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1 | ///////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////// | |
2 | // Name: strconv.h | |
3 | // Purpose: interface of wxMBConvUTF7 | |
4 | // Author: wxWidgets team | |
5 | // RCS-ID: $Id$ | |
6 | // Licence: wxWindows licence | |
7 | ///////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////// | |
8 | ||
9 | /** | |
10 | @class wxMBConv | |
11 | ||
12 | This class is the base class of a hierarchy of classes capable of | |
13 | converting text strings between multibyte (SBCS or DBCS) encodings and | |
14 | Unicode. | |
15 | ||
16 | This is an abstract base class which defines the operations implemented by | |
17 | all different conversion classes. The derived classes don't add any new | |
18 | operations of their own (except, possibly, some non-default constructors) | |
19 | and so you should simply use this class ToWChar() and FromWChar() (or | |
20 | cMB2WC() and cWC2MB()) methods with the objects of the derived class. | |
21 | ||
22 | In the documentation for this and related classes please notice that | |
23 | length of the string refers to the number of characters in the string | |
24 | not counting the terminating @c NUL, if any. While the size of the string | |
25 | is the total number of bytes in the string, including any trailing @c NUL. | |
26 | Thus, length of wide character string @c L"foo" is 3 while its size can | |
27 | be either 8 or 16 depending on whether @c wchar_t is 2 bytes (as | |
28 | under Windows) or 4 (Unix). | |
29 | ||
30 | @library{wxbase} | |
31 | @category{conv} | |
32 | ||
33 | @see wxCSConv, wxEncodingConverter, @ref overview_mbconv | |
34 | */ | |
35 | class wxMBConv | |
36 | { | |
37 | public: | |
38 | /** | |
39 | Trivial default constructor. | |
40 | */ | |
41 | wxMBConv(); | |
42 | ||
43 | /** | |
44 | This pure virtual function is overridden in each of the derived classes | |
45 | to return a new copy of the object it is called on. | |
46 | ||
47 | It is used for copying the conversion objects while preserving their | |
48 | dynamic type. | |
49 | */ | |
50 | virtual wxMBConv* Clone() const = 0; | |
51 | ||
52 | /** | |
53 | This function returns 1 for most of the multibyte encodings in which the | |
54 | string is terminated by a single @c NUL, 2 for UTF-16 and 4 for UTF-32 for | |
55 | which the string is terminated with 2 and 4 @c NUL characters respectively. | |
56 | The other cases are not currently supported and @c wxCONV_FAILED | |
57 | (defined as -1) is returned for them. | |
58 | */ | |
59 | virtual size_t GetMBNulLen() const; | |
60 | ||
61 | /** | |
62 | Returns the maximal value which can be returned by GetMBNulLen() for | |
63 | any conversion object. | |
64 | ||
65 | Currently this value is 4. | |
66 | ||
67 | This method can be used to allocate the buffer with enough space for the | |
68 | trailing @c NUL characters for any encoding. | |
69 | */ | |
70 | static size_t GetMaxMBNulLen(); | |
71 | ||
72 | /** | |
73 | Convert multibyte string to a wide character one. | |
74 | ||
75 | This is the most general function for converting a multibyte string to | |
76 | a wide string, cMB2WC() may be often more convenient, however this | |
77 | function is the most efficient one as it allows to avoid any | |
78 | unnecessary copying. | |
79 | ||
80 | The main case is when @a dst is not @NULL and @a srcLen is not | |
81 | @c wxNO_LEN (which is defined as @c (size_t)-1): then the function | |
82 | converts exactly @a srcLen bytes starting at @a src into wide string | |
83 | which it output to @e dst. If the length of the resulting wide | |
84 | string is greater than @e dstLen, an error is returned. Note that if | |
85 | @a srcLen bytes don't include @c NUL characters, the resulting wide | |
86 | string is not @c NUL-terminated neither. | |
87 | ||
88 | If @a srcLen is @c wxNO_LEN, the function supposes that the string is | |
89 | properly (i.e. as necessary for the encoding handled by this | |
90 | conversion) @c NUL-terminated and converts the entire string, including | |
91 | any trailing @c NUL bytes. In this case the wide string is also @c | |
92 | NUL-terminated. | |
93 | ||
94 | Finally, if @a dst is @NULL, the function returns the length of the | |
95 | needed buffer. | |
96 | ||
97 | Example of use of this function: | |
98 | @code | |
99 | size_t dstLen = conv.ToWChar(NULL, 0, src); | |
100 | if ( dstLen == wxCONV_FAILED ) | |
101 | ... handle error ... | |
102 | wchar_t *dst = new wchar_t[dstLen]; | |
103 | if ( conv.ToWChar(dst, dstLen, src) == wxCONV_FAILED ) | |
104 | ... handle error ... | |
105 | @endcode | |
106 | ||
107 | Notice that when passing the explicit source length the output will | |
108 | @e not be @c NUL terminated if you pass @c strlen(str) as parameter. | |
109 | Either leave @a srcLen as default @c wxNO_LEN or add one to @c strlen | |
110 | result if you want the output to be @c NUL terminated. | |
111 | ||
112 | @param dst | |
113 | Pointer to output buffer of the size of at least @a dstLen or @NULL. | |
114 | @param dstLen | |
115 | Maximal number of characters to be written to the output buffer if | |
116 | @a dst is non-@NULL, unused otherwise. | |
117 | @param src | |
118 | Point to the source string, must not be @NULL. | |
119 | @param srcLen | |
120 | The number of characters of the source string to convert or | |
121 | @c wxNO_LEN (default parameter) to convert everything up to and | |
122 | including the terminating @c NUL character(s). | |
123 | ||
124 | @return | |
125 | The number of character written (or which would have been written | |
126 | if it were non-@NULL) to @a dst or @c wxCONV_FAILED on error. | |
127 | */ | |
128 | virtual size_t ToWChar(wchar_t* dst, size_t dstLen, const char* src, | |
129 | size_t srcLen = wxNO_LEN) const; | |
130 | ||
131 | /** | |
132 | Converts wide character string to multibyte. | |
133 | ||
134 | This function has the same semantics as ToWChar() except that it | |
135 | converts a wide string to multibyte one. As with ToWChar(), it may be | |
136 | more convenient to use cWC2MB() when working with @c NUL terminated | |
137 | strings. | |
138 | ||
139 | @param dst | |
140 | Pointer to output buffer of the size of at least @a dstLen or @NULL. | |
141 | @param dstLen | |
142 | Maximal number of characters to be written to the output buffer if | |
143 | @a dst is non-@NULL, unused otherwise. | |
144 | @param src | |
145 | Point to the source string, must not be @NULL. | |
146 | @param srcLen | |
147 | The number of characters of the source string to convert or | |
148 | @c wxNO_LEN (default parameter) to convert everything up to and | |
149 | including the terminating @c NUL character. | |
150 | ||
151 | @return | |
152 | The number of character written (or which would have been written | |
153 | if it were non-@NULL) to @a dst or @c wxCONV_FAILED on error. | |
154 | */ | |
155 | virtual size_t FromWChar(char* dst, size_t dstLen, const wchar_t* src, | |
156 | size_t srcLen = wxNO_LEN) const; | |
157 | ||
158 | /** | |
159 | Converts from multibyte encoding to Unicode by calling ToWChar() and | |
160 | allocating a temporary wxWCharBuffer to hold the result. | |
161 | ||
162 | This function is a convenient wrapper around ToWChar() as it takes care | |
163 | of allocating the buffer of the necessary size itself. Its parameters | |
164 | have the same meaning as for ToWChar(), in particular @a inLen can be | |
165 | specified explicitly in which case exactly that many characters are | |
166 | converted and @a outLen receives (if non-@NULL) exactly the | |
167 | corresponding number of wide characters, whether the last one of them | |
168 | is @c NUL or not. However if @c inLen is @c wxNO_LEN, then @c outLen | |
169 | doesn't count the trailing @c NUL even if it is always present in this | |
170 | case. | |
171 | ||
172 | Finally notice that if the conversion fails, the returned buffer is | |
173 | invalid and @a outLen is set to 0 (and not @c wxCONV_FAILED for | |
174 | compatibility concerns). | |
175 | */ | |
176 | const wxWCharBuffer cMB2WC(const char* in, | |
177 | size_t inLen, | |
178 | size_t *outLen) const; | |
179 | ||
180 | /** | |
181 | Converts a char buffer to wide char one. | |
182 | ||
183 | This is the most convenient and safest conversion function as you | |
184 | don't have to deal with the buffer lengths directly. Use it if the | |
185 | input buffer is known not to be empty or if you are sure that the | |
186 | conversion is going to succeed -- otherwise, use the overload above to | |
187 | be able to distinguish between empty input and conversion failure. | |
188 | ||
189 | @return | |
190 | The buffer containing the converted text, empty if the input was | |
191 | empty or if the conversion failed. | |
192 | ||
193 | @since 2.9.1 | |
194 | */ | |
195 | const wxWCharBuffer cMB2WC(const wxCharBuffer& buf) const; | |
196 | ||
197 | //@{ | |
198 | /** | |
199 | Converts from multibyte encoding to the current wxChar type (which | |
200 | depends on whether wxUSE_UNICODE is set to 1). | |
201 | ||
202 | If wxChar is char, it returns the parameter unaltered. If wxChar is | |
203 | wchar_t, it returns the result in a wxWCharBuffer. The macro wxMB2WXbuf | |
204 | is defined as the correct return type (without const). | |
205 | */ | |
206 | const char* cMB2WX(const char* psz) const; | |
207 | const wxWCharBuffer cMB2WX(const char* psz) const; | |
208 | //@} | |
209 | ||
210 | /** | |
211 | Converts from Unicode to multibyte encoding by calling FromWChar() and | |
212 | allocating a temporary wxCharBuffer to hold the result. | |
213 | ||
214 | This function is a convenient wrapper around FromWChar() as it takes | |
215 | care of allocating the buffer of necessary size itself. | |
216 | ||
217 | Its parameters have the same meaning as the corresponding parameters of | |
218 | FromWChar(), please see the description of cMB2WC() for more details. | |
219 | */ | |
220 | const wxCharBuffer cWC2MB(const wchar_t* in, | |
221 | size_t inLen, | |
222 | size_t *outLen) const; | |
223 | ||
224 | /** | |
225 | Converts a wide char buffer to char one. | |
226 | ||
227 | This is the most convenient and safest conversion function as you | |
228 | don't have to deal with the buffer lengths directly. Use it if the | |
229 | input buffer is known not to be empty or if you are sure that the | |
230 | conversion is going to succeed -- otherwise, use the overload above to | |
231 | be able to distinguish between empty input and conversion failure. | |
232 | ||
233 | @return | |
234 | The buffer containing the converted text, empty if the input was | |
235 | empty or if the conversion failed. | |
236 | ||
237 | @since 2.9.1 | |
238 | */ | |
239 | const wxCharBuffer cWC2MB(const wxWCharBuffer& buf) const; | |
240 | ||
241 | //@{ | |
242 | /** | |
243 | Converts from Unicode to the current wxChar type. | |
244 | ||
245 | If wxChar is wchar_t, it returns the parameter unaltered. If wxChar is | |
246 | char, it returns the result in a wxCharBuffer. The macro wxWC2WXbuf is | |
247 | defined as the correct return type (without const). | |
248 | */ | |
249 | const wchar_t* cWC2WX(const wchar_t* psz) const; | |
250 | const wxCharBuffer cWC2WX(const wchar_t* psz) const; | |
251 | //@} | |
252 | ||
253 | //@{ | |
254 | /** | |
255 | Converts from the current wxChar type to multibyte encoding. | |
256 | ||
257 | If wxChar is char, it returns the parameter unaltered. If wxChar is | |
258 | wchar_t, it returns the result in a wxCharBuffer. The macro wxWX2MBbuf | |
259 | is defined as the correct return type (without const). | |
260 | */ | |
261 | const char* cWX2MB(const wxChar* psz) const; | |
262 | const wxCharBuffer cWX2MB(const wxChar* psz) const; | |
263 | //@} | |
264 | ||
265 | //@{ | |
266 | /** | |
267 | Converts from the current wxChar type to Unicode. | |
268 | ||
269 | If wxChar is wchar_t, it returns the parameter unaltered. If wxChar is | |
270 | char, it returns the result in a wxWCharBuffer. The macro wxWX2WCbuf is | |
271 | defined as the correct return type (without const). | |
272 | */ | |
273 | const wchar_t* cWX2WC(const wxChar* psz) const; | |
274 | const wxWCharBuffer cWX2WC(const wxChar* psz) const; | |
275 | //@} | |
276 | ||
277 | /** | |
278 | @deprecated This function is deprecated, please use ToWChar() instead. | |
279 | ||
280 | Converts from a string @a in multibyte encoding to Unicode putting up to | |
281 | @a outLen characters into the buffer @e out. | |
282 | ||
283 | If @a out is @NULL, only the length of the string which would result | |
284 | from the conversion is calculated and returned. Note that this is the | |
285 | length and not size, i.e. the returned value does not include the | |
286 | trailing @c NUL. But when the function is called with a non-@NULL @a | |
287 | out buffer, the @a outLen parameter should be one more to allow to | |
288 | properly @c NUL-terminate the string. | |
289 | ||
290 | So to properly use this function you need to write: | |
291 | @code | |
292 | size_t lenConv = conv.MB2WC(NULL, in, 0); | |
293 | if ( lenConv == wxCONV_FAILED ) | |
294 | ... handle error ... | |
295 | // allocate 1 more character for the trailing NUL and also pass | |
296 | // the size of the buffer to the function now | |
297 | wchar_t *out = new wchar_t[lenConv + 1]; | |
298 | if ( conv.MB2WC(out, in, lenConv + 1) == wxCONV_FAILED ) | |
299 | ... handle error ... | |
300 | @endcode | |
301 | For this and other reasons, ToWChar() is strongly recommended as a | |
302 | replacement. | |
303 | ||
304 | @param out | |
305 | The output buffer, may be @NULL if the caller is only | |
306 | interested in the length of the resulting string | |
307 | @param in | |
308 | The NUL-terminated input string, cannot be @NULL | |
309 | @param outLen | |
310 | The length of the output buffer but including | |
311 | NUL, ignored if out is @NULL | |
312 | ||
313 | @return The length of the converted string excluding the trailing NUL. | |
314 | */ | |
315 | virtual size_t MB2WC(wchar_t* out, const char* in, size_t outLen) const; | |
316 | ||
317 | /** | |
318 | @deprecated This function is deprecated, please use FromWChar() instead. | |
319 | ||
320 | Converts from Unicode to multibyte encoding. | |
321 | The semantics of this function (including the return value meaning) is | |
322 | the same as for wxMBConv::MB2WC. Notice that when the function is | |
323 | called with a non-@NULL buffer, the @a n parameter should be the size | |
324 | of the buffer and so it should take into account the trailing @c NUL, | |
325 | which might take two or four bytes for some encodings (UTF-16 and | |
326 | UTF-32) and not one, i.e. GetMBNulLen(). | |
327 | */ | |
328 | virtual size_t WC2MB(char* buf, const wchar_t* psz, size_t n) const; | |
329 | }; | |
330 | ||
331 | ||
332 | /** | |
333 | @class wxMBConvUTF7 | |
334 | ||
335 | This class converts between the UTF-7 encoding and Unicode. | |
336 | It has one predefined instance, @b wxConvUTF7. | |
337 | ||
338 | Notice that, unlike all the other conversion objects, this converter is | |
339 | stateful, i.e. it remembers its state from the last call to its ToWChar() | |
340 | or FromWChar() and assumes it is called on the continuation of the same | |
341 | string when the same method is called again. This assumption is only made | |
342 | if an explicit length is specified as parameter to these functions as if an | |
343 | entire @c NUL terminated string is processed the state doesn't need to be | |
344 | remembered. | |
345 | ||
346 | This also means that, unlike the other predefined conversion objects, | |
347 | @b wxConvUTF7 is @em not thread-safe. | |
348 | ||
349 | @library{wxbase} | |
350 | @category{conv} | |
351 | ||
352 | @see wxMBConvUTF8, @ref overview_mbconv | |
353 | */ | |
354 | class wxMBConvUTF7 : public wxMBConv | |
355 | { | |
356 | }; | |
357 | ||
358 | ||
359 | ||
360 | /** | |
361 | @class wxMBConvUTF8 | |
362 | ||
363 | This class converts between the UTF-8 encoding and Unicode. | |
364 | It has one predefined instance, @b wxConvUTF8. | |
365 | ||
366 | @library{wxbase} | |
367 | @category{conv} | |
368 | ||
369 | @see wxMBConvUTF7, @ref overview_mbconv | |
370 | */ | |
371 | class wxMBConvUTF8 : public wxMBConv | |
372 | { | |
373 | }; | |
374 | ||
375 | ||
376 | ||
377 | /** | |
378 | @class wxMBConvUTF16 | |
379 | ||
380 | This class is used to convert between multibyte encodings and UTF-16 Unicode | |
381 | encoding (also known as UCS-2). | |
382 | ||
383 | Unlike UTF-8 encoding, UTF-16 uses words and not bytes and hence depends | |
384 | on the byte ordering: big or little endian. Hence this class is provided in | |
385 | two versions: wxMBConvUTF16LE and wxMBConvUTF16BE and wxMBConvUTF16 itself | |
386 | is just a typedef for one of them (native for the given platform, e.g. LE | |
387 | under Windows and BE under Mac). | |
388 | ||
389 | @library{wxbase} | |
390 | @category{conv} | |
391 | ||
392 | @see wxMBConvUTF8, wxMBConvUTF32, @ref overview_mbconv | |
393 | */ | |
394 | class wxMBConvUTF16 : public wxMBConv | |
395 | { | |
396 | }; | |
397 | ||
398 | ||
399 | /** | |
400 | @class wxMBConvUTF32 | |
401 | ||
402 | This class is used to convert between multibyte encodings and UTF-32 | |
403 | Unicode encoding (also known as UCS-4). | |
404 | Unlike UTF-8 encoding, UTF-32 uses (double) words and not bytes and hence | |
405 | depends on the byte ordering: big or little endian. Hence this class is | |
406 | provided in two versions: wxMBConvUTF32LE and wxMBConvUTF32BE and | |
407 | wxMBConvUTF32 itself is just a typedef for one of them (native for the | |
408 | given platform, e.g. LE under Windows and BE under Mac). | |
409 | ||
410 | @library{wxbase} | |
411 | @category{conv} | |
412 | ||
413 | @see wxMBConvUTF8, wxMBConvUTF16, @ref overview_mbconv | |
414 | */ | |
415 | class wxMBConvUTF32 : public wxMBConv | |
416 | { | |
417 | }; | |
418 | ||
419 | ||
420 | ||
421 | ||
422 | /** | |
423 | @class wxCSConv | |
424 | ||
425 | This class converts between any character set supported by the system and | |
426 | Unicode. | |
427 | ||
428 | Please notice that this class uses system-provided conversion functions, | |
429 | e.g. @c MultiByteToWideChar() and @c WideCharToMultiByte() under MSW and @c | |
430 | iconv(3) under Unix systems and as such may support different encodings and | |
431 | different encoding names on different platforms (although all relatively | |
432 | common encodings are supported should be supported everywhere). | |
433 | ||
434 | It has one predefined instance, @b wxConvLocal, for the default user | |
435 | character set. | |
436 | ||
437 | @library{wxbase} | |
438 | @category{conv} | |
439 | ||
440 | @see wxMBConv, wxEncodingConverter, @ref overview_mbconv | |
441 | */ | |
442 | class wxCSConv : public wxMBConv | |
443 | { | |
444 | public: | |
445 | /** | |
446 | Constructor. | |
447 | ||
448 | You can specify the name of the character set you want to convert | |
449 | from/to. If the character set name is not recognized, ISO 8859-1 is | |
450 | used as fall back, use IsOk() to test for this. | |
451 | ||
452 | @param charset The name of the encoding, shouldn't be empty. | |
453 | */ | |
454 | wxCSConv(const wxString& charset); | |
455 | ||
456 | /** | |
457 | Constructor. | |
458 | ||
459 | You can specify an encoding constant for the character set you want to | |
460 | convert from/to. Use IsOk() after construction to check whether the | |
461 | encoding is supported by the current system. | |
462 | ||
463 | @param encoding Any valid (i.e. not wxFONTENCODING_MAX) font encoding. | |
464 | */ | |
465 | wxCSConv(wxFontEncoding encoding); | |
466 | ||
467 | /** | |
468 | Returns @true if the charset (or the encoding) given at constructor is | |
469 | really available to use. | |
470 | ||
471 | Returns @false if ISO 8859-1 will be used instead. | |
472 | ||
473 | Note this does not mean that a given string will be correctly | |
474 | converted. A malformed string may still make conversion functions | |
475 | return @c wxCONV_FAILED. | |
476 | ||
477 | @since 2.8.2 | |
478 | */ | |
479 | bool IsOk() const; | |
480 | }; | |
481 | ||
482 | ||
483 | ||
484 | /** | |
485 | @class wxMBConvFile | |
486 | ||
487 | This class used to define the class instance @b wxConvFileName, but | |
488 | nowadays @b wxConvFileName is either of type wxConvLibc (on most platforms) | |
489 | or wxConvUTF8 (on MacOS X). | |
490 | ||
491 | @b wxConvFileName converts filenames between filesystem multibyte encoding | |
492 | and Unicode. @b wxConvFileName can also be set to a something else at | |
493 | run-time which is used e.g. by wxGTK to use a class which checks the | |
494 | environment variable @b G_FILESYSTEM_ENCODING indicating that filenames | |
495 | should not be interpreted as UTF8 and also for converting invalid UTF8 | |
496 | characters (e.g. if there is a filename in iso8859_1) to strings with octal | |
497 | values. | |
498 | ||
499 | Since some platforms (such as Win32) use Unicode in the filenames, | |
500 | and others (such as Unix) use multibyte encodings, this class should only | |
501 | be used directly if wxMBFILES is defined to 1. A convenience macro, | |
502 | @c wxFNCONV, is defined to @c wxConvFileName->cWX2MB in this case. You | |
503 | could use it like this: | |
504 | ||
505 | @code | |
506 | wxChar *name = "rawfile.doc"; | |
507 | FILE *fil = fopen(wxFNCONV(name), "r"); | |
508 | @endcode | |
509 | ||
510 | (although it would be better to just use wxFopen(name, "r") in this | |
511 | particular case, you only need to use this class for functions taking file | |
512 | names not wrapped by wxWidgets.) | |
513 | ||
514 | @library{wxbase} | |
515 | @category{conv} | |
516 | ||
517 | @see @ref overview_mbconv | |
518 | */ | |
519 | class wxMBConvFile : public wxMBConv | |
520 | { | |
521 | public: | |
522 | }; |