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/* | |
* One of the questions that recently came up is how to remove vowels from Hebrew characters in Unicode | |
* (or any other similar language). A quick look at Hebrew Unicode chart shows that the vowels are all | |
* located between 0x0591 (1425) and 0x05C7 (1479). With this and Javascript's charCodeAt function, it | |
* is trivial to strip them out with Javascript as follows | |
* | |
* Live demo is available here: | |
* https://jsfiddle.net/js0ge7gn/ | |
*/ | |
function stripVowels(rawString) | |
{ | |
var newString = ''; | |
for(j=0; j<rawString.length; j++) { | |
if(rawString.charCodeAt(j)<1425 | |
|| rawString.charCodeAt(j)>1479) | |
{ newString = newString + rawString.charAt(j); } | |
} | |
return(newString); | |
} | |
/* @shimondoodkin suggested even a much shorter way to do this */ | |
function stripVowels2(rawString) { | |
return rawString.replace(/[\u0591-\u05C7]/g,"") | |
} | |
FYI: the jsfiddle seems to unintentionally strip dashes and non-vowel punctuation. For example, I put in Bereshit 1:12
"ืึทืชึผืึนืฆึตึจื ืึธืึธึืจึถืฅ ืึผึถึ ืฉืึถื ืขึตึฃืฉืึถื ืึทืึฐืจึดึคืืขึท ืึถึจืจึทืขึ ืึฐืึดืื ึตึืืึผ ืึฐืขึตึงืฅ ืขึนึฝืฉืึถืึพืคึผึฐืจึดึื ืึฒืฉืึถึฅืจ ืึทืจึฐืขืึนึพืึืึน ืึฐืึดืื ึตึืืึผ ืึทืึผึทึฅืจึฐื ืึฑืึนืึดึืื ืึผึดืึพืึฝืึนื"
and got
"ืืชืืฆื ืืืจืฅ ืืฉื ืขืฉื ืืืจืืข ืืจืข ืืืื ืื ืืขืฅ ืขืฉืืคืจื ืืฉืจ ืืจืขืืื ืืืื ืื ืืืจื ืืืืื ืืืืื"
And remove vowels in Java:
private String removeVowels(String hebString){
String newString = "";
for(int j=0; j<hebString.length() ; j++) {
char c = hebString.charAt(j);
if(hebString.charAt(j)<1425 || hebString.charAt(j)>1479)
newString = newString + hebString.charAt(j);
}
return newString;
}
@flamholz You can just exclude the "Maqaf" (the "dash" connecting two words in the hebrew text, unicode u05BE
) in the RegEx: return rawString.replace(/[\u0591-\u05BD\u05BF-\u05C7]/g,"");
Thanks for the python script @yakovsh! ๐
Based on that script I created a more advanced script in Python. ๐
๐ It has a GUI, using Tkinter!
It can read and write text files and also removes only Taamei haMikra characters if yo wish.
๐ฅ The script is part of an open source bible software I am writing, called Emmeth.
Check it our here: https://github.com/Emmeth/tools/blob/master/scripts/remove_nikkud.py
So this thread has been super helpful. I've been using the Google Sheets function suggested by yakovsh, with avrtau's modification to keep the maqqef and sof pasuq. Here's what I'm using: =REGEXREPLACE(B1,"[(\x{0591}-\x{05BD})OR(\x{05BF}-\x{05C2})OR(\x{05C4}-\x{05C7})]","")
But what I want to know is whether and how I could incorporate similar code into a macro for Word, since that is ultimately what I am using this for--to remove nikkud from Hebrew words and text extracts in a Word document. Currently I copy the vocalized text from the Word doc, paste it into my Google sheet, and then copy/paste that output over the vocalized text back in Word. It would be faster and more efficient if I could just select the vocalized text and run a macro on it with a shortcut key. I'm fairly sure this is possible, but I don't which if any of the code listed above would work. I'm pretty new to Word macros; I'm familiar with creating and editing them, and I understand the basics, but I don't know the syntax myself. Thanks for any suggestions!
Thanks for the ideas above. I imported all the data in an Excel spreadsheet and couldn't find a way to do it elegantly using a regexreplace function, say.
This is a bit brute-force, but it worked for me and only took about 10 seconds to convert around 10,000 words and sentences:
Function stripVowels(rawString)
Dim stripped As String
stripped = rawString
For H = 1425 To 1479
stripped = Replace(stripped, ChrW(H), "")
Next
stripVowels = stripped
End Function
And then just type "=stripVowels(A2)" in the cell(s) where you want nikkud-less Hebrew text (obviously replace "A2" with whatever the cell is of the original text).
:)
Here's the variation required for a Word Find-and-Replace macro:
Sub StripNkudot()
Application.DisplayAlerts = False
For H = 1425 To 1479
Selection.Find.ClearFormatting
Selection.Find.Replacement.ClearFormatting
With Selection.Find
.Text = ChrW(H)
.Replacement.Text = ""
.Forward = True
.Wrap = wdFindStop
.Format = False
.MatchCase = False
.MatchWholeWord = False
.MatchKashida = False
.MatchDiacritics = False
.MatchAlefHamza = False
.MatchControl = False
.MatchWildcards = False
.MatchSoundsLike = False
.MatchAllWordForms = False
End With
Selection.Find.Execute replace:=wdReplaceAll
Next
Application.DisplayAlerts = True
End Sub
(You might want to comment out DisplayAlerts=False if you want to see what's going on, but if you have a lot of text then switching off the display will speed up the process considerably.)
Golang example based on other comments on this gist: https://play.golang.org/p/B9VRe-L5lS3
When stripping nequdot from Torah passages (and essentially trying to modernize the spelling for myself), I realized that modern Hebrew actually writes in more vav's (and maybe yud's too). So I wrote this variation that checks to see if the o / u sound is represented before deleting one of its various representations. If it isn't represented, I ADD a vav.
`function stripVowels(rawString){
var newString = '';
for(j=0; j<rawString.length; j++) {
//If it has an O that isn't otherwise represented, then add a vav
if(rawString.charCodeAt(j) == 1465 && rawString[j+1] != "ื" && rawString[j+1] != "ื" && rawString[j+1] != "ื"){
newString += "ื";
}
//If it has a U, also add a vav
else if(rawString.charCodeAt(j) == 1467){
newString += "ื";
}
//Turn Hebrew hyphen into space
else if(rawString.charCodeAt(j) == 1470) newString += " ";
//Get rid of anything that's not a normal letter or punctuation
else if(rawString.charCodeAt(j)<1425 || rawString.charCodeAt(j)>1479){
newString += rawString.charAt(j);
}
}
return(newString);
}
//O == 1465
//hyphen == 1470
//U == 1467`
Here's an example of the difference:
ืึฐืึดืฉืึฐืจึธืึตื ืึธืึทื ืึถืชึพืึนืืกึตืฃ ืึดืึผึธืึพืึผึธื ึธืื ืึผึดืึพืึถืึพืึฐืงึปื ึดืื ืืึผื ืึนื ืึฐืขึธืฉืึธื ืึนื ืึผึฐืชึนื ึถืช ืคึผึทืกึผึดืื ื
ืืืฉืจืื ืืื ืืช ืืืกืฃ ืืื ืื ืื ืื ืื ืืงืื ืื ืืื ืื ืืขืฉื ืื ืืชืื ืช ืคืกืื
I don't know why the code font didn't kick in.
Gnarlodious suggested the following in Python: