speters33w commented on PR #450:
URL: https://github.com/apache/commons-text/pull/450#issuecomment-2059789205

   @theshoeshiner 
   
   I got everything re-merged into the initial clone, and git likes it. It 
finds differences in StringTokenizerTest, but that's it.
   
   I think I must have accidentally pasted utf32 characters directly into that 
AlphabetConverter (which I wasn't editing, but I was nosing around in there), 
and Java didn't know what to do with it, so the compile burped.
   
   OK, I'm impressed. This passes:
   ```
           assertParse(CamelCase.INSTANCE, 
"\uD835\uDE96\uD835\uDEA2\uD835\uDE72\uD835\uDE8A\uD835\uDE96\uD835\uDE8E\uD835\uDE95\uD835\uDE85\uD835\uDE8A\uD835\uDE9B\uD835\uDE92\uD835\uDE8A\uD835\uDE8B\uD835\uDE95\uD835\uDE8E",
                   Arrays.asList("\uD835\uDE96\uD835\uDEA2", 
"\uD835\uDE72\uD835\uDE8A\uD835\uDE96\uD835\uDE8E\uD835\uDE95", 
"\uD835\uDE85\uD835\uDE8A\uD835\uDE9B\uD835\uDE92\uD835\uDE8A\uD835\uDE8B\uD835\uDE95\uD835\uDE8E"));
   ```
   The string is: "𝚖𝚢𝙲𝚊𝚖𝚎𝚕𝚅𝚊𝚛𝚒𝚊𝚋𝚕𝚎". The tokens are "𝚖𝚢", "𝙲𝚊𝚖𝚎𝚕", "𝚅𝚊𝚛𝚒𝚊𝚋𝚕𝚎".
   
   You'd only see a variable like this in something like Julia, but danged if 
your API didn't work like a charm on it.
   
   I'm liking this.


-- 
This is an automated message from the Apache Git Service.
To respond to the message, please log on to GitHub and use the
URL above to go to the specific comment.

To unsubscribe, e-mail: [email protected]

For queries about this service, please contact Infrastructure at:
[email protected]

Reply via email to