I am trying to clean text in the exact way that Firefox does before spell checking individual words for a Firefox extension I'm building (my addon uses nspell, a JavaScript implementation of Hunspell, since Firefox doesn't expose the Hunspell instance it uses via the extension API).
I've looked at the Firefox gecko cloned codebase, i.e. in the mozSpellChecker.h file and other related files by searching for "spellcheck" but I cannot seem to find out how they are cleaning text.
Reverse engineering it has been a major PITA, I have this so far:
// cleans text and strips out unwanted symbols/patterns before we use it
// returns an empty string if content undefined
function cleanText (content, filter = true) {
if (!content) {
console.warn(`MultiDict: cannot clean falsy or undefined content: "${content}"`)
return ''
}
// ToDo: first split string by spaces in order to properly ignore urls
const rxUrls = /^(http|https|ftp|www)/
const rxSeparators = /[\s\r\n.,:;!?_<>{}()[\]"`´^$°§½¼³%&¬+=*~#|/\\]/
const rxSingleQuotes = /^'+|'+$/g
// split all content by any character that should not form part of a word
return content.split(rxSeparators)
.reduce((acc, string) => {
// remove any number of single quotes that do not form part of a word i.e. 'y'all' > y'all
string = string.replace(rxSingleQuotes, '')
// we never want empty strings, so skip them
if (string.length < 1) {
return acc
}
// for when we're just cleaning the text of punctuation (i.e. not filtering out emails, etc)
if (!filter) {
return acc.concat([string])
}
// filter out emails, URLs, numbers, and strings less than 2 characters in length
if (!string.includes('@') && !rxUrls.test(string) && isNaN(string) && string.length > 1) {
return acc.concat([string])
}
return acc
}, [])
}
But I'm still seeing big differences between content when testing things like - well - the text area used to create this question.
To be clear: I'm looking for the exact method(s) and matches and rules that Firefox uses to clean text, and since it's open source it should be somewhere, but I can't seem to find it!