/////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
-// Name: string
+// Name: string.h
// Purpose: topic overview
// Author: wxWidgets team
// RCS-ID: $Id$
// Licence: wxWindows license
/////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
-/*!
-
- @page string_overview wxString overview
-
- Classes: #wxString, #wxArrayString, #wxStringTokenizer
- #Introduction
- @ref otherstringclasses_overview
- @ref stringadvices_overview
- @ref relatedtostring_overview
- @ref stringrefcount_overview
- @ref stringtuning_overview
-
-
- @section introductiontowxstring Introduction
-
- wxString is a class which represents a character string of arbitrary length (limited by
- @e MAX_INT which is usually 2147483647 on 32 bit machines) and containing
- arbitrary characters. The ASCII NUL character is allowed, but be aware that
- in the current string implementation some methods might not work correctly
- in this case.
- wxString works with both ASCII (traditional, 7 or 8 bit, characters) as well as
- Unicode (wide characters) strings.
- This class has all the standard operations you can expect to find in a string class:
- dynamic memory management (string extends to accommodate new characters),
- construction from other strings, C strings and characters, assignment operators,
- access to individual characters, string concatenation and comparison, substring
- extraction, case conversion, trimming and padding (with spaces), searching and
- replacing and both C-like #Printf() and stream-like
- insertion functions as well as much more - see #wxString
- for a list of all functions.
-
- @section otherstringclasses Comparison of wxString to other string classes
-
- The advantages of using a special string class instead of working directly with
- C strings are so obvious that there is a huge number of such classes available.
- The most important advantage is the need to always
- remember to allocate/free memory for C strings; working with fixed size buffers almost
- inevitably leads to buffer overflows. At last, C++ has a standard string class
- (std::string). So why the need for wxString?
- There are several advantages:
-
-
- @b Efficiency This class was made to be as efficient as possible: both
- in terms of size (each wxString objects takes exactly the same space as a @e char * pointer, sing @ref stringrefcount_overview) and speed.
- It also provides performance @ref stringtuning_overview
- which may be enabled to fine tune the memory allocation strategy for your
- particular application - and the gain might be quite big.
- @b Compatibility This class tries to combine almost full compatibility
- with the old wxWidgets 1.xx wxString class, some reminiscence to MFC CString
- class and 90% of the functionality of std::string class.
- @b Rich set of functions Some of the functions present in wxString are
- very useful but don't exist in most of other string classes: for example,
- #AfterFirst,
- #BeforeLast, #operator
- or #Printf. Of course, all the standard string
- operations are supported as well.
- @b Unicode wxString is Unicode friendly: it allows to easily convert
- to and from ANSI and Unicode strings in any build mode (see the
- @ref unicode_overview for more details) and maps to either
- @c string or @c wstring transparently depending on the current mode.
- @b Used by wxWidgets And, of course, this class is used everywhere
- inside wxWidgets so there is no performance loss which would result from
- conversions of objects of any other string class (including std::string) to
- wxString internally by wxWidgets.
-
-
- However, there are several problems as well. The most important one is probably
- that there are often several functions to do exactly the same thing: for
- example, to get the length of the string either one of
- length(), #Len() or
- #Length() may be used. The first function, as almost
- all the other functions in lowercase, is std::string compatible. The second one
- is "native" wxString version and the last one is wxWidgets 1.xx way. So the
- question is: which one is better to use? And the answer is that:
- @b The usage of std::string compatible functions is strongly advised! It will
- both make your code more familiar to other C++ programmers (who are supposed to
- have knowledge of std::string but not of wxString), let you reuse the same code
- in both wxWidgets and other programs (by just typedefing wxString as std::string
- when used outside wxWidgets) and by staying compatible with future versions of
- wxWidgets which will probably start using std::string sooner or later too.
- In the situations where there is no corresponding std::string function, please
- try to use the new wxString methods and not the old wxWidgets 1.xx variants
- which are deprecated and may disappear in future versions.
-
- @section wxstringadvices Some advice about using wxString
-
- Probably the main trap with using this class is the implicit conversion operator to
- @e const char *. It is advised that you use #c_str()
- instead to clearly indicate when the conversion is done. Specifically, the
- danger of this implicit conversion may be seen in the following code fragment:
-
- @code
- // this function converts the input string to uppercase, output it to the screen
- // and returns the result
- const char *SayHELLO(const wxString& input)
- {
- wxString output = input.Upper();
-
- printf("Hello, %s!\n", output);
-
- return output;
- }
- @endcode
-
- There are two nasty bugs in these three lines. First of them is in the call to the
- @e printf() function. Although the implicit conversion to C strings is applied
- automatically by the compiler in the case of
-
- @code
- puts(output);
- @endcode
-
- because the argument of @e puts() is known to be of the type @e const char *,
- this is @b not done for @e printf() which is a function with variable
- number of arguments (and whose arguments are of unknown types). So this call may
- do anything at all (including displaying the correct string on screen), although
- the most likely result is a program crash. The solution is to use
- #c_str(): just replace this line with
-
- @code
- printf("Hello, %s!\n", output.c_str());
- @endcode
-
- The second bug is that returning @e output doesn't work. The implicit cast is
- used again, so the code compiles, but as it returns a pointer to a buffer
- belonging to a local variable which is deleted as soon as the function exits,
- its contents is totally arbitrary. The solution to this problem is also easy:
- just make the function return wxString instead of a C string.
- This leads us to the following general advice: all functions taking string
- arguments should take @e const wxString (this makes assignment to the
- strings inside the function faster because of
- @ref stringrefcount_overview) and all functions returning
- strings should return @e wxString - this makes it safe to return local
- variables.
-
- @section relatedtostring Other string related functions and classes
-
- As most programs use character strings, the standard C library provides quite
- a few functions to work with them. Unfortunately, some of them have rather
- counter-intuitive behaviour (like strncpy() which doesn't always terminate the
- resulting string with a @NULL) and are in general not very safe (passing @NULL
- to them will probably lead to program crash). Moreover, some very useful
- functions are not standard at all. This is why in addition to all wxString
- functions, there are also a few global string functions which try to correct
- these problems: #wxIsEmpty() verifies whether the string
- is empty (returning @true for @NULL pointers),
- #wxStrlen() also handles @NULLs correctly and returns 0 for
- them and #wxStricmp() is just a platform-independent
- version of case-insensitive string comparison function known either as
- stricmp() or strcasecmp() on different platforms.
- The @c wx/string.h header also defines #wxSnprintf
- and #wxVsnprintf functions which should be used instead
- of the inherently dangerous standard @c sprintf() and which use @c snprintf() instead which does buffer size checks whenever possible. Of
- course, you may also use wxString::Printf which is
- also safe.
- There is another class which might be useful when working with wxString:
- #wxStringTokenizer. It is helpful when a string must
- be broken into tokens and replaces the standard C library @e strtok() function.
- And the very last string-related class is #wxArrayString: it
- is just a version of the "template" dynamic array class which is specialized to work
- with strings. Please note that this class is specially optimized (using its
- knowledge of the internal structure of wxString) for storing strings and so it is
- vastly better from a performance point of view than a wxObjectArray of wxStrings.
-
- @section wxstringrefcount Reference counting and why you shouldn't care about it
-
- All considerations for wxObject-derived @ref trefcount_overview objects
- are valid also for wxString, even if it does not derive from wxObject.
- Probably the unique case when you might want to think about reference
- counting is when a string character is taken from a string which is not a
- constant (or a constant reference). In this case, due to C++ rules, the
- "read-only" @e operator[] (which is the same as
- #GetChar()) cannot be chosen and the "read/write"
- @e operator[] (the same as
- #GetWritableChar()) is used instead. As the
- call to this operator may modify the string, its data is unshared (COW is done)
- and so if the string was really shared there is some performance loss (both in
- terms of speed and memory consumption). In the rare cases when this may be
- important, you might prefer using #GetChar() instead
- of the array subscript operator for this reasons. Please note that
- #at() method has the same problem as the subscript operator in
- this situation and so using it is not really better. Also note that if all
- string arguments to your functions are passed as @e const wxString (see the
- section @ref stringadvices_overview) this situation will almost
- never arise because for constant references the correct operator is called automatically.
-
- @section wxstringtuning Tuning wxString for your application
-
-
- @b Note: this section is strictly about performance issues and is
- absolutely not necessary to read for using wxString class. Please skip it unless
- you feel familiar with profilers and relative tools. If you do read it, please
- also read the preceding section about
- @ref stringrefcount_overview.
-
- For the performance reasons wxString doesn't allocate exactly the amount of
- memory needed for each string. Instead, it adds a small amount of space to each
- allocated block which allows it to not reallocate memory (a relatively
- expensive operation) too often as when, for example, a string is constructed by
- subsequently adding one character at a time to it, as for example in:
-
- @code
- // delete all vowels from the string
- wxString DeleteAllVowels(const wxString& original)
- {
- wxString result;
-
- size_t len = original.length();
- for ( size_t n = 0; n len; n++ )
- {
- if ( strchr("aeuio", tolower(original[n])) == @NULL )
- result += original[n];
- }
-
- return result;
- }
- @endcode
-
- This is quite a common situation and not allocating extra memory at all would
- lead to very bad performance in this case because there would be as many memory
- (re)allocations as there are consonants in the original string. Allocating too
- much extra memory would help to improve the speed in this situation, but due to
- a great number of wxString objects typically used in a program would also
- increase the memory consumption too much.
- The very best solution in precisely this case would be to use
- #Alloc() function to preallocate, for example, len bytes
- from the beginning - this will lead to exactly one memory allocation being
- performed (because the result is at most as long as the original string).
- However, using Alloc() is tedious and so wxString tries to do its best. The
- default algorithm assumes that memory allocation is done in granularity of at
- least 16 bytes (which is the case on almost all of wide-spread platforms) and so
- nothing is lost if the amount of memory to allocate is rounded up to the next
- multiple of 16. Like this, no memory is lost and 15 iterations from 16 in the
- example above won't allocate memory but use the already allocated pool.
- The default approach is quite conservative. Allocating more memory may bring
- important performance benefits for programs using (relatively) few very long
- strings. The amount of memory allocated is configured by the setting of @e EXTRA_ALLOC in the file string.cpp during compilation (be sure to understand
- why its default value is what it is before modifying it!). You may try setting
- it to greater amount (say twice nLen) or to 0 (to see performance degradation
- which will follow) and analyse the impact of it on your program. If you do it,
- you will probably find it helpful to also define WXSTRING_STATISTICS symbol
- which tells the wxString class to collect performance statistics and to show
- them on stderr on program termination. This will show you the average length of
- strings your program manipulates, their average initial length and also the
- percent of times when memory wasn't reallocated when string concatenation was
- done but the already preallocated memory was used (this value should be about
- 98% for the default allocation policy, if it is less than 90% you should
- really consider fine tuning wxString for your application).
- It goes without saying that a profiler should be used to measure the precise
- difference the change to EXTRA_ALLOC makes to your program.
-
- */
-
-
+/**
+
+@page overview_string wxString Overview
+
+Classes: wxString, wxArrayString, wxStringTokenizer
+
+@li @ref overview_string_intro
+@li @ref overview_string_comparison
+@li @ref overview_string_advice
+@li @ref overview_string_related
+@li @ref overview_string_tuning
+
+
+<hr>
+
+
+@section overview_string_intro Introduction
+
+wxString is a class which represents a character string of arbitrary length and
+containing arbitrary characters. The ASCII NUL character is allowed, but be
+aware that in the current string implementation some methods might not work
+correctly in this case.
+
+Since wxWidgets 3.0 wxString internally uses UCS-2 (basically 2-byte per
+character wchar_t) under Windows and UTF-8 under Unix, Linux and
+OS X to store its content. Much work has been done to make
+existing code using ANSI string literals work as before.
+
+This class has all the standard operations you can expect to find in a string
+class: dynamic memory management (string extends to accommodate new
+characters), construction from other strings, C strings, wide character C strings
+and characters, assignment operators, access to individual characters, string
+concatenation and comparison, substring extraction, case conversion, trimming and padding (with
+spaces), searching and replacing and both C-like @c printf (wxString::Printf)
+and stream-like insertion functions as well as much more - see wxString for a
+list of all functions.
+
+
+@section overview_string_comparison Comparison to Other String Classes
+
+The advantages of using a special string class instead of working directly with
+C strings are so obvious that there is a huge number of such classes available.
+The most important advantage is the need to always remember to allocate/free
+memory for C strings; working with fixed size buffers almost inevitably leads
+to buffer overflows. At last, C++ has a standard string class (std::string). So
+why the need for wxString? There are several advantages:
+
+@li <b>Efficiency:</b> Since wxWidgets 3.0 wxString uses std::string (UTF8
+ mode under Linux, Unix and OS X) or std::wstring (MSW) internally by
+ default to store its constent. wxString will therefore inherit the
+ performance characteristics from std::string.
+@li <b>Compatibility:</b> This class tries to combine almost full compatibility
+ with the old wxWidgets 1.xx wxString class, some reminiscence to MFC
+ CString class and 90% of the functionality of std::string class.
+@li <b>Rich set of functions:</b> Some of the functions present in wxString are very
+ useful but don't exist in most of other string classes: for example,
+ wxString::AfterFirst, wxString::BeforeLast, wxString::operators or
+ wxString::Printf. Of course, all the standard string operations are
+ supported as well.
+@li <b>Unicode wxString is Unicode friendly:</b> it allows to easily convert to
+ and from ANSI and Unicode strings (see the @ref overview_unicode "unicode overview"
+ for more details) and maps to @c wstring transparently.
+@li <b>Used by wxWidgets:</b> And, of course, this class is used everywhere
+ inside wxWidgets so there is no performance loss which would result from
+ conversions of objects of any other string class (including std::string) to
+ wxString internally by wxWidgets.
+
+However, there are several problems as well. The most important one is probably
+that there are often several functions to do exactly the same thing: for
+example, to get the length of the string either one of wxString::length(),
+wxString::Len() or wxString::Length() may be used. The first function, as
+almost all the other functions in lowercase, is std::string compatible. The
+second one is the "native" wxString version and the last one is the wxWidgets
+1.xx way.
+
+So which is better to use? The usage of the std::string compatible functions is
+strongly advised! It will both make your code more familiar to other C++
+programmers (who are supposed to have knowledge of std::string but not of
+wxString), let you reuse the same code in both wxWidgets and other programs (by
+just typedefing wxString as std::string when used outside wxWidgets) and by
+staying compatible with future versions of wxWidgets which will probably start
+using std::string sooner or later too.
+
+In the situations where there is no corresponding std::string function, please
+try to use the new wxString methods and not the old wxWidgets 1.xx variants
+which are deprecated and may disappear in future versions.
+
+
+@section overview_string_advice Advice About Using wxString
+
+Probably the main trap with using this class is the implicit conversion
+operator to <tt>const char*</tt>. It is advised that you use wxString::c_str()
+instead to clearly indicate when the conversion is done. Specifically, the
+danger of this implicit conversion may be seen in the following code fragment:
+
+@code
+// this function converts the input string to uppercase,
+// output it to the screen and returns the result
+const char *SayHELLO(const wxString& input)
+{
+ wxString output = input.Upper();
+ printf("Hello, %s!\n", output);
+ return output;
+}
+@endcode
+
+There are two nasty bugs in these three lines. The first is in the call to the
+@c printf() function. Although the implicit conversion to C strings is applied
+automatically by the compiler in the case of
+
+@code
+puts(output);
+@endcode
+
+because the argument of @c puts() is known to be of the type
+<tt>const char*</tt>, this is @b not done for @c printf() which is a function
+with variable number of arguments (and whose arguments are of unknown types).
+So this call may do any number of things (including displaying the correct
+string on screen), although the most likely result is a program crash. The
+solution is to use wxString::c_str(). Just replace this line with this:
+
+@code
+printf("Hello, %s!\n", output.c_str());
+@endcode
+
+The second bug is that returning @c output doesn't work. The implicit cast is
+used again, so the code compiles, but as it returns a pointer to a buffer
+belonging to a local variable which is deleted as soon as the function exits,
+its contents are completely arbitrary. The solution to this problem is also
+easy, just make the function return wxString instead of a C string.
+
+This leads us to the following general advice: all functions taking string
+arguments should take <tt>const wxString</tt> (this makes assignment to the
+strings inside the function faster) and all functions returning strings
+should return wxString - this makes it safe to return local variables.
+
+
+@section overview_string_related String Related Functions and Classes
+
+As most programs use character strings, the standard C library provides quite
+a few functions to work with them. Unfortunately, some of them have rather
+counter-intuitive behaviour (like @c strncpy() which doesn't always terminate
+the resulting string with a @NULL) and are in general not very safe (passing
+@NULL to them will probably lead to program crash). Moreover, some very useful
+functions are not standard at all. This is why in addition to all wxString
+functions, there are also a few global string functions which try to correct
+these problems: wxIsEmpty() verifies whether the string is empty (returning
+@true for @NULL pointers), wxStrlen() also handles @NULL correctly and returns
+0 for them and wxStricmp() is just a platform-independent version of
+case-insensitive string comparison function known either as @c stricmp() or
+@c strcasecmp() on different platforms.
+
+The <tt>@<wx/string.h@></tt> header also defines wxSnprintf and wxVsnprintf
+functions which should be used instead of the inherently dangerous standard
+@c sprintf() and which use @c snprintf() instead which does buffer size checks
+whenever possible. Of course, you may also use wxString::Printf which is also
+safe.
+
+There is another class which might be useful when working with wxString:
+wxStringTokenizer. It is helpful when a string must be broken into tokens and
+replaces the standard C library @c strtok() function.
+
+And the very last string-related class is wxArrayString: it is just a version
+of the "template" dynamic array class which is specialized to work with
+strings. Please note that this class is specially optimized (using its
+knowledge of the internal structure of wxString) for storing strings and so it
+is vastly better from a performance point of view than a wxObjectArray of
+wxStrings.
+
+
+@section overview_string_tuning Tuning wxString for Your Application
+
+@note This section is strictly about performance issues and is absolutely not
+necessary to read for using wxString class. Please skip it unless you feel
+familiar with profilers and relative tools.
+
+For the performance reasons wxString doesn't allocate exactly the amount of
+memory needed for each string. Instead, it adds a small amount of space to each
+allocated block which allows it to not reallocate memory (a relatively
+expensive operation) too often as when, for example, a string is constructed by
+subsequently adding one character at a time to it, as for example in:
+
+@code
+// delete all vowels from the string
+wxString DeleteAllVowels(const wxString& original)
+{
+ wxString vowels( "aeuioAEIOU" );
+ wxString result;
+ wxString::const_iterator i;
+ for ( i = original.begin(); i != original.end(); ++i )
+ {
+ if (vowels.Find( *i ) == wxNOT_FOUND)
+ result += *i;
+ }
+
+ return result;
+}
+@endcode
+
+This is quite a common situation and not allocating extra memory at all would
+lead to very bad performance in this case because there would be as many memory
+(re)allocations as there are consonants in the original string. Allocating too
+much extra memory would help to improve the speed in this situation, but due to
+a great number of wxString objects typically used in a program would also
+increase the memory consumption too much.
+
+The very best solution in precisely this case would be to use wxString::Alloc()
+function to preallocate, for example, len bytes from the beginning - this will
+lead to exactly one memory allocation being performed (because the result is at
+most as long as the original string).
+
+However, using wxString::Alloc() is tedious and so wxString tries to do its
+best. The default algorithm assumes that memory allocation is done in
+granularity of at least 16 bytes (which is the case on almost all of
+wide-spread platforms) and so nothing is lost if the amount of memory to
+allocate is rounded up to the next multiple of 16. Like this, no memory is lost
+and 15 iterations from 16 in the example above won't allocate memory but use
+the already allocated pool.
+
+The default approach is quite conservative. Allocating more memory may bring
+important performance benefits for programs using (relatively) few very long
+strings. The amount of memory allocated is configured by the setting of
+@c EXTRA_ALLOC in the file string.cpp during compilation (be sure to understand
+why its default value is what it is before modifying it!). You may try setting
+it to greater amount (say twice nLen) or to 0 (to see performance degradation
+which will follow) and analyse the impact of it on your program. If you do it,
+you will probably find it helpful to also define @c WXSTRING_STATISTICS symbol
+which tells the wxString class to collect performance statistics and to show
+them on stderr on program termination. This will show you the average length of
+strings your program manipulates, their average initial length and also the
+percent of times when memory wasn't reallocated when string concatenation was
+done but the already preallocated memory was used (this value should be about
+98% for the default allocation policy, if it is less than 90% you should
+really consider fine tuning wxString for your application).
+
+It goes without saying that a profiler should be used to measure the precise
+difference the change to @c EXTRA_ALLOC makes to your program.
+
+*/
+