From: Vadim Zeitlin Date: Mon, 22 Sep 2008 12:43:35 +0000 (+0000) Subject: no changes, just clarified meaning of various conversion functions in a comment X-Git-Url: https://git.saurik.com/wxWidgets.git/commitdiff_plain/18666b42ca62c24cb3097c32b5108f57bbb7eec6 no changes, just clarified meaning of various conversion functions in a comment git-svn-id: https://svn.wxwidgets.org/svn/wx/wxWidgets/trunk@55792 c3d73ce0-8a6f-49c7-b76d-6d57e0e08775 --- diff --git a/include/wx/string.h b/include/wx/string.h index b66afd79ae..44e0d7d2ae 100644 --- a/include/wx/string.h +++ b/include/wx/string.h @@ -1526,11 +1526,53 @@ public: { return at(n); } #endif // size_t != unsigned int - // explicit conversion to C string (use this with printf()!) + + /* + Overview of wxString conversions, implicit and explicit: + + - wxString has a std::[w]string-like c_str() method, however it does + not return a C-style string directly but instead returns wxCStrData + helper object which is convertible to either "char *" narrow string + or "wchar_t *" wide string. Usually the correct conversion will be + applied by the compiler automatically but if this doesn't happen you + need to explicitly choose one using wxCStrData::AsChar() or AsWChar() + methods or another wxString conversion function. + + - One of the places where the conversion does *NOT* happen correctly is + when c_str() is passed to a vararg function such as printf() so you + must *NOT* use c_str() with them. Either use wxPrintf() (all wx + functions do handle c_str() correctly, even if they appear to be + vararg (but they're not, really)) or add an explicit AsChar() or, if + compatibility with previous wxWidgets versions is important, add a + cast to "const char *". + + - In non-STL mode only, wxString is also implicitly convertible to + wxCStrData. The same warning as above applies. + + - c_str() is polymorphic as it can be converted to either narrow or + wide string. If you explicitly need one or the other, choose to use + mb_str() (for narrow) or wc_str() (for wide) instead. Notice that + these functions can return either the pointer to string directly (if + this is what the string uses internally) or a temporary buffer + containing the string and convertible to it. Again, conversion will + usually be done automatically by the compiler but beware of the + vararg functions: you need an explicit cast when using them. + + - There are also non-const versions of mb_str() and wc_str() called + char_str() and wchar_str(). They are only meant to be used with + non-const-correct functions and they always return buffers. + + - Finally wx_str() returns whatever string representation is used by + wxString internally. It may be either a narrow or wide string + depending on wxWidgets build mode but it will always be a raw pointer + (and not a buffer). + */ + + // explicit conversion to wxCStrData wxCStrData c_str() const { return wxCStrData(this); } wxCStrData data() const { return c_str(); } - // implicit conversion to C string + // implicit conversion to wxCStrData operator wxCStrData() const { return c_str(); } // the first two operators conflict with operators for conversion to