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1 | ///////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////// | |
2 | // Name: string.h | |
3 | // Purpose: interface of wxStringBuffer, wxString | |
4 | // Author: wxWidgets team | |
5 | // RCS-ID: $Id$ | |
6 | // Licence: wxWindows license | |
7 | ///////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////// | |
8 | ||
9 | /** | |
10 | @class wxStringBuffer | |
11 | ||
12 | This tiny class allows you to conveniently access the wxString internal buffer | |
13 | as a writable pointer without any risk of forgetting to restore the string | |
14 | to the usable state later. | |
15 | ||
16 | For example, assuming you have a low-level OS function called | |
17 | @c "GetMeaningOfLifeAsString(char *)" returning the value in the provided | |
18 | buffer (which must be writable, of course) you might call it like this: | |
19 | ||
20 | @code | |
21 | wxString theAnswer; | |
22 | GetMeaningOfLifeAsString(wxStringBuffer(theAnswer, 1024)); | |
23 | if ( theAnswer != "42" ) | |
24 | wxLogError("Something is very wrong!"); | |
25 | @endcode | |
26 | ||
27 | Note that the exact usage of this depends on whether or not wxUSE_STL is | |
28 | enabled. If wxUSE_STL is enabled, wxStringBuffer creates a separate empty | |
29 | character buffer, and if wxUSE_STL is disabled, it uses GetWriteBuf() from | |
30 | wxString, keeping the same buffer wxString uses intact. In other words, | |
31 | relying on wxStringBuffer containing the old wxString data is not a good | |
32 | idea if you want to build your program both with and without wxUSE_STL. | |
33 | ||
34 | @library{wxbase} | |
35 | @category{data} | |
36 | */ | |
37 | class wxStringBuffer | |
38 | { | |
39 | public: | |
40 | /** | |
41 | Constructs a writable string buffer object associated with the given string | |
42 | and containing enough space for at least @a len characters. | |
43 | Basically, this is equivalent to calling wxString::GetWriteBuf() and | |
44 | saving the result. | |
45 | */ | |
46 | wxStringBuffer(const wxString& str, size_t len); | |
47 | ||
48 | /** | |
49 | Restores the string passed to the constructor to the usable state by calling | |
50 | wxString::UngetWriteBuf() on it. | |
51 | */ | |
52 | ~wxStringBuffer(); | |
53 | ||
54 | /** | |
55 | Returns the writable pointer to a buffer of the size at least equal to the | |
56 | length specified in the constructor. | |
57 | */ | |
58 | wxStringCharType* operator wxStringCharType *(); | |
59 | }; | |
60 | ||
61 | ||
62 | ||
63 | /** | |
64 | @class wxString | |
65 | ||
66 | The wxString class has been completely rewritten for wxWidgets 3.0 | |
67 | and this change was actually the main reason for the calling that | |
68 | version wxWidgets 3.0. | |
69 | ||
70 | wxString is a class representing a Unicode character string. | |
71 | wxString uses @c std::string internally to store its content | |
72 | unless this is not supported by the compiler or disabled | |
73 | specifically when building wxWidgets and it therefore inherits | |
74 | many features from @c std::string. Most implementations of | |
75 | @c std::string are thread-safe and don't use reference counting. | |
76 | By default, wxString uses @c std::string internally even if | |
77 | wxUSE_STL is not defined. | |
78 | ||
79 | wxString now internally uses UTF-16 under Windows and UTF-8 under | |
80 | Unix, Linux and OS X to store its content. Note that when iterating | |
81 | over a UTF-16 string under Windows, the user code has to take care | |
82 | of surrogate pair handling whereas Windows itself has built-in | |
83 | support pairs in UTF-16, such as for drawing strings on screen. | |
84 | ||
85 | Much work has been done to make existing code using ANSI string literals | |
86 | work as before. If you nonetheless need to have a wxString that uses wchar_t | |
87 | on Unix and Linux, too, you can specify this on the command line with the | |
88 | @c configure @c --disable-utf8 switch or you can consider using wxUString | |
89 | or std::wstring instead. | |
90 | ||
91 | Accessing a UTF-8 string by index can be very inefficient because | |
92 | a single character is represented by a variable number of bytes so that | |
93 | the entire string has to be parsed in order to find the character. | |
94 | Since iterating over a string by index is a common programming technique and | |
95 | was also possible and encouraged by wxString using the access operator[]() | |
96 | wxString implements caching of the last used index so that iterating over | |
97 | a string is a linear operation even in UTF-8 mode. | |
98 | ||
99 | It is nonetheless recommended to use iterators (instead of index based | |
100 | access) like this: | |
101 | ||
102 | @code | |
103 | wxString s = "hello"; | |
104 | wxString::const_iterator i; | |
105 | for (i = s.begin(); i != s.end(); ++i) | |
106 | { | |
107 | wxUniChar uni_ch = *i; | |
108 | // do something with it | |
109 | } | |
110 | @endcode | |
111 | ||
112 | Please see the @ref overview_string and the @ref overview_unicode for more | |
113 | information about it. | |
114 | ||
115 | wxString uses the current locale encoding to convert any C string | |
116 | literal to Unicode. The same is done for converting to and from | |
117 | @c std::string and for the return value of c_str(). | |
118 | For this conversion, the @a wxConvLibc class instance is used. | |
119 | See wxCSConv and wxMBConv. | |
120 | ||
121 | wxString implements most of the methods of the @c std::string class. | |
122 | These standard functions are only listed here, but they are not | |
123 | fully documented in this manual. Please see the STL documentation. | |
124 | The behaviour of all these functions is identical to the behaviour | |
125 | described there. | |
126 | ||
127 | You may notice that wxString sometimes has several functions which do | |
128 | the same thing like Length(), Len() and length() which | |
129 | all return the string length. In all cases of such duplication the | |
130 | @c std::string compatible method should be used. | |
131 | ||
132 | ||
133 | @section string_construct Constructors and assignment operators | |
134 | ||
135 | A string may be constructed either from a C string, (some number of copies of) | |
136 | a single character or a wide (Unicode) string. For all constructors (except the | |
137 | default which creates an empty string) there is also a corresponding assignment | |
138 | operator. | |
139 | ||
140 | @li wxString() | |
141 | @li operator=() | |
142 | @li ~wxString() | |
143 | @li assign() | |
144 | ||
145 | ||
146 | @section string_len String length | |
147 | ||
148 | These functions return the string length and check whether the string | |
149 | is empty or they empty it. | |
150 | ||
151 | @li length() | |
152 | @li size() | |
153 | @li Len() | |
154 | @li IsEmpty() | |
155 | @li operator!() | |
156 | @li Empty() | |
157 | @li Clear() | |
158 | ||
159 | ||
160 | @section string_access Character access | |
161 | ||
162 | Many functions below take a character index in the string. As with C | |
163 | strings and arrays, the indices start from 0, so the first character of a | |
164 | string is string[0]. An attempt to access a character beyond the end of the | |
165 | string (which may even be 0 if the string is empty) will provoke an assert | |
166 | failure in @ref overview_debugging "debug builds", but no checks are | |
167 | done in release builds. | |
168 | ||
169 | This section also contains both implicit and explicit conversions to C style | |
170 | strings. Although implicit conversion is quite convenient, you are advised | |
171 | to use wc_str() for the sake of clarity. | |
172 | ||
173 | @li GetChar() | |
174 | @li GetWritableChar() | |
175 | @li SetChar() | |
176 | @li Last() | |
177 | @li operator[]() | |
178 | @li wc_str() | |
179 | @li utf8_str() | |
180 | @li c_str() | |
181 | @li wx_str() | |
182 | @li mb_str() | |
183 | @li fn_str() | |
184 | ||
185 | ||
186 | @section string_concat Concatenation | |
187 | ||
188 | Anything may be concatenated (appended to) with a string. However, you can't | |
189 | append something to a C string (including literal constants), so to do this it | |
190 | should be converted to a wxString first. | |
191 | ||
192 | @li insert() | |
193 | @li append() | |
194 | @li operator<<() | |
195 | @li operator+=() | |
196 | @li operator+() | |
197 | @li Append() | |
198 | @li Prepend() | |
199 | ||
200 | ||
201 | @section string_comp Comparison | |
202 | ||
203 | The default comparison function Cmp() is case-sensitive and so is the default | |
204 | version of IsSameAs(). For case insensitive comparisons you should use CmpNoCase() | |
205 | or give a second parameter to IsSameAs(). This last function is maybe more | |
206 | convenient if only equality of the strings matters because it returns a boolean | |
207 | @true value if the strings are the same and not 0 (which is usually @false | |
208 | in C) as Cmp() does. | |
209 | ||
210 | Matches() is a poor man's regular expression matcher: it only understands | |
211 | '*' and '?' metacharacters in the sense of DOS command line interpreter. | |
212 | ||
213 | StartsWith() is helpful when parsing a line of text which should start | |
214 | with some predefined prefix and is more efficient than doing direct string | |
215 | comparison as you would also have to precalculate the length of the prefix. | |
216 | ||
217 | @li compare() | |
218 | @li Cmp() | |
219 | @li CmpNoCase() | |
220 | @li IsSameAs() | |
221 | @li Matches() | |
222 | @li StartsWith() | |
223 | @li EndsWith() | |
224 | ||
225 | ||
226 | @section string_substring Substring extraction | |
227 | ||
228 | These functions allow you to extract a substring from the string. The | |
229 | original string is not modified and the function returns the extracted | |
230 | substring. | |
231 | ||
232 | @li substr() | |
233 | @li Mid() | |
234 | @li operator()() | |
235 | @li Left() | |
236 | @li Right() | |
237 | @li BeforeFirst() | |
238 | @li BeforeLast() | |
239 | @li AfterFirst() | |
240 | @li AfterLast() | |
241 | @li StartsWith() | |
242 | @li EndsWith() | |
243 | ||
244 | ||
245 | @section string_case Case conversion | |
246 | ||
247 | The MakeXXX() variants modify the string in place, while the other functions | |
248 | return a new string which contains the original text converted to the upper or | |
249 | lower case and leave the original string unchanged. | |
250 | ||
251 | @li MakeUpper() | |
252 | @li Upper() | |
253 | @li MakeLower() | |
254 | @li Lower() | |
255 | @li MakeCapitalized() | |
256 | @li Capitalize() | |
257 | ||
258 | ||
259 | @section string_search Searching and replacing | |
260 | ||
261 | These functions replace the standard @e strchr() and @e strstr() | |
262 | functions. | |
263 | ||
264 | @li find() | |
265 | @li rfind() | |
266 | @li replace() | |
267 | @li Find() | |
268 | @li Replace() | |
269 | ||
270 | ||
271 | @section string_conv Conversion to numbers | |
272 | ||
273 | The string provides functions for conversion to signed and unsigned integer and | |
274 | floating point numbers. All functions take a pointer to the variable to | |
275 | put the numeric value in and return @true if the @b entire string could be | |
276 | converted to a number. | |
277 | ||
278 | @li ToLong() | |
279 | @li ToLongLong() | |
280 | @li ToULong() | |
281 | @li ToULongLong() | |
282 | @li ToDouble() | |
283 | ||
284 | ||
285 | @section string_fmt Writing values into the string | |
286 | ||
287 | Both formatted versions (Printf/() and stream-like insertion operators | |
288 | exist (for basic types only). Additionally, the Format() function allows | |
289 | you to simply append a formatted value to a string: | |
290 | ||
291 | @li Format() | |
292 | @li FormatV() | |
293 | @li Printf() | |
294 | @li PrintfV() | |
295 | @li operator>>() | |
296 | ||
297 | ||
298 | @section string_mem Memory management | |
299 | ||
300 | The following are "advanced" functions and they will be needed rarely. | |
301 | Alloc() and Shrink() are only interesting for optimization purposes. | |
302 | wxStringBuffer and wxStringBufferLength classes may be very useful | |
303 | when working with some external API which requires the caller to provide | |
304 | a writable buffer. | |
305 | ||
306 | @li reserve() | |
307 | @li resize() | |
308 | @li Alloc() | |
309 | @li Shrink() | |
310 | @li wxStringBuffer | |
311 | @li wxStringBufferLength | |
312 | ||
313 | ||
314 | @section string_misc Miscellaneous | |
315 | ||
316 | Miscellaneous other string functions. | |
317 | ||
318 | @li Trim() | |
319 | @li Truncate() | |
320 | @li Pad() | |
321 | ||
322 | ||
323 | @section string_compat wxWidgets 1.xx compatibility functions | |
324 | ||
325 | The following functions are deprecated. | |
326 | Please consider using @c std::string compatible variants. | |
327 | ||
328 | Contains(), First(), Freq(), IsAscii(), IsNull(), IsNumber(), IsWord(), | |
329 | Last(), Length(), LowerCase(), Remove(), Strip(), SubString(), UpperCase() | |
330 | ||
331 | ||
332 | @library{wxbase} | |
333 | @category{data} | |
334 | ||
335 | @stdobjects | |
336 | ::wxEmptyString | |
337 | ||
338 | @see @ref overview_string, @ref overview_unicode, wxUString | |
339 | */ | |
340 | class wxString | |
341 | { | |
342 | public: | |
343 | /** | |
344 | An 'invalid' value for string index | |
345 | */ | |
346 | static const size_t npos; | |
347 | ||
348 | /** | |
349 | @name Standard types | |
350 | */ | |
351 | //@{ | |
352 | typedef wxUniChar value_type; | |
353 | typedef wxUniChar char_type; | |
354 | typedef wxUniCharRef reference; | |
355 | typedef wxChar* pointer; | |
356 | typedef const wxChar* const_pointer; | |
357 | typedef size_t size_type; | |
358 | typedef wxUniChar const_reference; | |
359 | //@} | |
360 | ||
361 | /** | |
362 | Default constructor | |
363 | */ | |
364 | wxString(); | |
365 | ||
366 | /** | |
367 | Creates a string from another string. | |
368 | Just increases the ref count by 1. | |
369 | */ | |
370 | wxString(const wxString& stringSrc); | |
371 | ||
372 | ||
373 | /** | |
374 | Constructs a string from the string literal @e psz using | |
375 | the current locale encoding to convert it to Unicode (wxConvLibc). | |
376 | */ | |
377 | wxString(const char *psz); | |
378 | ||
379 | /** | |
380 | Constructs a string from the string literal @e psz using | |
381 | @e conv to convert it Unicode. | |
382 | */ | |
383 | wxString(const char *psz, const wxMBConv& conv); | |
384 | ||
385 | /** | |
386 | Constructs a string from the first @e nLength character of the string literal @e psz using | |
387 | the current locale encoding to convert it to Unicode (wxConvLibc). | |
388 | */ | |
389 | wxString(const char *psz, size_t nLength); | |
390 | ||
391 | /** | |
392 | Constructs a string from the first @e nLength character of the string literal @e psz using | |
393 | @e conv to convert it Unicode. | |
394 | */ | |
395 | wxString(const char *psz, const wxMBConv& conv, size_t nLength); | |
396 | ||
397 | /** | |
398 | Constructs a string from the string literal @e pwz. | |
399 | */ | |
400 | wxString(const wchar_t *pwz); | |
401 | ||
402 | /** | |
403 | Constructs a string from the first @e nLength characters of the string literal @e pwz. | |
404 | */ | |
405 | wxString(const wchar_t *pwz, size_t nLength); | |
406 | ||
407 | /** | |
408 | Constructs a string from @e buf using the using the current locale | |
409 | encoding to convert it to Unicode. | |
410 | */ | |
411 | wxString(const wxCharBuffer& buf); | |
412 | ||
413 | /** | |
414 | Constructs a string from @e buf. | |
415 | */ | |
416 | wxString(const wxWCharBuffer& buf); | |
417 | ||
418 | /** | |
419 | Constructs a string from @e str using the using the current locale encoding | |
420 | to convert it to Unicode (wxConvLibc). | |
421 | */ | |
422 | wxString(const std::string& str); | |
423 | ||
424 | /** | |
425 | Constructs a string from @e str. | |
426 | */ | |
427 | wxString(const std::wstring& str); | |
428 | ||
429 | ||
430 | /** | |
431 | String destructor. | |
432 | ||
433 | Note that this is not virtual, so wxString must not be inherited from. | |
434 | */ | |
435 | ~wxString(); | |
436 | ||
437 | /** | |
438 | Gets all the characters after the first occurrence of @e ch. | |
439 | Returns the empty string if @e ch is not found. | |
440 | */ | |
441 | wxString AfterFirst(wxUniChar ch) const; | |
442 | ||
443 | /** | |
444 | Gets all the characters after the last occurrence of @e ch. | |
445 | Returns the whole string if @e ch is not found. | |
446 | */ | |
447 | wxString AfterLast(wxUniChar ch) const; | |
448 | ||
449 | /** | |
450 | Preallocate enough space for wxString to store @a nLen characters. | |
451 | ||
452 | Please note that this method does the same thing as the standard | |
453 | reserve() one and shouldn't be used in new code. | |
454 | ||
455 | This function may be used to increase speed when the string is | |
456 | constructed by repeated concatenation as in | |
457 | ||
458 | @code | |
459 | // delete all vowels from the string | |
460 | wxString DeleteAllVowels(const wxString& original) | |
461 | { | |
462 | wxString result; | |
463 | ||
464 | size_t len = original.length(); | |
465 | ||
466 | result.Alloc(len); | |
467 | ||
468 | for ( size_t n = 0; n < len; n++ ) | |
469 | { | |
470 | if ( strchr("aeuio", tolower(original[n])) == NULL ) | |
471 | result += original[n]; | |
472 | } | |
473 | ||
474 | return result; | |
475 | } | |
476 | @endcode | |
477 | ||
478 | because it will avoid the need to reallocate string memory many times | |
479 | (in case of long strings). Note that it does not set the maximal length | |
480 | of a string -- it will still expand if more than @a nLen characters are | |
481 | stored in it. Also, it does not truncate the existing string (use | |
482 | Truncate() for this) even if its current length is greater than @a nLen. | |
483 | ||
484 | @return @true if memory was successfully allocated, @false otherwise. | |
485 | */ | |
486 | bool Alloc(size_t nLen); | |
487 | ||
488 | /** | |
489 | Appends the string literal @e psz. | |
490 | */ | |
491 | wxString& Append(const char* psz); | |
492 | ||
493 | /** | |
494 | Appends the wide string literal @e pwz. | |
495 | */ | |
496 | wxString& Append(const wchar_t* pwz); | |
497 | ||
498 | /** | |
499 | Appends the string literal @e psz with max length @e nLen. | |
500 | */ | |
501 | wxString& Append(const char* psz, size_t nLen); | |
502 | ||
503 | /** | |
504 | Appends the wide string literal @e psz with max length @e nLen. | |
505 | */ | |
506 | wxString& Append(const wchar_t* pwz, size_t nLen); | |
507 | ||
508 | /** | |
509 | Appends the string @e s. | |
510 | */ | |
511 | wxString& Append(const wxString& s); | |
512 | ||
513 | /** | |
514 | Appends the character @e ch @e count times. | |
515 | */ | |
516 | wxString &Append(wxUniChar ch, size_t count = 1u); | |
517 | ||
518 | /** | |
519 | Gets all characters before the first occurrence of @e ch. | |
520 | Returns the whole string if @a ch is not found. | |
521 | */ | |
522 | wxString BeforeFirst(wxUniChar ch) const; | |
523 | ||
524 | /** | |
525 | Gets all characters before the last occurrence of @e ch. | |
526 | Returns the empty string if @a ch is not found. | |
527 | */ | |
528 | wxString BeforeLast(wxUniChar ch) const; | |
529 | ||
530 | /** | |
531 | Return the copy of the string with the first string character in the | |
532 | upper case and the subsequent ones in the lower case. | |
533 | ||
534 | @since 2.9.0 | |
535 | ||
536 | @see MakeCapitalized() | |
537 | */ | |
538 | wxString Capitalize() const; | |
539 | ||
540 | /** | |
541 | Empties the string and frees memory occupied by it. | |
542 | See also: Empty() | |
543 | */ | |
544 | void Clear(); | |
545 | ||
546 | /** | |
547 | Returns a deep copy of the string. | |
548 | ||
549 | That is, the returned string is guaranteed to not share data with this | |
550 | string when using reference-counted wxString implementation. | |
551 | ||
552 | This method is primarily useful for passing strings between threads | |
553 | (because wxString is not thread-safe). Unlike creating a copy using | |
554 | @c wxString(c_str()), Clone() handles embedded NULs correctly. | |
555 | ||
556 | @since 2.9.0 | |
557 | */ | |
558 | wxString Clone() const; | |
559 | ||
560 | /** | |
561 | Case-sensitive comparison. | |
562 | Returns a positive value if the string is greater than the argument, | |
563 | zero if it is equal to it or a negative value if it is less than the | |
564 | argument (same semantics as the standard @c strcmp() function). | |
565 | ||
566 | See also CmpNoCase(), IsSameAs(). | |
567 | */ | |
568 | int Cmp(const wxString& s) const; | |
569 | ||
570 | /** | |
571 | Case-insensitive comparison. | |
572 | Returns a positive value if the string is greater than the argument, | |
573 | zero if it is equal to it or a negative value if it is less than the | |
574 | argument (same semantics as the standard @c strcmp() function). | |
575 | ||
576 | See also Cmp(), IsSameAs(). | |
577 | */ | |
578 | int CmpNoCase(const wxString& s) const; | |
579 | ||
580 | ||
581 | //@{ | |
582 | /** | |
583 | Comparison operators | |
584 | */ | |
585 | bool operator ==(const wxString& x, const wxString& y); | |
586 | bool operator ==(const wxString& x, wxUniChar ch); | |
587 | bool operator !=(const wxString& x, const wxString& y); | |
588 | bool operator !=(const wxString& x, wxUniChar ch); | |
589 | bool operator(const wxString& x, const wxString& y); | |
590 | bool operator(const wxString& x, wxUniChar ch); | |
591 | bool operator =(const wxString& x, const wxString& y); | |
592 | bool operator =(const wxString& x, wxUniChar ch); | |
593 | bool operator(const wxString& x, const wxString& y); | |
594 | bool operator(const wxString& x, wxUniChar ch); | |
595 | bool operator =(const wxString& x, const wxString& y); | |
596 | bool operator =(const wxString& x, wxUniChar ch); | |
597 | //@} | |
598 | ||
599 | ||
600 | /** | |
601 | Returns @true if target appears anywhere in wxString; else @false. | |
602 | This is a wxWidgets 1.xx compatibility function; you should not use it in new | |
603 | code. | |
604 | */ | |
605 | bool Contains(const wxString& str) const; | |
606 | ||
607 | ||
608 | /** | |
609 | Makes the string empty, but doesn't free memory occupied by the string. | |
610 | See also: Clear(). | |
611 | */ | |
612 | void Empty(); | |
613 | ||
614 | /** | |
615 | This function can be used to test if the string ends with the specified | |
616 | @e suffix. If it does, the function will return @true and put the | |
617 | beginning of the string before the suffix into @e rest string if it is not | |
618 | @NULL. Otherwise, the function returns @false and doesn't | |
619 | modify the @e rest. | |
620 | */ | |
621 | bool EndsWith(const wxString& suffix, wxString *rest = NULL) const; | |
622 | ||
623 | /** | |
624 | Searches for the given character @e ch. Returns the position or | |
625 | @c wxNOT_FOUND if not found. | |
626 | */ | |
627 | int Find(wxUniChar ch, bool fromEnd = false) const; | |
628 | ||
629 | /** | |
630 | Searches for the given string @e sub. Returns the starting position or | |
631 | @c wxNOT_FOUND if not found. | |
632 | */ | |
633 | int Find(const wxString& sub) const; | |
634 | ||
635 | //@{ | |
636 | /** | |
637 | Same as Find(). | |
638 | This is a wxWidgets 1.xx compatibility function; | |
639 | you should not use it in new code. | |
640 | */ | |
641 | int First(wxUniChar ch) const; | |
642 | int First(const wxString& str) const; | |
643 | //@} | |
644 | ||
645 | /** | |
646 | This static function returns the string containing the result of calling | |
647 | Printf() with the passed parameters on it. | |
648 | ||
649 | @see FormatV(), Printf() | |
650 | */ | |
651 | static wxString Format(const wxChar format, ...); | |
652 | ||
653 | /** | |
654 | This static function returns the string containing the result of calling | |
655 | PrintfV() with the passed parameters on it. | |
656 | ||
657 | @see Format(), PrintfV() | |
658 | */ | |
659 | static wxString FormatV(const wxChar format, va_list argptr); | |
660 | ||
661 | /** | |
662 | Returns the number of occurrences of @e ch in the string. | |
663 | This is a wxWidgets 1.xx compatibility function; you should not | |
664 | use it in new code. | |
665 | */ | |
666 | int Freq(wxUniChar ch) const; | |
667 | ||
668 | //@{ | |
669 | /** | |
670 | Converts given buffer of binary data from 8-bit string to wxString. In | |
671 | Unicode build, the string is interpreted as being in ISO-8859-1 | |
672 | encoding. The version without @e len parameter takes NUL-terminated | |
673 | data. | |
674 | ||
675 | This is a convenience method useful when storing binary data in | |
676 | wxString. It should be used @em only for that purpose and only in | |
677 | conjunction with To8BitData(). Use mb_str() for conversion of character | |
678 | data to known encoding. | |
679 | ||
680 | @since 2.8.4 | |
681 | ||
682 | @see wxString::To8BitData() | |
683 | */ | |
684 | static wxString From8BitData(const char* buf, size_t len); | |
685 | static wxString From8BitData(const char* buf); | |
686 | //@} | |
687 | ||
688 | //@{ | |
689 | /** | |
690 | Converts the string or character from an ASCII, 7-bit form | |
691 | to the native wxString representation. | |
692 | */ | |
693 | static wxString FromAscii(const char* s); | |
694 | static wxString FromAscii(const unsigned char* s); | |
695 | static wxString FromAscii(const char* s, size_t len); | |
696 | static wxString FromAscii(const unsigned char* s, size_t len); | |
697 | static wxString FromAscii(char c); | |
698 | //@} | |
699 | ||
700 | //@{ | |
701 | /** | |
702 | Converts C string encoded in UTF-8 to wxString. | |
703 | ||
704 | If @a s is not a valid UTF-8 string, an empty string is returned. | |
705 | ||
706 | Notice that when using UTF-8 wxWidgets build there is a more efficient | |
707 | alternative to this function called FromUTF8Unchecked() which, unlike | |
708 | this one, doesn't check that the input string is valid. | |
709 | ||
710 | @since 2.8.4 | |
711 | */ | |
712 | static wxString FromUTF8(const char* s); | |
713 | static wxString FromUTF8(const char* s, size_t len); | |
714 | //@} | |
715 | ||
716 | //@{ | |
717 | /** | |
718 | Converts C string encoded in UTF-8 to wxString without checking its | |
719 | validity. | |
720 | ||
721 | This method assumes that @a s is a valid UTF-8 sequence and doesn't do | |
722 | any validation (although an assert failure is triggered in debug builds | |
723 | if the string is invalid). Only use it if you are absolutely sure that | |
724 | @a s is a correct UTF-8 string (e.g. because it comes from another | |
725 | library using UTF-8) and if the performance matters, otherwise use | |
726 | slower (in UTF-8 build) but safer FromUTF8(). Passing a bad UTF-8 | |
727 | string to this function will result in creating a corrupted wxString | |
728 | and all the subsequent operations on it will be undefined. | |
729 | ||
730 | @since 2.8.9 | |
731 | */ | |
732 | static wxString FromUTF8Unchecked(const char* s); | |
733 | static wxString FromUTF8Unchecked(const char* s, size_t len); | |
734 | //@} | |
735 | ||
736 | /** | |
737 | Returns the character at position @a n (read-only). | |
738 | */ | |
739 | wxUniChar GetChar(size_t n) const; | |
740 | ||
741 | /** | |
742 | wxWidgets compatibility conversion. Same as c_str(). | |
743 | */ | |
744 | const wxCStrData GetData() const; | |
745 | ||
746 | /** | |
747 | Returns a reference to the character at position @e n. | |
748 | */ | |
749 | wxUniCharRef GetWritableChar(size_t n); | |
750 | ||
751 | /** | |
752 | Returns a writable buffer of at least @a len bytes. | |
753 | It returns a pointer to a new memory block, and the | |
754 | existing data will not be copied. | |
755 | Call UngetWriteBuf() as soon as possible to put the | |
756 | string back into a reasonable state. | |
757 | This method is deprecated, please use wxStringBuffer or | |
758 | wxStringBufferLength instead. | |
759 | */ | |
760 | wxStringCharType* GetWriteBuf(size_t len); | |
761 | ||
762 | /** | |
763 | Returns @true if the string contains only ASCII characters. | |
764 | This is a wxWidgets 1.xx compatibility function; you should not use it in new | |
765 | code. | |
766 | */ | |
767 | bool IsAscii() const; | |
768 | ||
769 | /** | |
770 | Returns @true if the string is empty. | |
771 | */ | |
772 | bool IsEmpty() const; | |
773 | ||
774 | /** | |
775 | Returns @true if the string is empty (same as wxString::IsEmpty). | |
776 | This is a wxWidgets 1.xx compatibility function; you should not use it in new | |
777 | code. | |
778 | */ | |
779 | bool IsNull() const; | |
780 | ||
781 | /** | |
782 | Returns @true if the string is an integer (with possible sign). | |
783 | This is a wxWidgets 1.xx compatibility function; you should not use it in new | |
784 | code. | |
785 | */ | |
786 | bool IsNumber() const; | |
787 | ||
788 | //@{ | |
789 | /** | |
790 | Test whether the string is equal to the single character @e c. The test is | |
791 | case-sensitive if @a caseSensitive is @true (default) or not if it is @c | |
792 | @false. | |
793 | Returns @true if the string is equal to the character, @false otherwise. | |
794 | See also Cmp(), CmpNoCase() | |
795 | */ | |
796 | bool IsSameAs(const wxString &s, bool caseSensitive = true) const; | |
797 | bool IsSameAs(wxUniChar ch, bool caseSensitive = true) const; | |
798 | //@} | |
799 | ||
800 | /** | |
801 | Returns @true if the string is a word. | |
802 | This is a wxWidgets 1.xx compatibility function; you should not use it in new | |
803 | code. | |
804 | */ | |
805 | bool IsWord() const; | |
806 | ||
807 | //@{ | |
808 | /** | |
809 | Returns a reference to the last character (writable). | |
810 | This is a wxWidgets 1.xx compatibility function; | |
811 | you should not use it in new code. | |
812 | */ | |
813 | wxUniCharRef Last(); | |
814 | const wxUniChar Last(); | |
815 | //@} | |
816 | ||
817 | /** | |
818 | Returns the first @a count characters of the string. | |
819 | */ | |
820 | wxString Left(size_t count) const; | |
821 | ||
822 | /** | |
823 | Returns the length of the string. | |
824 | */ | |
825 | size_t Len() const; | |
826 | ||
827 | /** | |
828 | Returns the length of the string (same as Len). | |
829 | This is a wxWidgets 1.xx compatibility function; you should not use it in new | |
830 | code. | |
831 | */ | |
832 | size_t Length() const; | |
833 | ||
834 | /** | |
835 | Returns this string converted to the lower case. | |
836 | ||
837 | @see MakeLower() | |
838 | */ | |
839 | wxString Lower() const; | |
840 | ||
841 | /** | |
842 | Same as MakeLower. | |
843 | This is a wxWidgets 1.xx compatibility function; you should not use it in new | |
844 | code. | |
845 | */ | |
846 | void LowerCase(); | |
847 | ||
848 | /** | |
849 | Converts the first characters of the string to the upper case and all | |
850 | the subsequent ones to the lower case and returns the result. | |
851 | ||
852 | @since 2.9.0 | |
853 | ||
854 | @see Capitalize() | |
855 | */ | |
856 | wxString& MakeCapitalized(); | |
857 | ||
858 | /** | |
859 | Converts all characters to lower case and returns the reference to the | |
860 | modified string. | |
861 | ||
862 | @see Lower() | |
863 | */ | |
864 | wxString& MakeLower(); | |
865 | ||
866 | /** | |
867 | Converts all characters to upper case and returns the reference to the | |
868 | modified string. | |
869 | ||
870 | @see Upper() | |
871 | */ | |
872 | wxString& MakeUpper(); | |
873 | ||
874 | /** | |
875 | Returns @true if the string contents matches a mask containing '*' and '?'. | |
876 | */ | |
877 | bool Matches(const wxString& mask) const; | |
878 | ||
879 | /** | |
880 | Returns a substring starting at @e first, with length @e count, or the rest of | |
881 | the string if @a count is the default value. | |
882 | */ | |
883 | wxString Mid(size_t first, size_t nCount = wxString::npos) const; | |
884 | ||
885 | ||
886 | /** | |
887 | Adds @a count copies of @a pad to the beginning, or to the end of the | |
888 | string (the default). Removes spaces from the left or from the right (default). | |
889 | */ | |
890 | wxString& Pad(size_t count, wxUniChar chPad = ' ', bool fromRight = true); | |
891 | ||
892 | /** | |
893 | Prepends @a str to this string, returning a reference to this string. | |
894 | */ | |
895 | wxString& Prepend(const wxString& str); | |
896 | ||
897 | /** | |
898 | Similar to the standard function @e sprintf(). Returns the number of | |
899 | characters written, or an integer less than zero on error. | |
900 | Note that if @c wxUSE_PRINTF_POS_PARAMS is set to 1, then this function supports | |
901 | Unix98-style positional parameters: | |
902 | ||
903 | @note This function will use a safe version of @e vsprintf() (usually called | |
904 | @e vsnprintf()) whenever available to always allocate the buffer of correct | |
905 | size. Unfortunately, this function is not available on all platforms and the | |
906 | dangerous @e vsprintf() will be used then which may lead to buffer overflows. | |
907 | */ | |
908 | int Printf(const wxString& pszFormat, ...); | |
909 | ||
910 | /** | |
911 | Similar to vprintf. Returns the number of characters written, or an integer | |
912 | less than zero | |
913 | on error. | |
914 | */ | |
915 | int PrintfV(const wxString& pszFormat, va_list argPtr); | |
916 | ||
917 | //@{ | |
918 | /** | |
919 | Removes @a len characters from the string, starting at @e pos. | |
920 | This is a wxWidgets 1.xx compatibility function; you should not use it in new | |
921 | code. | |
922 | */ | |
923 | wxString Remove(size_t pos); | |
924 | wxString Remove(size_t pos, size_t len); | |
925 | //@} | |
926 | ||
927 | /** | |
928 | Removes the last character. | |
929 | */ | |
930 | wxString& RemoveLast(size_t n = 1); | |
931 | ||
932 | /** | |
933 | Replace first (or all) occurrences of substring with another one. | |
934 | @e replaceAll: global replace (default), or only the first occurrence. | |
935 | Returns the number of replacements made. | |
936 | */ | |
937 | size_t Replace(const wxString& strOld, const wxString& strNew, | |
938 | bool replaceAll = true); | |
939 | ||
940 | /** | |
941 | Returns the last @a count characters. | |
942 | */ | |
943 | wxString Right(size_t count) const; | |
944 | ||
945 | /** | |
946 | Sets the character at position @e n. | |
947 | */ | |
948 | void SetChar(size_t n, wxUniChar ch); | |
949 | ||
950 | /** | |
951 | Minimizes the string's memory. This can be useful after a call to | |
952 | Alloc() if too much memory were preallocated. | |
953 | */ | |
954 | bool Shrink(); | |
955 | ||
956 | /** | |
957 | This function can be used to test if the string starts with the specified | |
958 | @e prefix. If it does, the function will return @true and put the rest | |
959 | of the string (i.e. after the prefix) into @a rest string if it is not | |
960 | @NULL. Otherwise, the function returns @false and doesn't modify the | |
961 | @e rest. | |
962 | */ | |
963 | bool StartsWith(const wxString& prefix, wxString *rest = NULL) const; | |
964 | ||
965 | /** | |
966 | Strip characters at the front and/or end. The same as Trim except that it | |
967 | doesn't change this string. | |
968 | This is a wxWidgets 1.xx compatibility function; you should not use it in new | |
969 | code. | |
970 | */ | |
971 | wxString Strip(stripType s = trailing) const; | |
972 | ||
973 | /** | |
974 | Returns the part of the string between the indices @a from and @e to | |
975 | inclusive. | |
976 | This is a wxWidgets 1.xx compatibility function, use Mid() | |
977 | instead (but note that parameters have different meaning). | |
978 | */ | |
979 | wxString SubString(size_t from, size_t to) const; | |
980 | ||
981 | //@{ | |
982 | /** | |
983 | Converts the string to an 8-bit string in ISO-8859-1 encoding in the | |
984 | form of a wxCharBuffer (Unicode builds only). | |
985 | ||
986 | This is a convenience method useful when storing binary data in | |
987 | wxString. It should be used @em only for this purpose. It is only valid | |
988 | to call this method on strings created using From8BitData(). | |
989 | ||
990 | @since 2.8.4 | |
991 | ||
992 | @see wxString::From8BitData() | |
993 | */ | |
994 | const char* To8BitData() const; | |
995 | const wxCharBuffer To8BitData() const; | |
996 | //@} | |
997 | ||
998 | //@{ | |
999 | /** | |
1000 | Converts the string to an ASCII, 7-bit string in the form of | |
1001 | a wxCharBuffer (Unicode builds only) or a C string (ANSI builds). | |
1002 | Note that this conversion only works if the string contains only ASCII | |
1003 | characters. The @ref mb_str() "mb_str" method provides more | |
1004 | powerful means of converting wxString to C string. | |
1005 | */ | |
1006 | const char* ToAscii() const; | |
1007 | const wxCharBuffer ToAscii() const; | |
1008 | //@} | |
1009 | ||
1010 | /** | |
1011 | Attempts to convert the string to a floating point number. Returns @true on | |
1012 | success (the number is stored in the location pointed to by @e val) or @false | |
1013 | if the string does not represent such number (the value of @a val is not | |
1014 | modified in this case). | |
1015 | ||
1016 | @see ToLong(), ToULong() | |
1017 | */ | |
1018 | bool ToDouble(double* val) const; | |
1019 | ||
1020 | /** | |
1021 | Attempts to convert the string to a signed integer in base @e base. Returns | |
1022 | @true on success in which case the number is stored in the location | |
1023 | pointed to by @a val or @false if the string does not represent a | |
1024 | valid number in the given base (the value of @a val is not modified | |
1025 | in this case). | |
1026 | The value of @a base must be comprised between 2 and 36, inclusive, or | |
1027 | be a special value 0 which means that the usual rules of @c C numbers are | |
1028 | applied: if the number starts with @c 0x it is considered to be in base | |
1029 | 16, if it starts with @c 0 - in base 8 and in base 10 otherwise. Note | |
1030 | that you may not want to specify the base 0 if you are parsing the numbers | |
1031 | which may have leading zeroes as they can yield unexpected (to the user not | |
1032 | familiar with C) results. | |
1033 | ||
1034 | @see ToDouble(), ToULong() | |
1035 | */ | |
1036 | bool ToLong(long* val, int base = 10) const; | |
1037 | ||
1038 | /** | |
1039 | This is exactly the same as ToLong() but works with 64 | |
1040 | bit integer numbers. | |
1041 | Notice that currently it doesn't work (always returns @false) if parsing of 64 | |
1042 | bit numbers is not supported by the underlying C run-time library. Compilers | |
1043 | with C99 support and Microsoft Visual C++ version 7 and higher do support this. | |
1044 | ||
1045 | @see ToLong(), ToULongLong() | |
1046 | */ | |
1047 | bool ToLongLong(wxLongLong_t* val, int base = 10) const; | |
1048 | ||
1049 | /** | |
1050 | Attempts to convert the string to an unsigned integer in base @e base. | |
1051 | Returns @true on success in which case the number is stored in the | |
1052 | location pointed to by @a val or @false if the string does not | |
1053 | represent a valid number in the given base (the value of @a val is not | |
1054 | modified in this case). | |
1055 | ||
1056 | Please notice that this function behaves in the same way as the standard | |
1057 | @c strtoul() and so it simply converts negative numbers to unsigned | |
1058 | representation instead of rejecting them (e.g. -1 is returned as @c ULONG_MAX). | |
1059 | ||
1060 | See ToLong() for the more detailed description of the @a base parameter. | |
1061 | ||
1062 | @see ToDouble(), ToLong() | |
1063 | */ | |
1064 | bool ToULong(unsigned long* val, int base = 10) const; | |
1065 | ||
1066 | /** | |
1067 | This is exactly the same as ToULong() but works with 64 | |
1068 | bit integer numbers. | |
1069 | Please see ToLongLong() for additional remarks. | |
1070 | */ | |
1071 | bool ToULongLong(wxULongLong_t* val, int base = 10) const; | |
1072 | ||
1073 | //@{ | |
1074 | /** | |
1075 | Same as utf8_str(). | |
1076 | */ | |
1077 | const char* ToUTF8() const; | |
1078 | const wxCharBuffer ToUTF8() const; | |
1079 | //@} | |
1080 | ||
1081 | /** | |
1082 | Removes white-space (space, tabs, form feed, newline and carriage return) from | |
1083 | the left or from the right end of the string (right is default). | |
1084 | */ | |
1085 | wxString& Trim(bool fromRight = true); | |
1086 | ||
1087 | /** | |
1088 | Truncate the string to the given length. | |
1089 | */ | |
1090 | wxString& Truncate(size_t len); | |
1091 | ||
1092 | //@{ | |
1093 | /** | |
1094 | Puts the string back into a reasonable state (in which it can be used | |
1095 | normally), after GetWriteBuf() was called. | |
1096 | ||
1097 | The version of the function without the @a len parameter will calculate the | |
1098 | new string length itself assuming that the string is terminated by the first | |
1099 | @c NUL character in it while the second one will use the specified length | |
1100 | and thus is the only version which should be used with the strings with | |
1101 | embedded @c NULs (it is also slightly more efficient as @c strlen() | |
1102 | doesn't have to be called). | |
1103 | ||
1104 | This method is deprecated, please use wxStringBuffer or | |
1105 | wxStringBufferLength instead. | |
1106 | */ | |
1107 | void UngetWriteBuf(); | |
1108 | void UngetWriteBuf(size_t len); | |
1109 | //@} | |
1110 | ||
1111 | /** | |
1112 | Returns this string converted to upper case. | |
1113 | ||
1114 | @see MakeUpper() | |
1115 | */ | |
1116 | wxString Upper() const; | |
1117 | ||
1118 | /** | |
1119 | The same as MakeUpper(). | |
1120 | ||
1121 | This is a wxWidgets 1.xx compatibility function; you should not use it in new | |
1122 | code. | |
1123 | */ | |
1124 | void UpperCase(); | |
1125 | ||
1126 | /** | |
1127 | Returns a lightweight intermediate class which is in turn implicitly | |
1128 | convertible to both @c const @c char* and to @c const @c wchar_t*. | |
1129 | Given this ambiguity it is mostly better to use wc_str(), mb_str() or | |
1130 | utf8_str() instead. | |
1131 | ||
1132 | Please see the @ref overview_unicode for more information about it. | |
1133 | ||
1134 | Note that the returned value is not convertible to @c char* or | |
1135 | @c wchar_t*, use char_str() or wchar_str() if you need to pass | |
1136 | string value to a function expecting non-const pointer. | |
1137 | ||
1138 | @see wc_str(), utf8_str(), c_str(), mb_str(), fn_str() | |
1139 | */ | |
1140 | wxCStrData c_str() const; | |
1141 | ||
1142 | /** | |
1143 | Returns an object with string data that is implicitly convertible to | |
1144 | @c char* pointer. Note that any change to the returned buffer is lost and so | |
1145 | this function is only usable for passing strings to legacy libraries that | |
1146 | don't have const-correct API. Use wxStringBuffer if you want to modify | |
1147 | the string. | |
1148 | ||
1149 | @see c_str() | |
1150 | */ | |
1151 | wxWritableCharBuffer char_str(const wxMBConv& conv = wxConvLibc) const; | |
1152 | ||
1153 | /** | |
1154 | Returns buffer of the specified type containing the string data. | |
1155 | ||
1156 | This method is only useful in template code, otherwise you should | |
1157 | directly call mb_str() or wc_str() if you need to retrieve a narrow or | |
1158 | wide string from this wxString. The template parameter @a t should be | |
1159 | either @c char or @c wchar_t. | |
1160 | ||
1161 | Notice that retrieving a char buffer in UTF-8 build will return the | |
1162 | internal string representation in UTF-8 while in wchar_t build the char | |
1163 | buffer will contain the conversion of the string to the encoding of the | |
1164 | current locale (and so can fail). | |
1165 | ||
1166 | @param len | |
1167 | If non-@NULL, filled with the length of the returned buffer. | |
1168 | ||
1169 | @return | |
1170 | buffer containing the string contents in the specified type, | |
1171 | notice that it may be @NULL if the conversion failed (e.g. Unicode | |
1172 | string couldn't be converted to the current encoding when @a T is | |
1173 | @c char). | |
1174 | */ | |
1175 | template <typename T> | |
1176 | wxCharTypeBuffer<T> tchar_str(size_t *len = NULL) const; | |
1177 | ||
1178 | //@{ | |
1179 | /** | |
1180 | Returns string representation suitable for passing to OS' functions | |
1181 | for file handling. | |
1182 | */ | |
1183 | const wchar_t* fn_str() const; | |
1184 | const char* fn_str() const; | |
1185 | const wxCharBuffer fn_str() const; | |
1186 | //@} | |
1187 | ||
1188 | /** | |
1189 | Returns the multibyte (C string) representation of the string | |
1190 | using @e conv's wxMBConv::cWC2MB method and returns wxCharBuffer. | |
1191 | ||
1192 | @see wc_str(), utf8_str(), c_str(), wxMBConv | |
1193 | */ | |
1194 | const wxCharBuffer mb_str(const wxMBConv& conv = wxConvLibc) const; | |
1195 | ||
1196 | /** | |
1197 | Extraction from a stream. | |
1198 | */ | |
1199 | friend istream operator>>(istream& is, wxString& str); | |
1200 | ||
1201 | //@{ | |
1202 | /** | |
1203 | These functions work as C++ stream insertion operators. They insert the | |
1204 | given value into the string. Precision and format cannot be set using them. | |
1205 | Use Printf() instead. | |
1206 | */ | |
1207 | wxString& operator<<(const wxString& s); | |
1208 | wxString& operator<<(const char* psz); | |
1209 | wxString& operator<<(const wchar_t* pwz); | |
1210 | wxString& operator<<(const wxCStrData& psz); | |
1211 | wxString& operator<<(const char* psz); | |
1212 | wxString& operator<<(wxUniCharRef ch); | |
1213 | wxString& operator<<(char ch); | |
1214 | wxString& operator<<(unsigned char ch); | |
1215 | wxString& operator<<(wchar_t ch); | |
1216 | wxString& operator<<(const wxCharBuffer& s); | |
1217 | wxString& operator<<(const wxWCharBuffer& s); | |
1218 | wxString& operator<<(wxUniCharRef ch); | |
1219 | wxString& operator<<(unsigned int ui); | |
1220 | wxString& operator<<(long l); | |
1221 | wxString& operator<<(unsigned long ul); | |
1222 | wxString& operator<<(wxLongLong_t ll); | |
1223 | wxString& operator<<(wxULongLong_t ul); | |
1224 | wxString& operator<<(float f); | |
1225 | wxString& operator<<(double d); | |
1226 | //@} | |
1227 | ||
1228 | /** | |
1229 | Same as Mid() (substring extraction). | |
1230 | */ | |
1231 | wxString operator()(size_t start, size_t len) const; | |
1232 | ||
1233 | //@{ | |
1234 | /** | |
1235 | Concatenation: these operators return a new string equal to the | |
1236 | concatenation of the operands. | |
1237 | */ | |
1238 | wxString operator +(const wxString& x, const wxString& y); | |
1239 | wxString operator +(const wxString& x, wxUniChar y); | |
1240 | //@} | |
1241 | ||
1242 | //@{ | |
1243 | /** | |
1244 | Concatenation in place: the argument is appended to the string. | |
1245 | */ | |
1246 | void operator +=(const wxString& str); | |
1247 | void operator +=(wxUniChar c); | |
1248 | //@} | |
1249 | ||
1250 | //@{ | |
1251 | /** | |
1252 | Assignment: the effect of each operation is the same as for the corresponding | |
1253 | constructor (see @ref wxString() "wxString constructors"). | |
1254 | */ | |
1255 | wxString operator =(const wxString& str); | |
1256 | wxString operator =(wxUniChar c); | |
1257 | //@} | |
1258 | ||
1259 | //@{ | |
1260 | /** | |
1261 | Element extraction. | |
1262 | */ | |
1263 | wxUniChar operator [](size_t i) const; | |
1264 | wxUniCharRef operator [](size_t i); | |
1265 | //@} | |
1266 | ||
1267 | /** | |
1268 | Empty string is @false, so !string will only return @true if the | |
1269 | string is empty. | |
1270 | ||
1271 | See also IsEmpty(). | |
1272 | */ | |
1273 | bool operator!() const; | |
1274 | ||
1275 | ||
1276 | //@{ | |
1277 | /** | |
1278 | Converts the strings contents to UTF-8 and returns it either as a | |
1279 | temporary wxCharBuffer object or as a pointer to the internal | |
1280 | string contents in UTF-8 build. | |
1281 | ||
1282 | @see wc_str(), c_str(), mb_str() | |
1283 | */ | |
1284 | const char* utf8_str() const; | |
1285 | const wxCharBuffer utf8_str() const; | |
1286 | //@} | |
1287 | ||
1288 | //@{ | |
1289 | /** | |
1290 | Converts the strings contents to the wide character represention | |
1291 | and returns it as a temporary wxWCharBuffer object (Unix and OS X) | |
1292 | or returns a pointer to the internal string contents in wide character | |
1293 | mode (Windows). | |
1294 | ||
1295 | The macro wxWX2WCbuf is defined as the correct return | |
1296 | type (without const). | |
1297 | ||
1298 | @see utf8_str(), c_str(), mb_str(), fn_str(), wchar_str() | |
1299 | */ | |
1300 | const wchar_t* wc_str() const; | |
1301 | const wxWCharBuffer wc_str() const; | |
1302 | //@} | |
1303 | ||
1304 | /** | |
1305 | Returns an object with string data that is implicitly convertible to | |
1306 | @c char* pointer. Note that changes to the returned buffer may or may | |
1307 | not be lost (depending on the build) and so this function is only usable for | |
1308 | passing strings to legacy libraries that don't have const-correct API. Use | |
1309 | wxStringBuffer if you want to modify the string. | |
1310 | ||
1311 | @see mb_str(), wc_str(), fn_str(), c_str(), char_str() | |
1312 | */ | |
1313 | wxWritableWCharBuffer wchar_str() const; | |
1314 | ||
1315 | /** | |
1316 | Explicit conversion to C string in the internal representation (either | |
1317 | wchar_t* or UTF-8-encoded char*, depending on the build). | |
1318 | */ | |
1319 | const wxStringCharType *wx_str() const; | |
1320 | ||
1321 | ||
1322 | /** | |
1323 | @name Iterator interface | |
1324 | ||
1325 | These methods return iterators to the beginnnig or | |
1326 | end of the string. | |
1327 | */ | |
1328 | //@{ | |
1329 | const_iterator begin() const; | |
1330 | iterator begin(); | |
1331 | const_iterator end() const; | |
1332 | iterator end(); | |
1333 | ||
1334 | const_reverse_iterator rbegin() const; | |
1335 | reverse_iterator rbegin(); | |
1336 | const_reverse_iterator rend() const; | |
1337 | reverse_iterator rend(); | |
1338 | //@} | |
1339 | ||
1340 | /** | |
1341 | @name STL interface | |
1342 | ||
1343 | The supported STL functions are listed here. Please see any | |
1344 | STL reference for their documentation. | |
1345 | */ | |
1346 | //@{ | |
1347 | size_t length() const; | |
1348 | size_type size() const; | |
1349 | size_type max_size() const; | |
1350 | size_type capacity() const; | |
1351 | void reserve(size_t sz); | |
1352 | ||
1353 | void resize(size_t nSize, wxUniChar ch = '\0'); | |
1354 | ||
1355 | wxString& append(const wxString& str, size_t pos, size_t n); | |
1356 | wxString& append(const wxString& str); | |
1357 | wxString& append(const char *sz, size_t n); | |
1358 | wxString& append(const wchar_t *sz, size_t n); | |
1359 | wxString& append(size_t n, wxUniChar ch); | |
1360 | wxString& append(const_iterator first, const_iterator last); | |
1361 | ||
1362 | wxString& assign(const wxString& str, size_t pos, size_t n); | |
1363 | wxString& assign(const wxString& str); | |
1364 | wxString& assign(const char *sz, size_t n); | |
1365 | wxString& assign(const wchar_t *sz, size_t n); | |
1366 | wxString& assign(size_t n, wxUniChar ch); | |
1367 | wxString& assign(const_iterator first, const_iterator last); | |
1368 | ||
1369 | void clear(); | |
1370 | ||
1371 | int compare(const wxString& str) const; | |
1372 | int compare(size_t nStart, size_t nLen, const wxString& str) const; | |
1373 | int compare(size_t nStart, size_t nLen, | |
1374 | const wxString& str, size_t nStart2, size_t nLen2) const; | |
1375 | int compare(size_t nStart, size_t nLen, | |
1376 | const char* sz, size_t nCount = npos) const; | |
1377 | int compare(size_t nStart, size_t nLen, | |
1378 | const wchar_t* sz, size_t nCount = npos) const; | |
1379 | ||
1380 | bool empty() const; | |
1381 | ||
1382 | wxString& erase(size_type pos = 0, size_type n = npos); | |
1383 | iterator erase(iterator first, iterator last); | |
1384 | iterator erase(iterator first); | |
1385 | ||
1386 | size_t find(const wxString& str, size_t nStart = 0) const; | |
1387 | size_t find(const char* sz, size_t nStart = 0, size_t n = npos) const; | |
1388 | size_t find(const wchar_t* sz, size_t nStart = 0, size_t n = npos) const; | |
1389 | size_t find(wxUniChar ch, size_t nStart = 0) const; | |
1390 | ||
1391 | wxString& insert(size_t nPos, const wxString& str); | |
1392 | wxString& insert(size_t nPos, const wxString& str, size_t nStart, size_t n); | |
1393 | wxString& insert(size_t nPos, const char *sz, size_t n); | |
1394 | wxString& insert(size_t nPos, const wchar_t *sz, size_t n); | |
1395 | wxString& insert(size_t nPos, size_t n, wxUniChar ch); | |
1396 | iterator insert(iterator it, wxUniChar ch); | |
1397 | void insert(iterator it, const_iterator first, const_iterator last); | |
1398 | void insert(iterator it, size_type n, wxUniChar ch); | |
1399 | ||
1400 | wxString& replace(size_t nStart, size_t nLen, const wxString& str); | |
1401 | wxString& replace(size_t nStart, size_t nLen, size_t nCount, wxUniChar ch); | |
1402 | wxString& replace(size_t nStart, size_t nLen, | |
1403 | const wxString& str, size_t nStart2, size_t nLen2); | |
1404 | wxString& replace(size_t nStart, size_t nLen, | |
1405 | const char* sz, size_t nCount); | |
1406 | wxString& replace(size_t nStart, size_t nLen, | |
1407 | const wchar_t* sz, size_t nCount); | |
1408 | wxString& replace(size_t nStart, size_t nLen, | |
1409 | const wxString& s, size_t nCount); | |
1410 | wxString& replace(iterator first, iterator last, const wxString& s); | |
1411 | wxString& replace(iterator first, iterator last, const char* s, size_type n); | |
1412 | wxString& replace(iterator first, iterator last, const wchar_t* s, size_type n); | |
1413 | wxString& replace(iterator first, iterator last, size_type n, wxUniChar ch); | |
1414 | wxString& replace(iterator first, iterator last, | |
1415 | const_iterator first1, const_iterator last1); | |
1416 | wxString& replace(iterator first, iterator last, | |
1417 | const char *first1, const char *last1); | |
1418 | wxString& replace(iterator first, iterator last, | |
1419 | const wchar_t *first1, const wchar_t *last1); | |
1420 | ||
1421 | size_t rfind(const wxString& str, size_t nStart = npos) const; | |
1422 | size_t rfind(const char* sz, size_t nStart = npos, size_t n = npos) const; | |
1423 | size_t rfind(const wchar_t* sz, size_t nStart = npos, size_t n = npos) const; | |
1424 | size_t rfind(wxUniChar ch, size_t nStart = npos) const; | |
1425 | ||
1426 | wxString substr(size_t nStart = 0, size_t nLen = npos) const; | |
1427 | ||
1428 | void swap(wxString& str); | |
1429 | ||
1430 | //@} | |
1431 | ||
1432 | }; | |
1433 | ||
1434 | /** | |
1435 | The global wxString instance of an empty string. | |
1436 | Used extensively in the entire wxWidgets API. | |
1437 | */ | |
1438 | wxString wxEmptyString; | |
1439 | ||
1440 | ||
1441 | ||
1442 | ||
1443 | /** | |
1444 | @class wxStringBufferLength | |
1445 | ||
1446 | This tiny class allows you to conveniently access the wxString internal buffer | |
1447 | as a writable pointer without any risk of forgetting to restore the string to | |
1448 | the usable state later, and allows the user to set the internal length of the string. | |
1449 | ||
1450 | For example, assuming you have a low-level OS function called | |
1451 | @c "int GetMeaningOfLifeAsString(char *)" copying the value in the provided | |
1452 | buffer (which must be writable, of course), and returning the actual length | |
1453 | of the string, you might call it like this: | |
1454 | ||
1455 | @code | |
1456 | wxString theAnswer; | |
1457 | wxStringBuffer theAnswerBuffer(theAnswer, 1024); | |
1458 | int nLength = GetMeaningOfLifeAsString(theAnswerBuffer); | |
1459 | theAnswerBuffer.SetLength(nLength); | |
1460 | if ( theAnswer != "42" ) | |
1461 | wxLogError("Something is very wrong!"); | |
1462 | @endcode | |
1463 | ||
1464 | @todo | |
1465 | the example above does not make use of wxStringBufferLength?? | |
1466 | ||
1467 | Note that the exact usage of this depends on whether or not wxUSE_STL is | |
1468 | enabled. If wxUSE_STL is enabled, wxStringBuffer creates a separate empty | |
1469 | character buffer, and if wxUSE_STL is disabled, it uses GetWriteBuf() from | |
1470 | wxString, keeping the same buffer wxString uses intact. In other words, | |
1471 | relying on wxStringBuffer containing the old wxString data is not a good | |
1472 | idea if you want to build your program both with and without wxUSE_STL. | |
1473 | ||
1474 | Note that wxStringBuffer::SetLength @b must be called before | |
1475 | wxStringBufferLength destructs. | |
1476 | ||
1477 | @library{wxbase} | |
1478 | @category{data} | |
1479 | */ | |
1480 | class wxStringBufferLength | |
1481 | { | |
1482 | public: | |
1483 | /** | |
1484 | Constructs a writable string buffer object associated with the given string | |
1485 | and containing enough space for at least @a len characters. | |
1486 | ||
1487 | Basically, this is equivalent to calling wxString::GetWriteBuf and | |
1488 | saving the result. | |
1489 | */ | |
1490 | wxStringBufferLength(const wxString& str, size_t len); | |
1491 | ||
1492 | /** | |
1493 | Restores the string passed to the constructor to the usable state by calling | |
1494 | wxString::UngetWriteBuf on it. | |
1495 | */ | |
1496 | ~wxStringBufferLength(); | |
1497 | ||
1498 | /** | |
1499 | Sets the internal length of the string referred to by wxStringBufferLength to | |
1500 | @a nLength characters. | |
1501 | ||
1502 | Must be called before wxStringBufferLength destructs. | |
1503 | */ | |
1504 | void SetLength(size_t nLength); | |
1505 | ||
1506 | /** | |
1507 | Returns the writable pointer to a buffer of the size at least equal to the | |
1508 | length specified in the constructor. | |
1509 | */ | |
1510 | wxChar* operator wxChar *(); | |
1511 | }; | |
1512 |