]> git.saurik.com Git - wxWidgets.git/blob - docs/latex/wx/tstring.tex
Added 'full' param to wxFileName::Mkdir to make all directories in a path,
[wxWidgets.git] / docs / latex / wx / tstring.tex
1 \section{wxString overview}\label{wxstringoverview}
2
3 Classes: \helpref{wxString}{wxstring}, \helpref{wxArrayString}{wxarraystring}, \helpref{wxStringTokenizer}{wxstringtokenizer}
4
5 \subsection{Introduction}
6
7 wxString is a class which represents a character string of arbitrary length (limited by
8 {\it MAX\_INT} which is usually 2147483647 on 32 bit machines) and containing
9 arbitrary characters. The ASCII NUL character is allowed, although care should be
10 taken when passing strings containing it to other functions.
11
12 wxString works with both ASCII (8 bit characters) as well as UNICODE (16 but
13 characters) strings.
14
15 This class has all the standard operations you can expect to find in a string class:
16 dynamic memory management (string extends to accommodate new characters),
17 construction from other strings, C strings and characters, assignment operators,
18 access to individual characters, string concatenation and comparison, substring
19 extraction, case conversion, trimming and padding (with spaces), searching and
20 replacing and both C-like \helpref{Printf()}{wxstringprintf} and stream-like
21 insertion functions as well as much more - see \helpref{wxString}{wxstring}
22 for a list of all functions.
23
24 \subsection{Comparison of wxString to other string classes}
25
26 The advantages of using a special string class instead of working directly with
27 C strings are so obvious that there is a huge number of such classes available.
28 The most important advantage is the need to always
29 remember to allocate/free memory for C strings; working with fixed size buffers almost
30 inevitably leads to buffer overflows. At last, C++ has a standard string class
31 (std::string). So why the need for wxString?
32
33 There are several advantages:
34
35 \begin{enumerate}\itemsep=0pt
36 \item {\bf Efficiency} This class was made to be as efficient as possible: both
37 in terms of size (each wxString objects takes exactly the same space as a {\it
38 char *} pointer, sing \helpref{reference counting}{wxstringrefcount}) and speed.
39 It also provides performance \helpref{statistics gathering code}{wxstringtuning}
40 which may be enabled to fine tune the memory allocation strategy for your
41 particular application - and the gain might be quite big.
42 \item {\bf Compatibility} This class tries to combine almost full compatibility
43 with the old wxWindows 1.xx wxString class, some reminiscence to MFC CString
44 class and 90\% of the functionality of std::string class.
45 \item {\bf Rich set of functions} Some of the functions present in wxString are
46 very useful but don't exist in most of other string classes: for example,
47 \helpref{AfterFirst}{wxstringafterfirst},
48 \helpref{BeforeLast}{wxstringbeforelast}, \helpref{operator<<}{wxstringoperatorout}
49 or \helpref{Printf}{wxstringprintf}. Of course, all the standard string
50 operations are supported as well.
51 \item {\bf UNICODE} In this release, wxString only supports {\it construction} from
52 a UNICODE string, but in the next one it will be capable of also storing its
53 internal data in either ASCII or UNICODE format.
54 \item {\bf Used by wxWindows} And, of course, this class is used everywhere
55 inside wxWindows so there is no performance loss which would result from
56 conversions of objects of any other string class (including std::string) to
57 wxString internally by wxWindows.
58 \end{enumerate}
59
60 However, there are several problems as well. The most important one is probably
61 that there are often several functions to do exactly the same thing: for
62 example, to get the length of the string either one of
63 length(), \helpref{Len()}{wxstringlen} or
64 \helpref{Length()}{wxstringlength} may be used. The first function, as almost
65 all the other functions in lowercase, is std::string compatible. The second one
66 is "native" wxString version and the last one is wxWindows 1.xx way. So the
67 question is: which one is better to use? And the answer is that:
68
69 {\bf The usage of std::string compatible functions is strongly advised!} It will
70 both make your code more familiar to other C++ programmers (who are supposed to
71 have knowledge of std::string but not of wxString), let you reuse the same code
72 in both wxWindows and other programs (by just typedefing wxString as std::string
73 when used outside wxWindows) and by staying compatible with future versions of
74 wxWindows which will probably start using std::string sooner or later too.
75
76 In the situations where there is no corresponding std::string function, please
77 try to use the new wxString methods and not the old wxWindows 1.xx variants
78 which are deprecated and may disappear in future versions.
79
80 \subsection{Some advice about using wxString}\label{wxstringadvices}
81
82 Probably the main trap with using this class is the implicit conversion operator to
83 {\it const char *}. It is advised that you use \helpref{c\_str()}{wxstringcstr}
84 instead to clearly indicate when the conversion is done. Specifically, the
85 danger of this implicit conversion may be seen in the following code fragment:
86
87 \begin{verbatim}
88 // this function converts the input string to uppercase, output it to the screen
89 // and returns the result
90 const char *SayHELLO(const wxString& input)
91 {
92 wxString output = input.Upper();
93
94 printf("Hello, %s!\n", output);
95
96 return output;
97 }
98 \end{verbatim}
99
100 There are two nasty bugs in these three lines. First of them is in the call to the
101 {\it printf()} function. Although the implicit conversion to C strings is applied
102 automatically by the compiler in the case of
103
104 \begin{verbatim}
105 puts(output);
106 \end{verbatim}
107
108 because the argument of {\it puts()} is known to be of the type {\it const char *},
109 this is {\bf not} done for {\it printf()} which is a function with variable
110 number of arguments (and whose arguments are of unknown types). So this call may
111 do anything at all (including displaying the correct string on screen), although
112 the most likely result is a program crash. The solution is to use
113 \helpref{c\_str()}{wxstringcstr}: just replace this line with
114
115 \begin{verbatim}
116 printf("Hello, %s!\n", output.c_str());
117 \end{verbatim}
118
119 The second bug is that returning {\it output} doesn't work. The implicit cast is
120 used again, so the code compiles, but as it returns a pointer to a buffer
121 belonging to a local variable which is deleted as soon as the function exits,
122 its contents is totally arbitrary. The solution to this problem is also easy:
123 just make the function return wxString instead of a C string.
124
125 This leads us to the following general advice: all functions taking string
126 arguments should take {\it const wxString\&} (this makes assignment to the
127 strings inside the function faster because of
128 \helpref{reference counting}{wxstringrefcount}) and all functions returning
129 strings should return {\it wxString} - this makes it safe to return local
130 variables.
131
132 \subsection{Other string related functions and classes}
133
134 As most programs use character strings, the standard C library provides quite a
135 few functions to work with them. Unfortunately, some of them have rather
136 counter-intuitive behaviour (like strncpy() which doesn't always terminate the resulting
137 string with a NULL) and are in general not very safe (passing NULL to them will
138 probably lead to program crash). Moreover, some very useful functions are not
139 standard at all. This is why in addition to all wxString functions, there are
140 also a few global string functions which try to correct these problems:
141 \helpref{IsEmpty()}{IsEmpty} verifies whether the string is empty (returning
142 TRUE for NULL pointers), \helpref{Strlen()}{Strlen} also handles NULLs correctly
143 and returns 0 for them and \helpref{Stricmp()}{Stricmp} is just a
144 platform-independent version of case-insensitive string comparison function
145 known either as stricmp() or strcasecmp() on different platforms.
146
147 The {\tt <wx/string.h>} header also defines \helpref{wxSnprintf}{wxsnprintf}
148 and \helpref{wxVsnprintf}{wxvsnprintf} functions which should be used instead
149 of the inherently dangerous standard {\tt sprintf()} and which use {\tt
150 snprintf()} instead which does buffer size checks whenever possible. Of
151 course, you may also use \helpref{wxString::Printf}{wxstringprintf} which is
152 also safe.
153
154 There is another class which might be useful when working with wxString:
155 \helpref{wxStringTokenizer}{wxstringtokenizer}. It is helpful when a string must
156 be broken into tokens and replaces the standard C library {\it
157 strtok()} function.
158
159 And the very last string-related class is \helpref{wxArrayString}{wxarraystring}: it
160 is just a version of the "template" dynamic array class which is specialized to work
161 with strings. Please note that this class is specially optimized (using its
162 knowledge of the internal structure of wxString) for storing strings and so it is
163 vastly better from a performance point of view than a wxObjectArray of wxStrings.
164
165 \subsection{Reference counting and why you shouldn't care about it}\label{wxstringrefcount}
166
167 wxString objects use a technique known as {\it copy on write} (COW). This means
168 that when a string is assigned to another, no copying really takes place: only
169 the reference count on the shared string data is incremented and both strings
170 share the same data.
171
172 But as soon as one of the two (or more) strings is modified, the data has to be
173 copied because the changes to one of the strings shouldn't be seen in the
174 others. As data copying only happens when the string is written to, this is
175 known as COW.
176
177 What is important to understand is that all this happens absolutely
178 transparently to the class users and that whether a string is shared or not is
179 not seen from the outside of the class - in any case, the result of any
180 operation on it is the same.
181
182 Probably the unique case when you might want to think about reference
183 counting is when a string character is taken from a string which is not a
184 constant (or a constant reference). In this case, due to C++ rules, the
185 "read-only" {\it operator[]} (which is the same as
186 \helpref{GetChar()}{wxstringgetchar}) cannot be chosen and the "read/write"
187 {\it operator[]} (the same as
188 \helpref{GetWritableChar()}{wxstringgetwritablechar}) is used instead. As the
189 call to this operator may modify the string, its data is unshared (COW is done)
190 and so if the string was really shared there is some performance loss (both in
191 terms of speed and memory consumption). In the rare cases when this may be
192 important, you might prefer using \helpref{GetChar()}{wxstringgetchar} instead
193 of the array subscript operator for this reasons. Please note that
194 \helpref{at()}{wxstringat} method has the same problem as the subscript operator in
195 this situation and so using it is not really better. Also note that if all
196 string arguments to your functions are passed as {\it const wxString\&} (see the
197 section \helpref{Some advice}{wxstringadvices}) this situation will almost
198 never arise because for constant references the correct operator is called automatically.
199
200 \subsection{Tuning wxString for your application}\label{wxstringtuning}
201
202 \normalbox{{\bf Note:} this section is strictly about performance issues and is
203 absolutely not necessary to read for using wxString class. Please skip it unless
204 you feel familiar with profilers and relative tools. If you do read it, please
205 also read the preceding section about
206 \helpref{reference counting}{wxstringrefcount}.}
207
208 For the performance reasons wxString doesn't allocate exactly the amount of
209 memory needed for each string. Instead, it adds a small amount of space to each
210 allocated block which allows it to not reallocate memory (a relatively
211 expensive operation) too often as when, for example, a string is constructed by
212 subsequently adding one character at a time to it, as for example in:
213
214 \begin{verbatim}
215 // delete all vowels from the string
216 wxString DeleteAllVowels(const wxString& original)
217 {
218 wxString result;
219
220 size_t len = original.length();
221 for ( size_t n = 0; n < len; n++ )
222 {
223 if ( strchr("aeuio", tolower(original[n])) == NULL )
224 result += original[n];
225 }
226
227 return result;
228 }
229 \end{verbatim}
230
231 This is quite a common situation and not allocating extra memory at all would
232 lead to very bad performance in this case because there would be as many memory
233 (re)allocations as there are consonants in the original string. Allocating too
234 much extra memory would help to improve the speed in this situation, but due to
235 a great number of wxString objects typically used in a program would also
236 increase the memory consumption too much.
237
238 The very best solution in precisely this case would be to use
239 \helpref{Alloc()}{wxstringalloc} function to preallocate, for example, len bytes
240 from the beginning - this will lead to exactly one memory allocation being
241 performed (because the result is at most as long as the original string).
242
243 However, using Alloc() is tedious and so wxString tries to do its best. The
244 default algorithm assumes that memory allocation is done in granularity of at
245 least 16 bytes (which is the case on almost all of wide-spread platforms) and so
246 nothing is lost if the amount of memory to allocate is rounded up to the next
247 multiple of 16. Like this, no memory is lost and 15 iterations from 16 in the
248 example above won't allocate memory but use the already allocated pool.
249
250 The default approach is quite conservative. Allocating more memory may bring
251 important performance benefits for programs using (relatively) few very long
252 strings. The amount of memory allocated is configured by the setting of {\it
253 EXTRA\_ALLOC} in the file string.cpp during compilation (be sure to understand
254 why its default value is what it is before modifying it!). You may try setting
255 it to greater amount (say twice nLen) or to 0 (to see performance degradation
256 which will follow) and analyse the impact of it on your program. If you do it,
257 you will probably find it helpful to also define WXSTRING\_STATISTICS symbol
258 which tells the wxString class to collect performance statistics and to show
259 them on stderr on program termination. This will show you the average length of
260 strings your program manipulates, their average initial length and also the
261 percent of times when memory wasn't reallocated when string concatenation was
262 done but the already preallocated memory was used (this value should be about
263 98\% for the default allocation policy, if it is less than 90\% you should
264 really consider fine tuning wxString for your application).
265
266 It goes without saying that a profiler should be used to measure the precise
267 difference the change to EXTRA\_ALLOC makes to your program.
268