 2px solid #ffff00; margin-bottom: 0.5em;
padding: 0.5em 1em; background-color: #ffffe0"><b>Info:</b>
Should be incorporated into dw::Textblock.</div>
Introduction
============
For the implementation of hyphenation in dillo, not only a
hyphenation algorithm was implemented, but also, the line breaking was
changed to a simple optimization per line. Aside from the improvement
by this change per se, an important aspect is the introduction of
"penalties". Before this change, dillo put all words into a line which
fitted into it; now, a "badness" is calculated for a possible
breakpoint, and the best breakpoint, i. e. the breakpoint with the
smallest value for "badness", is chosen. This can be simply refined
to define "good" and "bad" breakpoints by assigning a "penalty"; the
best breakpoint is then the one with the smallest value of "badness +
penalty". Details can be found below.
Example: Normal spaces have a penalty of 0, while hyphenation points
get a penalty of, say, 1, since hyphenation is generally considered as
a bit "ugly" and should rather be avoided. Consider a situation where
the word "dillo" could be hyphenated, with the following badnesses:
- before "dillo": 0.6;
- between "dil-" and "lo": 0.2;
- after "dillo": 0.5.
Since the penalty is added, the last value is the best one, so "dillo"
is put at the end of the line, without hyphenation.
Under other circumstances (e. g. narrower lines), the values
might be different:
- before "dillo": infinite;
- between "dil-" and "lo": 0.3;
- after "dillo": 1.5.
In this case, even the addition of the penalty makes hyphenation the
best choice.
Literature
==========
Breaking Paragraphs Into Lines
------------------------------
Although dillo does not (yet?) implement the algorithm T<sub>E</sub>X
uses for line breaking, this document shares much of the notation used
by the article *Breaking Paragraphs Into Lines* by Donald E. Knuth and
Michael F. Plass; originally published in: Software -- Practice and
Experience **11** (1981), 1119-1184; reprinted in: *Digital
Typography* by Donalt E. Knuth, CSLI Publications 1999. Anyway an
interesting reading.
Hyphenation
-----------
Dillo uses the algorithm by Frank Liang, which is described in his
doctoral dissertation found at http://www.tug.org/docs/liang/. There
is also a description in chapter H ("Hyphenation") of *The
T<sub>E</sub>Xbook* by Donald E. Knuth, Addison-Wesley 1984.
Pattern files can be found at
http://www.ctan.org/tex-archive/language/hyphenation.
Overview of Changes
===================
Starting with this change, dw/textblock.cc has been split up; anything
related to line breaking has been moved into
dw/textblock_linebreaking.cc. This will also be done for other aspects
like floats. (Better, however, would be a clean logical split.)
An important change relates to the way that lines are added: before,
dillo would add a line as soon as a new word for this line was
added. Now, a line is added not before the *last* word of this line is
known. This has two important implications:
- Some values in dw::Textblock::Line, which represented values
accumulated within the line, could be removed, since now, these
values can be calculated simply in a loop.
- On the other hand, this means that some words may not belong to any
line. For this reason, in some cases (e. g. in
dw::Textblock::sizeRequestImpl) dw::Textblock::showMissingLines is
called, which creates temporary lines, which must, under other
circumstances, be removed again by
dw::Textblock::removeTemporaryLines, since they have been created
based on limited information, and so possibly in a wrong way. (See
below for details.)
When a word can be hyphenated, an instance of dw::Textblock::Word is
used for each part. Notice that soft hyphens are evaluated
immediately, but automatic hyphenation is done in a lazy way (details
below), so the number of instances may change. There are some new
attributes: only when dw::Textblock::Word::canBeHyphenated is set to
*true*, automatic hyphenation is allowed; it is set to false when soft
hyphens are used for a word, and (of course) by the automatic
hyphenation itself. Furthermore, dw::Textblock::Word::hyphenWidth
(more details in the comment there) has to be included when
calculating line widths.
Some values should be configurable: dw::Textblock::HYPHEN_BREAK, the
penalty for hyphens. Also dw::Textblock::Word::stretchability,
dw::Textblock::Word::shrinkability, which are both set in
dw::Textblock::addSpace.
Criteria for Line-Breaking
==========================
Before these changes to line breaking, a word (represented by
dw::Textblock::Word) had the following attributes related to
line-breaking:
- the width of the word itself, represented by
dw::Textblock::Word::size;
- the width of the space following the word, represented by
dw::Textblock::Word::origSpace.
In a more mathematical notation, the \f$i\f$th word has a width
\f$w_i\f$ and a space \f$s_i\f$.
A break was possible, when there was a space between the two words,
and the first possible break was chosen.
With hyphenation, the criteria are refined. Hyphenation should only be
used when otherwise line breaking results in very large spaces. We
define:
- the badness \f$\beta\f$ of a line, which is greater the more the
spaces between the words differ from the ideal space;
- a penalty \f$p\f$ for any possible break point.
The goal is to find those break points, where \f$\beta + p\f$ is
minimal.
Examples for the penalty \f$p\f$:
- 0 for normal line breaks (between words);
- \f$\infty\f$ to prevent a line break at all costs;
- \f$-\infty\f$ to force a line
- a positive, but finite, value for hyphenation points.
So we need the following values:
- \f$w_i\f$ (the width of the word \f$i\f$ itself);
- \f$s_i\f$ (the width of the space following the word \f$i\f$);
- the stretchability \f$y_i\f$, a value denoting how much the space
after word\f$i\f$ can be stretched (typically \f${1\over 2} s_i\f$
for justified text; otherwise 0, since the spaces are not
stretched);
- the shrinkability \f$y_i\f$, a value denoting how much the space
after word\f$i\f$ can be shrunken (typically \f${1\over 3} s_i\f$
for justified text; otherwise 0, since the spaces are not shrinked);
- the penalty \f$p_i\f$, if the line is broken after word \f$i\f$;
- a width \f$h_i\f$, which is added, when the line is broken after
word \f$i\f$.
\f$h_i\f$ is the width of the hyphen, if the word \f$i\f$ is a part of
the hyphenated word (except the last part); otherwise 0.
Let \f$l\f$ be the (ideal) width (length) of the line, which is
e. at the top given by the browser window width. Furthermore, all words
from \f$a\f$ to \f$b\f$ are added to the line. \f$a\f$ is fixed: we do
not modify the previous lines anymore; but our task is to find a
suitable \f$b\f$.
We define:
\f[W_a^b = \sum_{i=a}^{b} w_i + \sum_{i=a}^{b-1} s_i + h_b\f]
\f[Y_a^b = {Y_0}_a^b + \sum_{i=a}^{b-1} y_i\f]
\f[Z_a^b = {Z_0}_a^b + \sum_{i=a}^{b-1} z_i\f]
\f$W_a^b\f$ is the total width, \f$Y_a^b\f$ the total stretchability,
and \f$Z_a^b\f$ the total shrinkability. \f${Y_0}_a^b\f$ and
\f${Z_0}_a^b\f$ are the stretchability and shrinkability defined per
line, and applied at the borders; they are 0 for justified text, but
\f${Y_0}_a^b\f$ has a positive value otherwise, see below for details.
Furthermore the *adjustment ratio* \f$r_a^b\f$:
- in the ideal case that \f$W_a^b = l\f$: \f$r_a^b = 0\f$;
- if \f$W_a^b < l\f$: \f$r_a^b = (l - W_a^b) / Y_a^b\f$
(\f$r_a^b < 0\f$ in this case);
- if \f$W_a^b > l\f$: \f$r_a^b = (l - W_a^b) / Z_a^b\f$
(\f$r_a^b < 0\f$ in this case).
The badness \f$\beta_a^b\f$ is defined as follows:
- if \f$r_a^b\f$ is undefined or \f$r_a^b < -1\f$: \f$\beta_a^b = \infty\f$;
- otherwise: \f$\beta_a^b = |r_a^b|^3\f$
The goal is to find the value of \f$b\f$ where \f$\beta_a^b + p_b\f$
is minimal. (\f$a\f$ is given, since we do not modify the previous
lines.)
After a couple of words, it is not predictable whether this minimum
has already been reached. There are two cases where this is possible
for a given \f$b'\f$:
- \f$\beta_{b'}^a = \infty\f$ (line gets too tight):
\f$a \le b < b'\f$, the minimum has to be searched between these two
values;
- \f$p_{b'} = -\infty\f$ (forced line break):
\f$a \le b \le b'\f$ (there may be another minimum of
\f$\beta_a^b\f$ before; note the \f$\le\f$ instead of \f$<\f$).
This leads to a problem that the last words of a text block are not
displayed this way, since they do not fulfill these rules for being
added to a line. For this reason, there are "temporary" lines already
described above.
(Note that the actual calculation differs from this description, since
integer arithmetic is used for performance, which make the actual
code more complicated. See dw::Textblock::BadnessAndPenalty for
details.)
Ragged Borders
--------------
For other than justified text (left-, right-aligned and centered), the
spaces between the words are not shrinked or stretched (so \f$y_i\f$
and \f$z_i\f$ are 0), but additional space is added to the left or
right border or to both. For this reason, an additional stretchability
\f${Y_0}_a^b\f$ is added (see definition above). Since this space at
the border is 0 in an ideal case (\f$W_a^b = l\f$), it cannot be
shrunken, so \f${Z_0}_a^b\f$ is 0.
This is not equivalent to the calculation of the total stretchability
as done for justified text, since in this case, the stretchability
depends on the number of words: consider the typical case that all
spaces and stretchabilities are equal (\f$y_a = y_{a + 1} = \ldots =
y_b\f$). With \f$n\f$ words, the total strechability would be \f$n
\cdot y_a\f$, so increase with an increasing number of words
(\f$y_a\f$ is constant). This is correct for justified text, but for
other alignments, where only one space (or two, for centered text) is
changed, this would mean that a line with many narrow words is more
stretchable than a line with few wide words.
It is obvious that left-aligned text can be handled in the same way as
right-aligned text. [... Centered text? ...]
The default value for the stretchability is the line height without
the space between the lines (more precisely: the maximum of all word
heights). The exact value not so important when comparing different
possible values for the badness \f$\beta_a^b\f$, when \f${Y_0}_a^b\f$
is nearly constant for different \f$b\f$ (which is the case for the
actual value), but it is important for the comparison with penalties,
which are constant. To be considered is also that for non-justified
text, hyphenation is differently (less) desirable; this effect can be
achieved by enlarging the stretchability, which will lead to a smaller
badness, and so make hyphenation less likely. The user can configure
the stretchability by changing the preference value
*stretchability_factor* (default: 1.0).
(Comparison to T<sub>E</sub>X: Knuth and Plass describe a method for
ragged borders, which is effectively the same as described here (Knuth
1999, pp. 93--94). The value for the stretchability of the line
is slightly less, 1&nsbp;em (ibid., see also p.&nsbp;72 for the
definition of the units). However, this article suggests a value for
the hyphenation penalty, which is ten times larger than the value for
justified text; this would suggest a larger value for
*stretchability_factor*.)
Hyphens
=======
Words (instances of dw::Textblock::Word), which are actually part of a
hyphenated word, are always drawn as a whole, not seperately. This
way, the underlying platform is able to apply kerning, ligatures, etc.
Calculating the width of such words causes some problems, since it is
not required that the width of text "AB" is identical to the width of
"A" plus the width of "B", just for the reasons mentioned above. It
gets even a bit more complicated, since it is required that a word
part (instance of dw::Textblock::Word) has always the same length,
independent of whether hyphenation is applied or not. Furthermore, the
hyphen length is fixed for a word; for practical reasons, it is always
the width of a hyphen, in the given font.
For calculating the widths, consider a word of four syllables:
A-B-C-D. There are 3 hyphenation points, and so 2<sup>3</sup> = 8
possible ways of hyphenation: ABCD, ABC-D, AB-CD, AB-C-D, A-BCD,
A-BC-D, A-B-CD, A-B-C-D. (Some of them, like the last one, are only
probable for very narrow lines.)
Let w(A), w(B), w(C), w(D) be the word widths (part of
dw::Textblock::Word::size), which have to be calculated, and l be a
shorthand for dw::core::Platform::textWidth. Without considering
this problem, the calculation would be simple: w(A) = l(A)
etc. However, it gets a bit more complicated. Since all
non-hyphenations are drawn as a whole, the following conditions can be
concluded:
- from drawing "ABCD" (not hyphenated at all): w(A) + w(B) + w(C) +
w(D) = l(ABCD);
- from drawing "BCD", when hyphenated as "A-BCD" ("A-" is not
considered here): w(B) + w(C) + w(D) = l(BCD);
- likewise, from drawing "CD" (cases "AB-CD" and "A-B-CD"): w(C) +
w(D) = l(CD);
- finally, for the cases "ABC-D", "AB-C-D", "A-BC-D", and "A-B-C-D":
w(D) = l(D).
So, the calculation is simple:
- w(D) = l(D)
- w(C) = l(CD) - w(D)
- w(B) = l(BCD) - (w(C) + w(D))
- w(A) = l(ABCD) - (w(B) + w(C) + w(D))
For calculation the hyphen widths, the exact conditions would be
over-determined, even when the possibility for individual hyphen
widths (instead of simply the text width of a hyphen character) would
be used. However, a simple approach of fixed hyphen widths will have
near-perfect results, so this is kept simple.
Automatic Hyphenation
=====================
When soft hyphens are used, words are immediately divided into
different parts, and so different instances of
dw::Textblock::Word. Automatic hyphenation (using Liang's algorithm)
is, however, not applied always, but only when possibly needed, after
calculating a line without hyphenation:
- When the line is tight, the last word of the line is hyphenated;
possibly this will result in a line with less parts of this word,
and so a less tight line.
- When the line is loose, and there is another word (for the next
line) available, this word is hyphenated; possibly, some parts of
this word are taken into this line, making it less loose.
After this, the line is re-calculated.
A problem arrises when the textblock is rewrapped, e. g. when the
user changes the window width. In this case, some new instances of
dw::Textblock::Word must be inserted into the word list,
dw::Textblock::words. This word list is implemented as an array, which
is dynamically increased; a simple approach would involve moving all
of the <i>n</i> elements after position <i>i</i>, so
<i>n</i> - <i>i</i> steps are necessary. This would not be a
problem, since O(n) steps are necessary; however, this will be
necessary again for the next hyphenated word (at the end of a
following line), and so on, so that
(<i>n</i> - <i>i</i><sub>1</sub>) +
(<i>n</i> - <i>i</i><sub>2</sub>) + ..., with
<i>i</i><sub>1</sub> < <i>i</i><sub>2</sub> < ...,
which results in O(n<sup>2</sup>) steps. For this reason, the word
list is managed by the class lout::misc::NotSoSimpleVector, which uses
a trick (a second array) to deal with exactly this problem. See there
for more details.
Tests
=====
There are test HTML files in the <i>test</i> directory. Also, there is
a program testing automatic hyphenation, <i>test/liang</i>, which can
be easily extended.
Bugs and Things Needing Improvement
===================================
High Priority
-------------
None.
Medium Priority
---------------
None.
Low Priority
------------
**Mark the end of a paragraph:** Should dw::core::Content::BREAK still
be used? Currently, this is redundant to
dw::Textblock::BadnessAndPenalty.
Solved (Must Be Documented)
---------------------------
These have been solved recently and should be documented above.
*Bugs in hyphenation:* There seem to be problems when breaking words
containing hyphens already. Example: "Abtei-Stadt", which is divided
into "Abtei-" and "Stadt", resulting possibly in
"Abtei-<span></span>-[new line]Stadt". See also below under
"Medium Priority", on how to deal with hyphens and dashes.
**Solution:** See next.
*Break hyphens and dashes:* The following rules seem to be relevant:
- In English, an em-dash is used with no spaces around. Breaking
before and after the dash should be possible, perhaps with a
penalty > 0. (In German, an en-dash (Halbgeviert) with spaces around
is used instead.)
- After a hyphen, which is part of a compound word, a break should be
possible. As described above ("Abtei-Stadt"), this collides with
hyphenation.
Where to implement? In the same dynamic, lazy way like hyphenation? As
part of hyphenation?
Notice that Liang's algorithm may behave different regarding hyphens:
"Abtei-Stadt" is (using the patterns from CTAN) divided into "Abtei-"
and "Stadt", but "Nordrhein-Westfalen" is divided into "Nord",
"rhein-West", "fa", "len": the part containing the hyphen
("rhein-West") is untouched. (Sorry for the German words; if you have
got English examples, send them me.)</div>
**Solution for both:** This has been implemented in
dw::Textblock::addText, in a similar way to soft hyphens. Liang's
algorithm now only operates on the parts: "Abtei" and "Stadt";
"Nordrhein" and "Westfalen".
*Hyphens in adjacent lines:* It should be simple to assign a larger
penalty for hyphens, when the line before is already hyphenated. This
way, hyphens in adjacent lines are penalized further.
**Solved:** There are always two penalties. Must be documented in
detail.
*Incorrect calculation of extremes:* The minimal width of a text block
(as part of the width extremes, which are mainly used for tables) is
defined by everything between two possible breaks. A possible break
may also be a hyphenation point; however, hyphenation points are
calculated in a lazy way, when the lines are broken, and not when
extremes are calculated. So, it is a matter of chance whether the
calculation of the minimal width will take the two parts "dil-" and
"lo" into account (when "dillo" has already been hyphenated), or only
one part, "dillo" (when "dillo" has not yet been hyphenated),
resulting possibly in a different value for the minimal width.
Possible strategies to deal with this problem:
- Ignore. The implications should be minimal.
- Any solution will make it neccessary to hyphenate at least some
words when calculating extremes. Since the minimal widths of all
words are used to calculate the minimal width of the text block, the
simplest approach will hyphenate all words. This would, of course,
eliminate the performance gains of the current lazy approach.
- The latter approach could be optimized in some ways. Examples: (i)
If a word is already narrower than the current accumulated value for
the minimal width, it makes no sense to hyphenate it. (ii) In other
cases, heuristics may be used to estimate the number of syllables,
the width of the widest of them etc.
**Solved:** Hyphenated parts of a word are not considered anymore for
width extremes, but only whole words. This is also one reason for the
introduction of the paragraphs list.
**Also:**
- Configuration of penalties.
*/