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authorMatthias Clasen <mclasen@redhat.com>2019-07-18 07:45:30 -0700
committerMatthias Clasen <mclasen@redhat.com>2019-07-18 07:46:32 -0700
commit22c1da8800cee6637e3d4f1dc1a9e0d8c84c53db (patch)
treec2dd27b83e00487a329aa4f5d465e64f035e2303 /utils
parentd0dc07fa02d7f459c187803b9552bd834639e524 (diff)
downloadpango-22c1da8800cee6637e3d4f1dc1a9e0d8c84c53db.tar.gz
Add a test file with lots of hyphens
This has quite a few soft hyphens, some explicit hyphens, and some hyphenation point characters. Try it with pango-view --width=330 --wrap=word --justify test-hyphens.txt
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diff --git a/utils/test-hyphens.txt b/utils/test-hyphens.txt
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+A hy­phen­ation al­go­rithm is a set of rules, espe­ci­ally one co­di­fied for im­ple­men­tation in a com­pu­ter pro­gram, that de­ci­des at which points a word can be bro­ken over two lines with a hy­phen. For ex­am­ple, a hy­phen­ation al­go­rithm might de­cide that im­peach­ment can be broken as impeach‧ment or im‧peachment but not impe‧‍achment.
+
+One of the rea­sons for the com­plex­ity of the rules of word­break­ing is that dif­fer­ent "di­alects" of English tend to dif­fer on hy­phen­ation[ci­ta­tion needed]: Ame­rican Eng­lish tends to work on sound, but British English tends to look to the ori­gins of the word and then to sound. There are also a large num­ber of ex­cep­tions, which fur­ther com­pli­cates mat­ters.