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1 /////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
2 // Name: string.h
3 // Purpose: interface of wxStringBuffer
4 // Author: wxWidgets team
5 // RCS-ID: $Id$
6 // Licence: wxWindows license
7 /////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
8
9 /**
10 @class wxStringBuffer
11 @wxheader{string.h}
12
13 This tiny class allows to conveniently access the wxString
14 internal buffer as a writable pointer without any risk of forgetting to restore
15 the string to the usable state later.
16
17 For example, assuming you have a low-level OS function called
18 @c GetMeaningOfLifeAsString(char *) returning the value in the provided
19 buffer (which must be writable, of course) you might call it like this:
20
21 @code
22 wxString theAnswer;
23 GetMeaningOfLifeAsString(wxStringBuffer(theAnswer, 1024));
24 if ( theAnswer != "42" )
25 {
26 wxLogError("Something is very wrong!");
27 }
28 @endcode
29
30 Note that the exact usage of this depends on whether on not wxUSE_STL is
31 enabled. If
32 wxUSE_STL is enabled, wxStringBuffer creates a separate empty character buffer,
33 and
34 if wxUSE_STL is disabled, it uses GetWriteBuf() from wxString, keeping the same
35 buffer
36 wxString uses intact. In other words, relying on wxStringBuffer containing the
37 old
38 wxString data is probably not a good idea if you want to build your program in
39 both
40 with and without wxUSE_STL.
41
42 @library{wxbase}
43 @category{FIXME}
44 */
45 class wxStringBuffer
46 {
47 public:
48 /**
49 Constructs a writable string buffer object associated with the given string
50 and containing enough space for at least @a len characters. Basically, this
51 is equivalent to calling wxString::GetWriteBuf and
52 saving the result.
53 */
54 wxStringBuffer(const wxString& str, size_t len);
55
56 /**
57 Restores the string passed to the constructor to the usable state by calling
58 wxString::UngetWriteBuf on it.
59 */
60 ~wxStringBuffer();
61
62 /**
63 Returns the writable pointer to a buffer of the size at least equal to the
64 length specified in the constructor.
65 */
66 wxStringCharType* operator wxStringCharType *();
67 };
68
69
70
71 /**
72 @class wxString
73 @wxheader{string.h}
74
75 wxString is a class representing a Unicode character string.
76 wxString uses @c std::string internally to store its content
77 unless this is not supported by the compiler or disabled
78 specifically when building wxWidgets. Therefore wxString
79 inherits many features from @c std::string's. Most
80 implementations of @std::string are thread-safe and don't
81 use reference counting. By default, wxString uses @c std::string
82 internally even if wxUSE_STL is not defined.
83
84 Since wxWidgets 3.0 wxString internally uses UCS-2 (basically 2-byte per
85 character wchar_t) under Windows and UTF-8 under Unix, Linux and
86 OS X to store its content. Much work has been done to make existing
87 code using ANSI string literals work as before. If you need to have a
88 wxString that uses wchar_t on Unix and Linux, too, you can specify
89 this on the command line with the @c configure @c --disable-utf8 switch.
90
91 As a consequence of this change, iterating over a wxString by index
92 can become inefficient in UTF8 mode and iterators should be used instead:
93
94 @code
95 wxString s = "hello";
96 wxString::const_iterator i;
97 for (i = s.begin(); i != s.end(); ++i)
98 {
99 wxUniChar uni_ch = *i;
100 // do something with it
101 }
102 @endcode
103
104 Please see the
105 @ref overview_string "wxString overview" and the
106 @ref overview_unicode "Unicode overview" for more information
107 about it.
108
109 wxString uses the current locale encoding to convert any C string
110 literal to Unicode. The same is done for converting to and from
111 @c std::string and for the return value of c_str(). For this
112 conversion, the @a wxConvLibc class instance is used. See wxCSConv and wxMBConv.
113
114 wxString implements most of the methods of the @c std::string class.
115 These standard functions are only listed here, but they are not
116 fully documented in this manual. Please see the STL documentation.
117 The behaviour of all these functions is identical to the behaviour
118 described there.
119
120 You may notice that wxString sometimes has several functions which do
121 the same thing like, for example, Length(), Len() and length() which
122 all return the string length. In all cases of such duplication the
123 @c std::string compatible method should be used.
124
125 Anything may be concatenated (appended to) with a string. However, you can't
126 append something to a C string (including literal constants), so to do this it
127 should be converted to a wxString first.
128
129 @li operator<<()
130 @li operator+=()
131 @li operator+()
132 @li Append()
133 @li Prepend()
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
144 The MakeXXX() variants modify the string in place, while the other functions
145 return a new string which contains the original text converted to the upper or
146 lower case and leave the original string unchanged.
147
148 @li MakeUpper()
149 @li Upper()
150 @li MakeLower()
151 @li Lower()
152
153 Many functions in this section take a character index in the string. As with C
154 strings and/or arrays, the indices start from 0, so the first character of a
155 string is string[0]. Attempt to access a character beyond the end of the
156 string (which may be even 0 if the string is empty) will provoke an assert
157 failure in @ref overview_debugging "debug build", but no checks are
158 done in release builds.
159 This section also contains both implicit and explicit conversions to C style
160 strings. Although implicit conversion is quite convenient, it is advised to use
161 explicit c_str() method for the sake of clarity.
162
163 @li GetChar()
164 @li GetWritableChar()
165 @li SetChar()
166 @li Last()
167 @li operator[]()
168 @li c_str()
169 @li mb_str()
170 @li wc_str()
171 @li fn_str()
172
173 The default comparison function Cmp() is case-sensitive and
174 so is the default version of IsSameAs(). For case
175 insensitive comparisons you should use CmpNoCase() or
176 give a second parameter to IsSameAs. This last function is may be more
177 convenient if only equality of the strings matters because it returns a boolean
178 @true value if the strings are the same and not 0 (which is usually @false
179 in C)as Cmp() does.
180 Matches() is a poor man's regular expression matcher: it only understands
181 '*' and '?' metacharacters in the sense of DOS command line interpreter.
182 StartsWith() is helpful when parsing a line of text which should start
183 with some predefined prefix and is more efficient than doing direct string
184 comparison as you would also have to precalculate the length of the prefix then.
185
186 @li Cmp()
187 @li CmpNoCase()
188 @li IsSameAs()
189 @li Matches()
190 @li StartsWith()
191 @li EndsWith()
192
193 The string provides functions for conversion to signed and unsigned integer and
194 floating point numbers. All three functions take a pointer to the variable to
195 put the numeric value in and return @true if the @b entire string could be
196 converted to a number.
197
198 @li ToLong()
199 @li ToLongLong()
200 @li ToULong()
201 @li ToULongLong()
202 @li ToDouble()
203
204 These are "advanced" functions and they will be needed quite rarely.
205 Alloc() and Shrink() are only interesting for optimization purposes.
206 wxStringBuffer and wxStringBufferLength classes may be very useful
207 when working with some external API which requires the caller to provide
208 a writable buffer.
209
210 @li Alloc()
211 @li Shrink()
212 @li wxStringBuffer
213 @li wxStringBufferLength
214
215 Misc. other string functions.
216
217 @li Trim()
218 @li Truncate()
219 @li Pad()
220
221 These functions return the string length and check whether the string
222 is empty or empty it.
223
224 @li Len()
225 @li IsEmpty()
226 @li operator!()
227 @li Empty()
228 @li Clear()
229
230
231 These functions allow to extract substring from this string. All of them don't
232 modify the original string and return a new string containing the extracted
233 substring.
234
235 @li Mid()
236 @li operator()()
237 @li Left()
238 @li Right()
239 @li BeforeFirst()
240 @li BeforeLast()
241 @li AfterFirst()
242 @li AfterLast()
243 @li StartsWith()
244 @li EndsWith()
245
246 These functions replace the standard @e strchr() and @e strstr()
247 functions.
248
249 @li Find()
250 @li Replace()
251
252 Both formatted versions (Printf/() and stream-like insertion operators
253 exist (for basic types only). Additionally, the Format() function allows
254 to use simply append formatted value to a string:
255
256 @li Format()
257 @li FormatV()
258 @li Printf()
259 @li PrintfV()
260 @li operator>>()
261
262 These functions are deprecated, please consider using new wxWidgets 2.0
263 functions instead of them (or, even better, std::string compatible variants).
264
265 Contains(), First(), Freq(), IsAscii(), IsNull(),
266 IsNumber(), IsWord(), Last(), Length(), LowerCase(), Remove(), Strip(),
267 SubString(), UpperCase()
268
269 @library{wxbase}
270 @category{data}
271
272 @stdobjects
273 ::Objects:, ::wxEmptyString,
274
275 @see @ref overview_string "wxString overview", @ref overview_unicode
276 "Unicode overview"
277 */
278 class wxString
279 {
280 public:
281 /**
282 An 'invalid' value for string index
283 */
284 static const size_t npos;
285
286 /**
287 @name Standard types
288 */
289 //@{
290 typedef wxUniChar value_type;
291 typedef wxUniChar char_type;
292 typedef wxUniCharRef reference;
293 typedef wxChar* pointer;
294 typedef const wxChar* const_pointer;
295 typedef size_t size_type;
296 typedef wxUniChar const_reference;
297 //@}
298
299 /**
300 Default constructor
301 */
302 wxString();
303
304 /**
305 Creates a string from another string. Just increases the ref
306 count by 1.
307 */
308 wxString(const wxString& stringSrc);
309
310
311 /**
312 Constructs a string from the string literal @e psz using
313 the current locale encoding to convert it to Unicode (wxConvLibc).
314 */
315 wxString(const char *psz);
316
317 /**
318 Constructs a string from the string literal @e psz using
319 @e conv to convert it Unicode.
320 */
321 wxString(const char *psz, const wxMBConv& conv);
322
323 /**
324 Constructs a string from the first @e nLength character of the string literal @e psz using
325 the current locale encoding to convert it to Unicode (wxConvLibc).
326 */
327 wxString(const char *psz, size_t nLength);
328
329 /**
330 Constructs a string from the first @e nLength character of the string literal @e psz using
331 @e conv to convert it Unicode.
332 */
333 wxString(const char *psz, const wxMBConv& conv, size_t nLength);
334
335 /**
336 Constructs a string from the string literal @e pwz.
337 */
338 wxString(const wchar_t *pwz);
339
340 /**
341 Constructs a string from the first @e nLength characters of the string literal @e pwz.
342 */
343 wxString(const wchar_t *pwz, size_t nLength);
344
345 /**
346 Constructs a string from @e buf using the using
347 the current locale encoding to convert it to Unicode.
348 */
349 wxString(const wxCharBuffer& buf);
350
351 /**
352 Constructs a string from @e buf.
353 */
354 wxString(const wxWCharBuffer& buf);
355
356 /**
357 Constructs a string from @e str using the using the current locale encoding
358 to convert it to Unicode (wxConvLibc).
359 */
360 wxString(const std::string& str);
361
362 /**
363 Constructs a string from @e str.
364 */
365 wxString(const std::wstring& str);
366
367
368 /**
369 String destructor. Note that this is not virtual, so wxString must not be
370 inherited from.
371 */
372 ~wxString();
373
374 /**
375 Gets all the characters after the first occurrence of @e ch.
376 Returns the empty string if @e ch is not found.
377 */
378 wxString AfterFirst(wxUniChar ch) const;
379
380 /**
381 Gets all the characters after the last occurrence of @e ch.
382 Returns the whole string if @e ch is not found.
383 */
384 wxString AfterLast(wxUniChar ch) const;
385
386 /**
387 Preallocate enough space for wxString to store @a nLen characters.
388
389 Please note that this method does the same thing as the standard
390 reserve() one and shouldn't be used in new code.
391
392 This function may be used to increase speed when the string is
393 constructed by repeated concatenation as in
394
395 @code
396 // delete all vowels from the string
397 wxString DeleteAllVowels(const wxString& original)
398 {
399 wxString result;
400
401 size_t len = original.length();
402
403 result.Alloc(len);
404
405 for ( size_t n = 0; n < len; n++ )
406 {
407 if ( strchr("aeuio", tolower(original[n])) == NULL )
408 result += original[n];
409 }
410
411 return result;
412 }
413 @endcode
414
415 because it will avoid the need to reallocate string memory many times
416 (in case of long strings). Note that it does not set the maximal length
417 of a string -- it will still expand if more than @a nLen characters are
418 stored in it. Also, it does not truncate the existing string (use
419 Truncate() for this) even if its current length is greater than @a nLen.
420
421 @return @true if memory was successfully allocated, @false otherwise.
422 */
423 bool Alloc(size_t nLen);
424
425 /**
426 Appends the string literal @e psz.
427 */
428 wxString& Append(const char* psz);
429
430 /**
431 Appends the wide string literal @e pwz.
432 */
433 wxString& Append(const wchar_t* pwz)
434
435 /**
436 Appends the string literal @e psz with max length @e nLen.
437 */
438 wxString& Append(const char* psz, size_t nLen);
439
440 /**
441 Appends the wide string literal @e psz with max length @e nLen.
442 */
443 wxString& Append(const wchar_t* pwz, size_t nLen)
444
445 /**
446 Appends the string @e s.
447 */
448 wxString &Append(const wxString &s);
449
450 /**
451 Appends the character @e ch @e count times.
452 */
453 wxString &Append(wxUniChar ch, size_t count = 1u);
454
455 /**
456 Gets all characters before the first occurrence of @e ch.
457 Returns the whole string if @a ch is not found.
458 */
459 wxString BeforeFirst(wxUniChar ch) const;
460
461 /**
462 Gets all characters before the last occurrence of @e ch.
463 Returns the empty string if @a ch is not found.
464 */
465 wxString BeforeLast(wxUniChar ch) const;
466
467
468 /**
469 Empties the string and frees memory occupied by it.
470 See also: Empty()
471 */
472 void Clear();
473
474 /**
475 Returns a deep copy of the string.
476
477 That is, the returned string is guaranteed to not share data with this
478 string when using reference-counted wxString implementation.
479
480 This method is primarily useful for passing strings between threads
481 (because wxString is not thread-safe). Unlike creating a copy using
482 @c wxString(c_str()), Clone() handles embedded NULs correctly.
483
484 @since 2.9.0
485 */
486 wxString Clone() const;
487
488 /**
489 Case-sensitive comparison.
490 Returns a positive value if the string is greater than the argument,
491 zero if it is equal to it or a negative value if it is less than the
492 argument (same semantics as the standard @c strcmp() function).
493
494 See also CmpNoCase(), IsSameAs().
495 */
496 int Cmp(const wxString& s) const;
497
498 /**
499 Case-insensitive comparison.
500 Returns a positive value if the string is greater than the argument,
501 zero if it is equal to it or a negative value if it is less than the
502 argument (same semantics as the standard @c strcmp() function).
503
504 See also Cmp(), IsSameAs().
505 */
506 int CmpNoCase(const wxString& s) const;
507
508
509 //@{
510 /**
511 Comparison operators
512 */
513 bool operator ==(const wxString& x, const wxString& y);
514 bool operator ==(const wxString& x, wxUniChar ch);
515 bool operator !=(const wxString& x, const wxString& y);
516 bool operator !=(const wxString& x, wxUniChar ch);
517 bool operator(const wxString& x, const wxString& y);
518 bool operator(const wxString& x, wxUniChar ch);
519 bool operator =(const wxString& x, const wxString& y);
520 bool operator =(const wxString& x, wxUniChar ch);
521 bool operator(const wxString& x, const wxString& y);
522 bool operator(const wxString& x, wxUniChar ch);
523 bool operator =(const wxString& x, const wxString& y);
524 bool operator =(const wxString& x, wxUniChar ch);
525 //@}
526
527
528 /**
529 Returns @true if target appears anywhere in wxString; else @false.
530 This is a wxWidgets 1.xx compatibility function; you should not use it in new
531 code.
532 */
533 bool Contains(const wxString& str) const;
534
535
536 /**
537 Makes the string empty, but doesn't free memory occupied by the string.
538 See also: Clear().
539 */
540 void Empty();
541
542 /**
543 This function can be used to test if the string ends with the specified
544 @e suffix. If it does, the function will return @true and put the
545 beginning of the string before the suffix into @e rest string if it is not
546 @NULL. Otherwise, the function returns @false and doesn't
547 modify the @e rest.
548 */
549 bool EndsWith(const wxString& suffix, wxString *rest = NULL) const;
550
551 /**
552 Searches for the given character @e ch. Returns the position or
553 @c wxNOT_FOUND if not found.
554 */
555 int Find(wxUniChar ch, bool fromEnd = false) const;
556
557 /**
558 Searches for the given string @e sub. Returns the starting position or
559 @c wxNOT_FOUND if not found.
560 */
561 int Find(const wxString& sub) const;
562
563 //@{
564 /**
565 Same as Find().
566 This is a wxWidgets 1.xx compatibility function;
567 you should not use it in new code.
568 */
569 int First(wxUniChar ch) const;
570 int First(const wxString& str) const;
571 //@}
572
573 /**
574 This static function returns the string containing the result of calling
575 Printf() with the passed parameters on it.
576
577 @see FormatV(), Printf()
578 */
579 static wxString Format(const wxChar format, ...);
580
581 /**
582 This static function returns the string containing the result of calling
583 PrintfV() with the passed parameters on it.
584
585 @see Format(), PrintfV()
586 */
587 static wxString FormatV(const wxChar format, va_list argptr);
588
589 /**
590 Returns the number of occurrences of @e ch in the string.
591 This is a wxWidgets 1.xx compatibility function; you should not
592 use it in new code.
593 */
594 int Freq(wxUniChar ch) const;
595
596 //@{
597 /**
598 Converts given buffer of binary data from 8-bit string to wxString. In
599 Unicode build, the string is interpreted as being in ISO-8859-1
600 encoding. The version without @e len parameter takes NUL-terminated
601 data.
602
603 This is a convenience method useful when storing binary data in
604 wxString. It should be used @em only for that purpose and only in
605 conjunction with To8BitData(). Use mb_str() for conversion of character
606 data to known encoding.
607
608 @since 2.8.4
609
610 @see wxString::To8BitData()
611 */
612 static wxString From8BitData(const char* buf, size_t len);
613 static wxString From8BitData(const char* buf);
614 //@}
615
616 //@{
617 /**
618 Converts the string or character from an ASCII, 7-bit form
619 to the native wxString representation.
620 */
621 static wxString FromAscii(const char* s);
622 static wxString FromAscii(const unsigned char* s);
623 static wxString FromAscii(const char* s, size_t len);
624 static wxString FromAscii(const unsigned char* s, size_t len);
625 static wxString FromAscii(char c);
626 //@}
627
628 //@{
629 /**
630 Converts C string encoded in UTF-8 to wxString.
631 Note that this method assumes that @a s is a valid UTF-8 sequence and
632 doesn't do any validation in release builds, it's validity is only checked in
633 debug builds.
634 */
635 static wxString FromUTF8(const char* s);
636 static wxString FromUTF8(const char* s, size_t len);
637 //@}
638
639 /**
640 Returns the character at position @a n (read-only).
641 */
642 wxUniChar GetChar(size_t n) const;
643
644 /**
645 wxWidgets compatibility conversion. Same as c_str().
646 */
647 const wxCStrData* GetData() const;
648
649 /**
650 Returns a reference to the character at position @e n.
651 */
652 wxUniCharRef GetWritableChar(size_t n);
653
654 /**
655 Returns a writable buffer of at least @a len bytes.
656 It returns a pointer to a new memory block, and the
657 existing data will not be copied.
658 Call UngetWriteBuf() as soon as possible to put the
659 string back into a reasonable state.
660 This method is deprecated, please use wxStringBuffer or
661 wxStringBufferLength instead.
662 */
663 wxStringCharType* GetWriteBuf(size_t len);
664
665 /**
666 Returns @true if the string contains only ASCII characters.
667 This is a wxWidgets 1.xx compatibility function; you should not use it in new
668 code.
669 */
670 bool IsAscii() const;
671
672 /**
673 Returns @true if the string is empty.
674 */
675 bool IsEmpty() const;
676
677 /**
678 Returns @true if the string is empty (same as wxString::IsEmpty).
679 This is a wxWidgets 1.xx compatibility function; you should not use it in new
680 code.
681 */
682 bool IsNull() const;
683
684 /**
685 Returns @true if the string is an integer (with possible sign).
686 This is a wxWidgets 1.xx compatibility function; you should not use it in new
687 code.
688 */
689 bool IsNumber() const;
690
691 //@{
692 /**
693 Test whether the string is equal to the single character @e c. The test is
694 case-sensitive if @a caseSensitive is @true (default) or not if it is @c
695 @false.
696 Returns @true if the string is equal to the character, @false otherwise.
697 See also Cmp(), CmpNoCase()
698 */
699 bool IsSameAs(const wxString &s, bool caseSensitive = true) const;
700 bool IsSameAs(wxUniChar ch, bool caseSensitive = true) const;
701 //@}
702
703 /**
704 Returns @true if the string is a word.
705 This is a wxWidgets 1.xx compatibility function; you should not use it in new
706 code.
707 */
708 bool IsWord() const;
709
710 //@{
711 /**
712 Returns a reference to the last character (writable).
713 This is a wxWidgets 1.xx compatibility function;
714 you should not use it in new code.
715 */
716 wxUniCharRef Last();
717 const wxUniChar Last();
718 //@}
719
720 /**
721 Returns the first @a count characters of the string.
722 */
723 wxString Left(size_t count) const;
724
725 /**
726 Returns the length of the string.
727 */
728 size_t Len() const;
729
730 /**
731 Returns the length of the string (same as Len).
732 This is a wxWidgets 1.xx compatibility function; you should not use it in new
733 code.
734 */
735 size_t Length() const;
736
737 /**
738 Returns this string converted to the lower case.
739 */
740 wxString Lower() const;
741
742 /**
743 Same as MakeLower.
744 This is a wxWidgets 1.xx compatibility function; you should not use it in new
745 code.
746 */
747 void LowerCase();
748
749 /**
750 Converts all characters to lower case and returns the result.
751 */
752 wxString& MakeLower();
753
754 /**
755 Converts all characters to upper case and returns the result.
756 */
757 wxString& MakeUpper();
758
759 /**
760 Returns @true if the string contents matches a mask containing '*' and '?'.
761 */
762 bool Matches(const wxString& mask) const;
763
764 /**
765 Returns a substring starting at @e first, with length @e count, or the rest of
766 the string if @a count is the default value.
767 */
768 wxString Mid(size_t first, size_t count = wxSTRING_MAXLEN) const;
769
770
771 /**
772 Adds @a count copies of @a pad to the beginning, or to the end of the
773 string (the default). Removes spaces from the left or from the right (default).
774 */
775 wxString& Pad(size_t count, wxUniChar pad = ' ',
776 bool fromRight = true);
777
778 /**
779 Prepends @a str to this string, returning a reference to this string.
780 */
781 wxString& Prepend(const wxString& str);
782
783 /**
784 Similar to the standard function @e sprintf(). Returns the number of
785 characters written, or an integer less than zero on error.
786 Note that if @c wxUSE_PRINTF_POS_PARAMS is set to 1, then this function supports
787 Unix98-style positional parameters:
788
789 @note This function will use a safe version of @e vsprintf() (usually called
790 @e vsnprintf()) whenever available to always allocate the buffer of correct
791 size. Unfortunately, this function is not available on all platforms and the
792 dangerous @e vsprintf() will be used then which may lead to buffer overflows.
793 */
794 int Printf(const wxChar* pszFormat, ...);
795
796 /**
797 Similar to vprintf. Returns the number of characters written, or an integer
798 less than zero
799 on error.
800 */
801 int PrintfV(const wxChar* pszFormat, va_list argPtr);
802
803 //@{
804 /**
805 Removes @a len characters from the string, starting at @e pos.
806 This is a wxWidgets 1.xx compatibility function; you should not use it in new
807 code.
808 */
809 wxString Remove(size_t pos);
810 wxString Remove(size_t pos, size_t len);
811 //@}
812
813 /**
814 Removes the last character.
815 */
816 wxString RemoveLast();
817
818 /**
819 Replace first (or all) occurrences of substring with another one.
820 @e replaceAll: global replace (default), or only the first occurrence.
821 Returns the number of replacements made.
822 */
823 size_t Replace(const wxString& strOld, const wxString& strNew,
824 bool replaceAll = true);
825
826 /**
827 Returns the last @a count characters.
828 */
829 wxString Right(size_t count) const;
830
831 /**
832 Sets the character at position @e n.
833 */
834 void SetChar(size_t n, wxUniChar ch);
835
836 /**
837 Minimizes the string's memory. This can be useful after a call to
838 Alloc() if too much memory were preallocated.
839 */
840 void Shrink();
841
842 /**
843 This function can be used to test if the string starts with the specified
844 @e prefix. If it does, the function will return @true and put the rest
845 of the string (i.e. after the prefix) into @a rest string if it is not
846 @NULL. Otherwise, the function returns @false and doesn't modify the
847 @e rest.
848 */
849 bool StartsWith(const wxString& prefix, wxString *rest = NULL) const;
850
851 /**
852 Strip characters at the front and/or end. The same as Trim except that it
853 doesn't change this string.
854 This is a wxWidgets 1.xx compatibility function; you should not use it in new
855 code.
856 */
857 wxString Strip(stripType s = trailing) const;
858
859 /**
860 Returns the part of the string between the indices @a from and @e to
861 inclusive.
862 This is a wxWidgets 1.xx compatibility function, use Mid()
863 instead (but note that parameters have different meaning).
864 */
865 wxString SubString(size_t from, size_t to) const;
866
867 //@{
868 /**
869 Converts the string to an 8-bit string in ISO-8859-1 encoding in the
870 form of a wxCharBuffer (Unicode builds only).
871
872 This is a convenience method useful when storing binary data in
873 wxString. It should be used @em only for this purpose. It is only valid
874 to call this method on strings created using From8BitData().
875
876 @since 2.8.4
877
878 @see wxString::From8BitData()
879 */
880 const char* To8BitData() const;
881 const wxCharBuffer To8BitData() const;
882 //@}
883
884 //@{
885 /**
886 Converts the string to an ASCII, 7-bit string in the form of
887 a wxCharBuffer (Unicode builds only) or a C string (ANSI builds).
888 Note that this conversion only works if the string contains only ASCII
889 characters. The @ref mbstr() mb_str method provides more
890 powerful means of converting wxString to C string.
891 */
892 const char* ToAscii() const;
893 const wxCharBuffer ToAscii() const;
894 //@}
895
896 /**
897 Attempts to convert the string to a floating point number. Returns @true on
898 success (the number is stored in the location pointed to by @e val) or @false
899 if the string does not represent such number (the value of @a val is not
900 modified in this case).
901
902 @see ToLong(), ToULong()
903 */
904 bool ToDouble(double val) const;
905
906 /**
907 Attempts to convert the string to a signed integer in base @e base. Returns
908 @true on success in which case the number is stored in the location
909 pointed to by @a val or @false if the string does not represent a
910 valid number in the given base (the value of @a val is not modified
911 in this case).
912 The value of @a base must be comprised between 2 and 36, inclusive, or
913 be a special value 0 which means that the usual rules of @c C numbers are
914 applied: if the number starts with @c 0x it is considered to be in base
915 16, if it starts with @c 0 - in base 8 and in base 10 otherwise. Note
916 that you may not want to specify the base 0 if you are parsing the numbers
917 which may have leading zeroes as they can yield unexpected (to the user not
918 familiar with C) results.
919
920 @see ToDouble(), ToULong()
921 */
922 bool ToLong(long val, int base = 10) const;
923
924 /**
925 This is exactly the same as ToLong() but works with 64
926 bit integer numbers.
927 Notice that currently it doesn't work (always returns @false) if parsing of 64
928 bit numbers is not supported by the underlying C run-time library. Compilers
929 with C99 support and Microsoft Visual C++ version 7 and higher do support this.
930
931 @see ToLong(), ToULongLong()
932 */
933 bool ToLongLong(wxLongLong_t val, int base = 10) const;
934
935 /**
936 Attempts to convert the string to an unsigned integer in base @e base.
937 Returns @true on success in which case the number is stored in the
938 location pointed to by @a val or @false if the string does not
939 represent a valid number in the given base (the value of @a val is not
940 modified in this case). Please notice that this function
941 behaves in the same way as the standard @c strtoul() and so it simply
942 converts negative numbers to unsigned representation instead of rejecting them
943 (e.g. -1 is returned as @c ULONG_MAX).
944 See ToLong() for the more detailed
945 description of the @a base parameter.
946
947 @see ToDouble(), ToLong()
948 */
949 bool ToULong(unsigned long val, int base = 10) const;
950
951 /**
952 This is exactly the same as ToULong() but works with 64
953 bit integer numbers.
954 Please see ToLongLong() for additional remarks.
955 */
956 bool ToULongLong(wxULongLong_t val, int base = 10) const;
957
958 //@{
959 /**
960 Same as utf8_str().
961 */
962 const char* ToUTF8() const;
963 const wxCharBuffer ToUF8() const;
964 //@}
965
966 /**
967 Removes white-space (space, tabs, form feed, newline and carriage return) from
968 the left or from the right end of the string (right is default).
969 */
970 wxString& Trim(bool fromRight = true);
971
972 /**
973 Truncate the string to the given length.
974 */
975 wxString& Truncate(size_t len);
976
977 //@{
978 /**
979 Puts the string back into a reasonable state (in which it can be used
980 normally), after
981 GetWriteBuf() was called.
982 The version of the function without the @a len parameter will calculate the
983 new string length itself assuming that the string is terminated by the first
984 @c NUL character in it while the second one will use the specified length
985 and thus is the only version which should be used with the strings with
986 embedded @c NULs (it is also slightly more efficient as @c strlen()
987 doesn't have to be called).
988 This method is deprecated, please use
989 wxStringBuffer or
990 wxStringBufferLength instead.
991 */
992 void UngetWriteBuf();
993 void UngetWriteBuf(size_t len);
994 //@}
995
996 /**
997 Returns this string converted to upper case.
998 */
999 wxString Upper() const;
1000
1001 /**
1002 The same as MakeUpper.
1003 This is a wxWidgets 1.xx compatibility function; you should not use it in new
1004 code.
1005 */
1006 void UpperCase();
1007
1008 /**
1009 Returns a pointer to the string data (@c const char* when using UTF-8
1010 internally, @c const wchar_t* when using UCS-2 internally).
1011
1012 Note that the returned value is not convertible to @c char* or
1013 @c wchar_t*, use char_str() or wchar_str() if you need to pass
1014 string value to a function expecting non-const pointer.
1015 */
1016 const wxCStrData c_str() const;
1017
1018 /**
1019 Returns an object with string data that is implicitly convertible to
1020 @c char* pointer. Note that any change to the returned buffer is lost and so
1021 this function is only usable for passing strings to legacy libraries that
1022 don't have const-correct API. Use wxStringBuffer if you want to modify
1023 the string.
1024
1025 @see c_str()
1026 */
1027 wxWritableCharBuffer char_str(const wxMBConv& conv = wxConvLibc) const;
1028
1029 /**
1030 Returns buffer of the specified type containing the string data.
1031
1032 This method is only useful in template code, otherwise you should
1033 directly call mb_str() or wc_str() if you need to retrieve a narrow or
1034 wide string from this wxString. The template parameter @a t should be
1035 either @c char or @c wchar_t.
1036
1037 Notice that retrieving a char buffer in UTF-8 build will return the
1038 internal string representation in UTF-8 while in wchar_t build the char
1039 buffer will contain the conversion of the string to the encoding of the
1040 current locale (and so can fail).
1041
1042 @param len If non-@NULL, filled with the length of the returned buffer.
1043 @return
1044 buffer containing the string contents in the specified type,
1045 notice that it may be @NULL if the conversion failed (e.g. Unicode
1046 string couldn't be converted to the current encoding when @a T is
1047 @c char).
1048 */
1049 template <typename T>
1050 wxCharTypeBuffer<T> tchar_str(size_t *len = NULL) const;
1051
1052 //@{
1053 /**
1054 Returns string representation suitable for passing to OS' functions
1055 for file handling.
1056 */
1057 const wchar_t* fn_str() const;
1058 const char* fn_str() const;
1059 const wxCharBuffer fn_str() const;
1060 //@}
1061
1062 //@{
1063 /**
1064 Returns multibyte (C string) representation of the string.
1065 In Unicode build, converts using @e conv's wxMBConv::cWC2MB
1066 method and returns wxCharBuffer. In ANSI build, this function
1067 is same as c_str().
1068 The macro wxWX2MBbuf is defined as the correct return type (without const).
1069
1070 @see wxMBConv, c_str(), wc_str(), fn_str(), char_str()
1071 */
1072 const char* mb_str(const wxMBConv& conv = wxConvLibc) const;
1073 const wxCharBuffer mb_str(const wxMBConv& conv = wxConvLibc) const;
1074 //@}
1075
1076 /**
1077 Extraction from a stream.
1078 */
1079 friend istream operator(istream& is, wxString& str);
1080
1081 //@{
1082 /**
1083 These functions work as C++ stream insertion operators: they insert the given
1084 value into the string. Precision or format cannot be set using them, you can
1085 use Printf() for this.
1086 */
1087 wxString operator(const wxString& str);
1088 wxString operator(wxUniChar ch);
1089 wxString operator(int i);
1090 wxString operator(float f);
1091 wxString operator(double d);
1092 //@}
1093
1094 /**
1095 Same as Mid (substring extraction).
1096 */
1097 wxString operator ()(size_t start, size_t len);
1098
1099 //@{
1100 /**
1101 Concatenation: these operators return a new string equal to the
1102 concatenation of the operands.
1103 */
1104 wxString operator +(const wxString& x, const wxString& y);
1105 wxString operator +(const wxString& x, wxUniChar y);
1106 //@}
1107
1108 //@{
1109 /**
1110 Concatenation in place: the argument is appended to the string.
1111 */
1112 void operator +=(const wxString& str);
1113 void operator +=(wxUniChar c);
1114 //@}
1115
1116 //@{
1117 /**
1118 Assignment: the effect of each operation is the same as for the corresponding
1119 constructor (see @ref construct() "wxString constructors").
1120 */
1121 wxString operator =(const wxString& str);
1122 wxString operator =(wxUniChar c);
1123 //@}
1124
1125 //@{
1126 /**
1127 Element extraction.
1128 */
1129 wxUniChar operator [](size_t i) const;
1130 wxUniCharRef operator [](size_t i);
1131 //@}
1132
1133 /**
1134 Empty string is @false, so !string will only return @true if the
1135 string is empty.
1136
1137 See also IsEmpty().
1138 */
1139 bool operator!() const;
1140
1141
1142 //@{
1143 /**
1144 Converts the strings contents to UTF-8 and returns it either as a
1145 temporary wxCharBuffer object or as a pointer to the internal
1146 string contents in UTF-8 build.
1147 */
1148 const char* utf8_str() const;
1149 const wxCharBuffer utf8_str() const;
1150 //@}
1151
1152 //@{
1153 /**
1154 Converts the strings contents to the wide character represention
1155 and returns it as a temporary wxWCharBuffer object or returns a
1156 pointer to the internal string contents in wide character mode.
1157
1158 The macro wxWX2WCbuf is defined as the correct return
1159 type (without const).
1160
1161 @see wxMBConv, c_str(), mb_str(), fn_str(), wchar_str()
1162 */
1163 const wchar_t* wc_str() const;
1164 const wxWCharBuffer wc_str() const;
1165 //@}
1166
1167 /**
1168 Returns an object with string data that is implicitly convertible to
1169 @c char* pointer. Note that changes to the returned buffer may or may
1170 not be lost (depending on the build) and so this function is only usable for
1171 passing strings to legacy libraries that don't have const-correct API. Use
1172 wxStringBuffer if you want to modify the string.
1173
1174 @see mb_str(), wc_str(), fn_str(), c_str(), char_str()
1175 */
1176 wxWritableWCharBuffer wchar_str() const;
1177
1178 /**
1179 @name Iterator interface
1180
1181 These methods return iterators to the beginnnig or
1182 end of the string.
1183 */
1184 //@{
1185 const_iterator begin() const;
1186 iterator begin();
1187 const_iterator end() const;
1188 iterator end();
1189
1190 const_reverse_iterator rbegin() const;
1191 reverse_iterator rbegin();
1192 const_reverse_iterator rend() const;
1193 reverse_iterator rend();
1194 //@}
1195
1196 /**
1197 @name STL interface
1198
1199 The supported STL functions are listed here. Please see any
1200 STL reference for their documentation.
1201 */
1202 //@{
1203 size_t length() const;
1204 size_type size() const;
1205 size_type max_size() const;
1206 size_type capacity() const;
1207 void reserve(size_t sz);
1208
1209 void resize(size_t nSize, wxUniChar ch = '\0');
1210
1211 wxString& append(const wxString& str, size_t pos, size_t n);
1212 wxString& append(const wxString& str);
1213 wxString& append(const char *sz, size_t n);
1214 wxString& append(const wchar_t *sz, size_t n);
1215 wxString& append(size_t n, wxUniChar ch);
1216 wxString& append(const_iterator first, const_iterator last);
1217
1218 wxString& assign(const wxString& str, size_t pos, size_t n);
1219 wxString& assign(const wxString& str);
1220 wxString& assign(const char *sz, size_t n);
1221 wxString& assign(const wchar_t *sz, size_t n);
1222 wxString& assign(size_t n, wxUniChar ch);
1223 wxString& assign(const_iterator first, const_iterator last);
1224
1225 void clear();
1226
1227 int compare(const wxString& str) const;
1228 int compare(size_t nStart, size_t nLen, const wxString& str) const;
1229 int compare(size_t nStart, size_t nLen,
1230 const wxString& str, size_t nStart2, size_t nLen2) const;
1231 int compare(size_t nStart, size_t nLen,
1232 const char* sz, size_t nCount = npos) const;
1233 int compare(size_t nStart, size_t nLen,
1234 const wchar_t* sz, size_t nCount = npos) const;
1235
1236 bool empty() const;
1237
1238 wxString& erase(size_type pos = 0, size_type n = npos);
1239 iterator erase(iterator first, iterator last);
1240 iterator erase(iterator first);
1241
1242 size_t find(const wxString& str, size_t nStart = 0) const;
1243 size_t find(const char* sz, size_t nStart = 0, size_t n = npos) const;
1244 size_t find(const wchar_t* sz, size_t nStart = 0, size_t n = npos) const;
1245 size_t find(wxUniChar ch, size_t nStart = 0) const;
1246
1247 wxString& insert(size_t nPos, const wxString& str);
1248 wxString& insert(size_t nPos, const wxString& str, size_t nStart, size_t n);
1249 wxString& insert(size_t nPos, const char *sz, size_t n);
1250 wxString& insert(size_t nPos, const wchar_t *sz, size_t n);
1251 wxString& insert(size_t nPos, size_t n, wxUniChar ch);
1252 iterator insert(iterator it, wxUniChar ch);
1253 void insert(iterator it, const_iterator first, const_iterator last);
1254 void insert(iterator it, size_type n, wxUniChar ch);
1255
1256 wxString& replace(size_t nStart, size_t nLen, const wxString& str);
1257 wxString& replace(size_t nStart, size_t nLen, size_t nCount, wxUniChar ch);
1258 wxString& replace(size_t nStart, size_t nLen,
1259 const wxString& str, size_t nStart2, size_t nLen2);
1260 wxString& replace(size_t nStart, size_t nLen,
1261 const char* sz, size_t nCount);
1262 wxString& replace(size_t nStart, size_t nLen,
1263 const wchar_t* sz, size_t nCount);
1264 wxString& replace(size_t nStart, size_t nLen,
1265 const wxString& s, size_t nCount);
1266 wxString& replace(iterator first, iterator last, const wxString& s);
1267 wxString& replace(iterator first, iterator last, const char* s, size_type n);
1268 wxString& replace(iterator first, iterator last, const wchar_t* s, size_type n);
1269 wxString& replace(iterator first, iterator last, size_type n, wxUniChar ch);
1270 wxString& replace(iterator first, iterator last,
1271 const_iterator first1, const_iterator last1);
1272 wxString& replace(iterator first, iterator last,
1273 const char *first1, const char *last1);
1274 wxString& replace(iterator first, iterator last,
1275 const wchar_t *first1, const wchar_t *last1);
1276
1277 size_t rfind(const wxString& str, size_t nStart = npos) const;
1278 size_t rfind(const char* sz, size_t nStart = npos, size_t n = npos) const;
1279 size_t rfind(const wchar_t* sz, size_t nStart = npos, size_t n = npos) const;
1280 size_t rfind(wxUniChar ch, size_t nStart = npos) const;
1281
1282 wxString substr(size_t nStart = 0, size_t nLen = npos) const;
1283
1284 void swap(wxString& str);
1285
1286 //@}
1287
1288 };
1289
1290
1291 /**
1292 FIXME
1293 */
1294 wxString Objects:
1295 ;
1296
1297 /**
1298 FIXME
1299 */
1300 wxString wxEmptyString;
1301
1302
1303
1304
1305 /**
1306 @class wxStringBufferLength
1307 @wxheader{string.h}
1308
1309 This tiny class allows to conveniently access the wxString
1310 internal buffer as a writable pointer without any risk of forgetting to restore
1311 the string to the usable state later, and allows the user to set the internal
1312 length of the string.
1313
1314 For example, assuming you have a low-level OS function called
1315 @c int GetMeaningOfLifeAsString(char *) copying the value in the provided
1316 buffer (which must be writable, of course), and returning the actual length
1317 of the string, you might call it like this:
1318
1319 @code
1320 wxString theAnswer;
1321 wxStringBuffer theAnswerBuffer(theAnswer, 1024);
1322 int nLength = GetMeaningOfLifeAsString(theAnswerBuffer);
1323 theAnswerBuffer.SetLength(nLength);
1324 if ( theAnswer != "42" )
1325 {
1326 wxLogError("Something is very wrong!");
1327 }
1328 @endcode
1329
1330 Note that the exact usage of this depends on whether on not wxUSE_STL is
1331 enabled. If
1332 wxUSE_STL is enabled, wxStringBuffer creates a separate empty character buffer,
1333 and
1334 if wxUSE_STL is disabled, it uses GetWriteBuf() from wxString, keeping the same
1335 buffer
1336 wxString uses intact. In other words, relying on wxStringBuffer containing the
1337 old
1338 wxString data is probably not a good idea if you want to build your program in
1339 both
1340 with and without wxUSE_STL.
1341
1342 Note that SetLength @c must be called before wxStringBufferLength destructs.
1343
1344 @library{wxbase}
1345 @category{FIXME}
1346 */
1347 class wxStringBufferLength
1348 {
1349 public:
1350 /**
1351 Constructs a writable string buffer object associated with the given string
1352 and containing enough space for at least @a len characters. Basically, this
1353 is equivalent to calling wxString::GetWriteBuf and
1354 saving the result.
1355 */
1356 wxStringBufferLength(const wxString& str, size_t len);
1357
1358 /**
1359 Restores the string passed to the constructor to the usable state by calling
1360 wxString::UngetWriteBuf on it.
1361 */
1362 ~wxStringBufferLength();
1363
1364 /**
1365 Sets the internal length of the string referred to by wxStringBufferLength to
1366 @a nLength characters.
1367 Must be called before wxStringBufferLength destructs.
1368 */
1369 void SetLength(size_t nLength);
1370
1371 /**
1372 Returns the writable pointer to a buffer of the size at least equal to the
1373 length specified in the constructor.
1374 */
1375 wxChar* operator wxChar *();
1376 };
1377