package com.google.zxing.qrcode.decoder;
-import com.google.zxing.ReaderException;
+import com.google.zxing.FormatException;
import com.google.zxing.common.BitSource;
import com.google.zxing.common.CharacterSetECI;
+import com.google.zxing.common.DecoderResult;
+import com.google.zxing.common.StringUtils;
import java.io.UnsupportedEncodingException;
+import java.util.Hashtable;
+import java.util.Vector;
/**
* <p>QR Codes can encode text as bits in one of several modes, and can use multiple modes
*
* <p>See ISO 18004:2006, 6.4.3 - 6.4.7</p>
*
- * @author srowen@google.com (Sean Owen)
+ * @author Sean Owen
*/
final class DecodedBitStreamParser {
'O', 'P', 'Q', 'R', 'S', 'T', 'U', 'V', 'W', 'X', 'Y', 'Z',
' ', '$', '%', '*', '+', '-', '.', '/', ':'
};
- private static final String SHIFT_JIS = "SJIS";
- private static final String EUC_JP = "EUC_JP";
- private static final boolean ASSUME_SHIFT_JIS;
- private static final String UTF8 = "UTF8";
- private static final String ISO88591 = "ISO8859_1";
-
- static {
- String platformDefault = System.getProperty("file.encoding");
- ASSUME_SHIFT_JIS = SHIFT_JIS.equalsIgnoreCase(platformDefault) || EUC_JP.equalsIgnoreCase(platformDefault);
- }
private DecodedBitStreamParser() {
}
- static String decode(byte[] bytes, Version version) throws ReaderException {
+ static DecoderResult decode(byte[] bytes, Version version, ErrorCorrectionLevel ecLevel, Hashtable hints)
+ throws FormatException {
BitSource bits = new BitSource(bytes);
- StringBuffer result = new StringBuffer();
+ StringBuffer result = new StringBuffer(50);
CharacterSetECI currentCharacterSetECI = null;
boolean fc1InEffect = false;
+ Vector byteSegments = new Vector(1);
Mode mode;
do {
// While still another segment to read...
// OK, assume we're done. Really, a TERMINATOR mode should have been recorded here
mode = Mode.TERMINATOR;
} else {
- mode = Mode.forBits(bits.readBits(4)); // mode is encoded by 4 bits
+ try {
+ mode = Mode.forBits(bits.readBits(4)); // mode is encoded by 4 bits
+ } catch (IllegalArgumentException iae) {
+ throw FormatException.getFormatInstance();
+ }
}
if (!mode.equals(Mode.TERMINATOR)) {
if (mode.equals(Mode.FNC1_FIRST_POSITION) || mode.equals(Mode.FNC1_SECOND_POSITION)) {
// We do little with FNC1 except alter the parsed result a bit according to the spec
fc1InEffect = true;
+ } else if (mode.equals(Mode.STRUCTURED_APPEND)) {
+ // not really supported; all we do is ignore it
+ // Read next 8 bits (symbol sequence #) and 8 bits (parity data), then continue
+ bits.readBits(16);
} else if (mode.equals(Mode.ECI)) {
// Count doesn't apply to ECI
int value = parseECIValue(bits);
- try {
- currentCharacterSetECI = CharacterSetECI.getCharacterSetECIByValue(value);
- } catch (IllegalArgumentException iae) {
- // unsupported... just continue?
+ currentCharacterSetECI = CharacterSetECI.getCharacterSetECIByValue(value);
+ if (currentCharacterSetECI == null) {
+ throw FormatException.getFormatInstance();
}
} else {
// How many characters will follow, encoded in this mode?
} else if (mode.equals(Mode.ALPHANUMERIC)) {
decodeAlphanumericSegment(bits, result, count, fc1InEffect);
} else if (mode.equals(Mode.BYTE)) {
- decodeByteSegment(bits, result, count, currentCharacterSetECI);
+ decodeByteSegment(bits, result, count, currentCharacterSetECI, byteSegments, hints);
} else if (mode.equals(Mode.KANJI)) {
decodeKanjiSegment(bits, result, count);
} else {
- throw new ReaderException("Unsupported mode indicator");
+ throw FormatException.getFormatInstance();
}
}
}
} while (!mode.equals(Mode.TERMINATOR));
- // I thought it wasn't allowed to leave extra bytes after the terminator but it happens
- /*
- int bitsLeft = bits.available();
- if (bitsLeft > 0) {
- if (bitsLeft > 6 || bits.readBits(bitsLeft) != 0) {
- throw new ReaderException("Excess bits or non-zero bits after terminator mode indicator");
- }
- }
- */
- return result.toString();
+ return new DecoderResult(bytes, result.toString(), byteSegments.isEmpty() ? null : byteSegments, ecLevel);
}
private static void decodeKanjiSegment(BitSource bits,
StringBuffer result,
- int count) throws ReaderException {
+ int count) throws FormatException {
// Each character will require 2 bytes. Read the characters as 2-byte pairs
// and decode as Shift_JIS afterwards
byte[] buffer = new byte[2 * count];
}
// Shift_JIS may not be supported in some environments:
try {
- result.append(new String(buffer, SHIFT_JIS));
+ result.append(new String(buffer, StringUtils.SHIFT_JIS));
} catch (UnsupportedEncodingException uee) {
- throw new ReaderException(SHIFT_JIS + " encoding is not supported on this device");
+ throw FormatException.getFormatInstance();
}
}
private static void decodeByteSegment(BitSource bits,
StringBuffer result,
int count,
- CharacterSetECI currentCharacterSetECI) throws ReaderException {
+ CharacterSetECI currentCharacterSetECI,
+ Vector byteSegments,
+ Hashtable hints) throws FormatException {
byte[] readBytes = new byte[count];
if (count << 3 > bits.available()) {
- throw new ReaderException("Count too large: " + count);
+ throw FormatException.getFormatInstance();
}
for (int i = 0; i < count; i++) {
readBytes[i] = (byte) bits.readBits(8);
// upon decoding. I have seen ISO-8859-1 used as well as
// Shift_JIS -- without anything like an ECI designator to
// give a hint.
- encoding = guessEncoding(readBytes);
+ encoding = StringUtils.guessEncoding(readBytes, hints);
} else {
encoding = currentCharacterSetECI.getEncodingName();
}
try {
result.append(new String(readBytes, encoding));
} catch (UnsupportedEncodingException uce) {
- throw new ReaderException(uce.toString());
+ throw FormatException.getFormatInstance();
}
+ byteSegments.addElement(readBytes);
}
private static void decodeAlphanumericSegment(BitSource bits,
private static void decodeNumericSegment(BitSource bits,
StringBuffer result,
- int count) throws ReaderException {
+ int count) throws FormatException {
// Read three digits at a time
while (count >= 3) {
// Each 10 bits encodes three digits
int threeDigitsBits = bits.readBits(10);
if (threeDigitsBits >= 1000) {
- throw new ReaderException("Illegal value for 3-digit unit: " + threeDigitsBits);
+ throw FormatException.getFormatInstance();
}
result.append(ALPHANUMERIC_CHARS[threeDigitsBits / 100]);
result.append(ALPHANUMERIC_CHARS[(threeDigitsBits / 10) % 10]);
// Two digits left over to read, encoded in 7 bits
int twoDigitsBits = bits.readBits(7);
if (twoDigitsBits >= 100) {
- throw new ReaderException("Illegal value for 2-digit unit: " + twoDigitsBits);
+ throw FormatException.getFormatInstance();
}
result.append(ALPHANUMERIC_CHARS[twoDigitsBits / 10]);
result.append(ALPHANUMERIC_CHARS[twoDigitsBits % 10]);
// One digit left over to read
int digitBits = bits.readBits(4);
if (digitBits >= 10) {
- throw new ReaderException("Illegal value for digit unit: " + digitBits);
+ throw FormatException.getFormatInstance();
}
result.append(ALPHANUMERIC_CHARS[digitBits]);
}
}
-
- private static String guessEncoding(byte[] bytes) {
- if (ASSUME_SHIFT_JIS) {
- return SHIFT_JIS;
- }
- // Does it start with the UTF-8 byte order mark? then guess it's UTF-8
- if (bytes.length > 3 && bytes[0] == (byte) 0xEF && bytes[1] == (byte) 0xBB && bytes[2] == (byte) 0xBF) {
- return UTF8;
- }
- // For now, merely tries to distinguish ISO-8859-1, UTF-8 and Shift_JIS,
- // which should be by far the most common encodings. ISO-8859-1
- // should not have bytes in the 0x80 - 0x9F range, while Shift_JIS
- // uses this as a first byte of a two-byte character. If we see this
- // followed by a valid second byte in Shift_JIS, assume it is Shift_JIS.
- // If we see something else in that second byte, we'll make the risky guess
- // that it's UTF-8.
- int length = bytes.length;
- boolean canBeISO88591 = true;
- boolean lastWasPossibleDoubleByteStart = false;
- for (int i = 0; i < length; i++) {
- int value = bytes[i] & 0xFF;
- if (value >= 0x80 && value <= 0x9F && i < length - 1) {
- canBeISO88591 = false;
- // ISO-8859-1 shouldn't use this, but before we decide it is Shift_JIS,
- // just double check that it is followed by a byte that's valid in
- // the Shift_JIS encoding
- if (lastWasPossibleDoubleByteStart) {
- // If we just checked this and the last byte for being a valid double-byte
- // char, don't check starting on this byte. If this and the last byte
- // formed a valid pair, then this shouldn't be checked to see if it starts
- // a double byte pair of course.
- lastWasPossibleDoubleByteStart = false;
- } else {
- // ... otherwise do check to see if this plus the next byte form a valid
- // double byte pair encoding a character.
- lastWasPossibleDoubleByteStart = true;
- int nextValue = bytes[i + 1] & 0xFF;
- if (nextValue < 0x40 || nextValue > 0xFC) {
- return UTF8;
- }
- // There is some conflicting information out there about which bytes can follow which in
- // double-byte Shift_JIS characters. The rule above seems to be the one that matches practice.
- // The stricter rule below, however, is given by other resources.
- /*
- if ((value & 0x1) == 0) {
- // if even, next value should be in [0x9F,0xFC]
- // if not, we'll guess UTF-8
- if (nextValue < 0x9F || nextValue > 0xFC) {
- return UTF8;
- }
- } else {
- // if odd, next value should be in [0x40,0x9E]
- // if not, we'll guess UTF-8
- if (nextValue < 0x40 || nextValue > 0x9E) {
- return UTF8;
- }
- }
- */
- }
- }
- }
- return canBeISO88591 ? ISO88591 : SHIFT_JIS;
- }
private static int parseECIValue(BitSource bits) {
int firstByte = bits.readBits(8);