Ting
Ting can convert between various systems for phonetically writing Mandarin Chinese. It can also handle various representation of tones, so it can be used to convert pinyin with numbers to pinyin with tones.
Hanyu Pinyin, Bopomofo, Wade-Giles, Tongyong Pinyin and International Phonetic Alphabet (IPA) are supported.
INSTALL
- gem install ting
SYNOPSIS
To parse your strings create a Reader object. Ting.reader() takes two
parameters : the transliteration format, and the way that tones are represented.
To some extent these can be mixed and matched.
To generate pinyin/wade-giles/etc. create a Writer object. Use Ting.writer()
Formats
:hanyuHanyu Pinyin:zhuyinZhuyin Fuhao (a.k.a. Bopomofo):wadegilesWade Giles:ipaInternational Phonetic Alphabet:tongyongTongyong Pinyin
Tones
:numbersSimply put a number after the syllable, easy to type:accentsUse diacritics, follows the Hanyu Pinyin rules, there needs to be at least one vowel to apply this to, not usable with IPA or Bopomofo:supernumSuperscript numerals, typically used for Wade-Giles:marksTone mark after the syllable, typically used for Bopomofo:ipaIPA tone marks:no_tonesUse no tones
Examples
Parse Hanyu Pinyin
require 'ting'
reader = Ting.reader(:hanyu, :numbers)
reader.( "wo3 ai4 ni3" )
# => [<Ting::Syllable <initial=Empty, final=Uo, tone=3>>,
# <Ting::Syllable <initial=Empty, final=Ai, tone=4>>,
# <Ting::Syllable <initial=Ne, final=I, tone=3>>]
Generate Bopomofo
= Ting.writer(:zhuyin, :marks)
.(reader.("wo3 ai4 ni3"))
# => "ㄨㄛˇ ㄞˋ ㄋㄧˇ"
Generate Wade-Giles
wadegiles = Ting.writer(:wadegiles, :supernum)
wadegiles.(reader.("qing2 kuang4 ru2 he2"))
# => "ch`ing² k`uang⁴ ju² ho²"
Generate IPA
ipa = Ting.writer.new(:ipa, :ipa)
ipa.(reader.("you3 peng2 zi4 yuan2 fang1 lai2"))
# => "iou˧˩˧ pʰeŋ˧˥ ts˥˩ yɛn˧˥ faŋ˥˥ lai˧˥"
Since this is such a common use case, a convenience method exists to add diacritics to pinyin.
Ting.pretty_tones "wo3 ai4 ni3"
# => "wǒ ài nǐ"
Note that syllables need to be separated by spaces, feeding "peng2you3" to the parser
does not work. The Ting.pretty_tones(string) method does handle these things a bit more gracefully.
If you need to parse input that does not conform, consider using a regexp to scan for valid
syllables, then feed the syllables to the parser one by one. Have a look at Ting.pretty_tones for
an example of how to do this, but note that it does not support special cases like erhua
(wanr2 = wan2 er) or non-standard Pinyin syllables like 嗯/"ń" or 呣/"ḿ" (which appear in the official
Unicode data and some textbooks).
ting_table
The ting_table script will spit out a CSV table of all syllables and formats Ting knows about. Useful if you want to do conversion in other languages.
REQUIREMENTS
- none, Ting uses nothing but Ruby
LICENSE
Copyright (c) 2007-2017, Arne Brasseur. (http://www.arnebrasseur.net)
Available as Free Software under the GPLv3 License, see LICENSE.txt for details

