This is the version 2.0.0 release of Camomile library package. Camomile is a Unicode library for ocaml. Camomile provides Unicode character type, UTF-8, UTF-16, UTF-32 strings, conversion to/from about 200 encodings, collation and locale-sensitive case mappings, and more.
The library is licensed under LGPL-2 with the common linking exception given to OCaml packages. See LICENSE.md
The recommended way to install Camomile is via the opam package manager. With
the opam
binary installed and configured, all you should have to do is:
$ opam install camomile
Otherwise, you might want to see if your distribution has a package available for it.
For developers and testers, dune is used to build the library:
$ dune build
This includes a default library configured with paths internals to dune
where its
shared files are stored.
The Camomile
API provides a functor-base configuration interface that allows to
define custom libraries with shared files located at a different location.
If you are building for packaging purposes and need to place shared files in a specific location for the default library, you can use environment variables at build-time:
$ CAMOMILE_CONFIG=env CAMOMILE_PREFIX=/usr dune build
in which case, the library will look for those files at /usr/share/camomile
Please note that dune install
installs the file under the same local directory regardless of this option.
This option is meant to be used when packaging the library for distributions using binary packages such
as debian or ubuntu packages, RPM package etc.
The library's API was update and cleaned up in its version 2.0.0
as part of the migration to support OCaml 5.0.0
. As a
consequence, modules depending on the old library are now incompatible with the new library.
If you were previously using the CamomileLibraryDefault
module, all you should have to do is
use the new top-level Camomile
module.
If you were previously using the configuration functor to define your own library, you should be able to
use the new Camomile.Make
functor available at top-level as well.
Otherwise, you can check the compat/
directory of this repository. It contains a simple compatibility
library that you should be able to re-use in your code. We do, however, recommend simply updating your
code to the new API. It really shouldn't be too hard!
Camomile requires a runtime configuration to be able to locate its data files.
Camomile's idea of configuration is "configuration by functors". Modules which
require configuration become functors parametrized by a module which contains
configuration variables. Camomile.Config.Type
specifies the module
type of configuration parameters. You can pass the configuration module to
individual modules' Make
(as UCol.Make
) or Configure
functors (as
CharEncoding.Configure
), or pass it to the whole-in-one functor
Camomile.Make
and obtain configured modules.
Camomile provides two top-level modules which contains modules already configured. Therefore it is suitable to use if you are using Camomile locally installed from the source.
See camomile.ml
file.
See https://github.com/savonet/Camomile
Camomile is currently maintained by Romain Beauxis [email protected] and was forked over from the original project with permission from @yoriyuki
However, the project is still in need of active contributors. Please file pull requests and more!
So many people are contributed to Camomile. See https://github.com/savonet/Camomile/graphs/contributors
Before GitHub becomes into existence...
- Peter Jolly provided CP932 conversion table.
- Kawakami Shigenobu contributed findlib support.
- Pierre Chambart contributed
StringPrep
module. - Stanisław T. Findeisen pointed out the balancing bug of AVL-trees.
- Sylvain Le Gall provided dynamic configuration module
ConfigDyn.ml
.
Many people contributed bug fixes.