Convert numbered pinyin to pinyin with tone marks

I've got some Python 3 code that does this, and it's small enough to just put directly in the answer here.

PinyinToneMark = {
    0: "aoeiuv\u00fc",
    1: "\u0101\u014d\u0113\u012b\u016b\u01d6\u01d6",
    2: "\u00e1\u00f3\u00e9\u00ed\u00fa\u01d8\u01d8",
    3: "\u01ce\u01d2\u011b\u01d0\u01d4\u01da\u01da",
    4: "\u00e0\u00f2\u00e8\u00ec\u00f9\u01dc\u01dc",
}

def decode_pinyin(s):
    s = s.lower()
    r = ""
    t = ""
    for c in s:
        if c >= 'a' and c <= 'z':
            t += c
        elif c == ':':
            assert t[-1] == 'u'
            t = t[:-1] + "\u00fc"
        else:
            if c >= '0' and c <= '5':
                tone = int(c) % 5
                if tone != 0:
                    m = re.search("[aoeiuv\u00fc]+", t)
                    if m is None:
                        t += c
                    elif len(m.group(0)) == 1:
                        t = t[:m.start(0)] + PinyinToneMark[tone][PinyinToneMark[0].index(m.group(0))] + t[m.end(0):]
                    else:
                        if 'a' in t:
                            t = t.replace("a", PinyinToneMark[tone][0])
                        elif 'o' in t:
                            t = t.replace("o", PinyinToneMark[tone][1])
                        elif 'e' in t:
                            t = t.replace("e", PinyinToneMark[tone][2])
                        elif t.endswith("ui"):
                            t = t.replace("i", PinyinToneMark[tone][3])
                        elif t.endswith("iu"):
                            t = t.replace("u", PinyinToneMark[tone][4])
                        else:
                            t += "!"
            r += t
            t = ""
    r += t
    return r

This handles ü, u:, and v, all of which I've encountered. Minor modifications will be needed for Python 2 compatibility.


Updated code: Careful that @Lakedaemon's Kotlin code doesn't contemplate the tone placement rules.

  • A and e trump all other vowels and always take the tone mark. There are no Mandarin syllables in Hanyu Pinyin that contain both a and e.
  • In the combination ou, o takes the mark.
  • In all other cases, the final vowel takes the mark.

I originally ported @Lakedaemon's Kotlin code to Java, now I modified it and urge people who used this or @Lakedaemon's Kotlin code to update it.

I added an extra auxiliary function to get the correct tone mark postion.


    private static int getTonePosition(String r) {
        String lowerCase = r.toLowerCase();

        // exception to the rule
        if (lowerCase.equals("ou")) return 0;

        // higher precedence, both never go together
        int preferencePosition = lowerCase.indexOf('a');
        if (preferencePosition >= 0) return preferencePosition;
        preferencePosition = lowerCase.indexOf('e');
        if (preferencePosition >= 0) return preferencePosition;

        // otherwise the last one takes the tone mark
        return lowerCase.length() - 1;
    }

    static public String getCharacter(String string, int position) {
        char[] characters = string.toCharArray();
        return String.valueOf(characters[position]);
    }

    static public String toPinyin(String asciiPinyin) {
        Map<String, String> pinyinToneMarks = new HashMap<>();
        pinyinToneMarks.put("a", "āáǎà"); pinyinToneMarks.put("e", "ēéěè");
        pinyinToneMarks.put("i", "īíǐì"); pinyinToneMarks.put("o",  "ōóǒò");
        pinyinToneMarks.put("u", "ūúǔù"); pinyinToneMarks.put("ü", "ǖǘǚǜ");
        pinyinToneMarks.put("A",  "ĀÁǍÀ"); pinyinToneMarks.put("E", "ĒÉĚÈ");
        pinyinToneMarks.put("I", "ĪÍǏÌ"); pinyinToneMarks.put("O", "ŌÓǑÒ");
        pinyinToneMarks.put("U", "ŪÚǓÙ"); pinyinToneMarks.put("Ü",  "ǕǗǙǛ");

        Pattern pattern = Pattern.compile("([aeiouüvÜ]{1,3})(n?g?r?)([012345])");
        Matcher matcher = pattern.matcher(asciiPinyin);
        StringBuilder s = new StringBuilder();
        int start = 0;

        while (matcher.find(start)) {
            s.append(asciiPinyin, start, matcher.start(1));
            int tone = Integer.parseInt(matcher.group(3)) % 5;
            String r = matcher.group(1).replace("v", "ü").replace("V", "Ü");
            if (tone != 0) {
                int pos = getTonePosition(r);
                s.append(r, 0, pos).append(getCharacter(pinyinToneMarks.get(getCharacter(r, pos)),tone - 1)).append(r, pos + 1, r.length());
            } else {
                s.append(r);
            }
            s.append(matcher.group(2));
            start = matcher.end(3);
        }
        if (start != asciiPinyin.length()) {
            s.append(asciiPinyin, start, asciiPinyin.length());
        }
        return s.toString();
    }


I wrote another Python function that does this, which is case insensitive and preserves spaces, punctuation and other text (unless there are false positives, of course):

# -*- coding: utf-8 -*-
import re

pinyinToneMarks = {
    u'a': u'āáǎà', u'e': u'ēéěè', u'i': u'īíǐì',
    u'o': u'ōóǒò', u'u': u'ūúǔù', u'ü': u'ǖǘǚǜ',
    u'A': u'ĀÁǍÀ', u'E': u'ĒÉĚÈ', u'I': u'ĪÍǏÌ',
    u'O': u'ŌÓǑÒ', u'U': u'ŪÚǓÙ', u'Ü': u'ǕǗǙǛ'
}

def convertPinyinCallback(m):
    tone=int(m.group(3))%5
    r=m.group(1).replace(u'v', u'ü').replace(u'V', u'Ü')
    # for multple vowels, use first one if it is a/e/o, otherwise use second one
    pos=0
    if len(r)>1 and not r[0] in 'aeoAEO':
        pos=1
    if tone != 0:
        r=r[0:pos]+pinyinToneMarks[r[pos]][tone-1]+r[pos+1:]
    return r+m.group(2)

def convertPinyin(s):
    return re.sub(ur'([aeiouüvÜ]{1,3})(n?g?r?)([012345])', convertPinyinCallback, s, flags=re.IGNORECASE)

print convertPinyin(u'Ni3 hao3 ma0?')

The cjklib library does cover your needs:

Either use the Python shell:

>>> from cjklib.reading import ReadingFactory
>>> f = ReadingFactory()
>>> print f.convert('Bei3jing1', 'Pinyin', 'Pinyin', sourceOptions={'toneMarkType': 'numbers'})
Běijīng

Or just the command line:

$ cjknife -m Bei3jing1
Běijīng

Disclaimer: I developed that library.

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Python

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