VideoTools/vendor/golang.org/x/text/language/coverage.go
Stu Leak 68df790d27 Fix player frame generation and video playback
Major improvements to UnifiedPlayer:

1. GetFrameImage() now works when paused for responsive UI updates
2. Play() method properly starts FFmpeg process
3. Frame display loop runs continuously for smooth video display
4. Disabled audio temporarily to fix video playback fundamentals
5. Simplified FFmpeg command to focus on video stream only

Player now:
- Generates video frames correctly
- Shows video when paused
- Has responsive progress tracking
- Starts playback properly

Next steps: Re-enable audio playback once video is stable
2026-01-07 22:20:00 -05:00

188 lines
4.8 KiB
Go

// Copyright 2014 The Go Authors. All rights reserved.
// Use of this source code is governed by a BSD-style
// license that can be found in the LICENSE file.
package language
import (
"fmt"
"sort"
"golang.org/x/text/internal/language"
)
// The Coverage interface is used to define the level of coverage of an
// internationalization service. Note that not all types are supported by all
// services. As lists may be generated on the fly, it is recommended that users
// of a Coverage cache the results.
type Coverage interface {
// Tags returns the list of supported tags.
Tags() []Tag
// BaseLanguages returns the list of supported base languages.
BaseLanguages() []Base
// Scripts returns the list of supported scripts.
Scripts() []Script
// Regions returns the list of supported regions.
Regions() []Region
}
var (
// Supported defines a Coverage that lists all supported subtags. Tags
// always returns nil.
Supported Coverage = allSubtags{}
)
// TODO:
// - Support Variants, numbering systems.
// - CLDR coverage levels.
// - Set of common tags defined in this package.
type allSubtags struct{}
// Regions returns the list of supported regions. As all regions are in a
// consecutive range, it simply returns a slice of numbers in increasing order.
// The "undefined" region is not returned.
func (s allSubtags) Regions() []Region {
reg := make([]Region, language.NumRegions)
for i := range reg {
reg[i] = Region{language.Region(i + 1)}
}
return reg
}
// Scripts returns the list of supported scripts. As all scripts are in a
// consecutive range, it simply returns a slice of numbers in increasing order.
// The "undefined" script is not returned.
func (s allSubtags) Scripts() []Script {
scr := make([]Script, language.NumScripts)
for i := range scr {
scr[i] = Script{language.Script(i + 1)}
}
return scr
}
// BaseLanguages returns the list of all supported base languages. It generates
// the list by traversing the internal structures.
func (s allSubtags) BaseLanguages() []Base {
bs := language.BaseLanguages()
base := make([]Base, len(bs))
for i, b := range bs {
base[i] = Base{b}
}
return base
}
// Tags always returns nil.
func (s allSubtags) Tags() []Tag {
return nil
}
// coverage is used by NewCoverage which is used as a convenient way for
// creating Coverage implementations for partially defined data. Very often a
// package will only need to define a subset of slices. coverage provides a
// convenient way to do this. Moreover, packages using NewCoverage, instead of
// their own implementation, will not break if later new slice types are added.
type coverage struct {
tags func() []Tag
bases func() []Base
scripts func() []Script
regions func() []Region
}
func (s *coverage) Tags() []Tag {
if s.tags == nil {
return nil
}
return s.tags()
}
// bases implements sort.Interface and is used to sort base languages.
type bases []Base
func (b bases) Len() int {
return len(b)
}
func (b bases) Swap(i, j int) {
b[i], b[j] = b[j], b[i]
}
func (b bases) Less(i, j int) bool {
return b[i].langID < b[j].langID
}
// BaseLanguages returns the result from calling s.bases if it is specified or
// otherwise derives the set of supported base languages from tags.
func (s *coverage) BaseLanguages() []Base {
if s.bases == nil {
tags := s.Tags()
if len(tags) == 0 {
return nil
}
a := make([]Base, len(tags))
for i, t := range tags {
a[i] = Base{language.Language(t.lang())}
}
sort.Sort(bases(a))
k := 0
for i := 1; i < len(a); i++ {
if a[k] != a[i] {
k++
a[k] = a[i]
}
}
return a[:k+1]
}
return s.bases()
}
func (s *coverage) Scripts() []Script {
if s.scripts == nil {
return nil
}
return s.scripts()
}
func (s *coverage) Regions() []Region {
if s.regions == nil {
return nil
}
return s.regions()
}
// NewCoverage returns a Coverage for the given lists. It is typically used by
// packages providing internationalization services to define their level of
// coverage. A list may be of type []T or func() []T, where T is either Tag,
// Base, Script or Region. The returned Coverage derives the value for Bases
// from Tags if no func or slice for []Base is specified. For other unspecified
// types the returned Coverage will return nil for the respective methods.
func NewCoverage(list ...interface{}) Coverage {
s := &coverage{}
for _, x := range list {
switch v := x.(type) {
case func() []Base:
s.bases = v
case func() []Script:
s.scripts = v
case func() []Region:
s.regions = v
case func() []Tag:
s.tags = v
case []Base:
s.bases = func() []Base { return v }
case []Script:
s.scripts = func() []Script { return v }
case []Region:
s.regions = func() []Region { return v }
case []Tag:
s.tags = func() []Tag { return v }
default:
panic(fmt.Sprintf("language: unsupported set type %T", v))
}
}
return s
}