but support for UNICODE (16 but characters) is planned for the next one.
This class has all the standard operations you can expect to find in a string class:
-dynamic memory management (string extends to accomodate new characters),
+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
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
-\helpref{length()}{wxstringlength}, \helpref{Len()}{wxstringlen} or
-\helpref{Length()}{wxstringLength} may be used. The first function, as almost
+length(), \helpref{Len()}{wxstringlen} or
+\helpref{Length()}{wxstringlength} 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 wxWindows 1.xx way. So the
question is: which one is better to use? And the answer is that:
when used outside wxWindows) and by staying compatible with future versions of
wxWindows which will probably start using std::string sooner or later too.
-In the situations where there is no correspondinw std::string function, please
+In the situations where there is no corresponding std::string function, please
try to use the new wxString methods and not the old wxWindows 1.xx variants
which are deprecated and may disappear in future versions.
platform-independent version of case-insensitive string comparison function
known either as stricmp() or strcasecmp() on different platforms.
+The {\tt <wx/string.h>} header also defines \helpref{wxSnprintf}{wxsnprintf}
+and \helpref{wxVsnprintf}{wxvsnprintf} functions which should be used instead
+of the inherently dangerous standard {\tt sprintf()} and which use {\tt
+snprintf()} instead which does buffer size checks whenever possible. Of
+course, you may also use \helpref{wxString::Printf}{wxstringprintf} which is
+also safe.
+
There is another class which might be useful when working with wxString:
\helpref{wxStringTokenizer}{wxstringtokenizer}. It is helpful when a string must
be broken into tokens and replaces the standard C library {\it
But as soon as one of the two (or more) strings is modified, the data has to be
copied because the changes to one of the strings shouldn't be seen in the
-otheres. As data copying only happens when the string is written to, this is
+others. As data copying only happens when the string is written to, this is
known as COW.
What is important to understand is that all this happens absolutely
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 alread preallocated memory was used (this value should be about
+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).