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#define | G_ASCII_DTOSTR_BUF_SIZE |
enum | GNumberParserError |
#define | G_NUMBER_PARSER_ERROR |
#define | G_STR_DELIMITERS |
typedef | GStrv |
This section describes a number of utility functions for creating, duplicating, and manipulating strings.
Note that the functions g_printf()
, g_fprintf()
, g_sprintf()
,
g_snprintf()
, g_vprintf()
, g_vfprintf()
, g_vsprintf()
and g_vsnprintf()
are declared in the header gprintf.h
which is not included in glib.h
(otherwise using glib.h
would drag in stdio.h
), so you'll have to
explicitly include <glib/gprintf.h>
in order to use the GLib
printf()
functions.
While you may use the printf()
functions to format UTF-8 strings,
notice that the precision of a %Ns parameter is interpreted
as the number of bytes, not characters to print. On top of that,
the GNU libc implementation of the printf()
functions has the
"feature" that it checks that the string given for the %Ns
parameter consists of a whole number of characters in the current
encoding. So, unless you are sure you are always going to be in an
UTF-8 locale or your know your text is restricted to ASCII, avoid
using %Ns. If your intention is to format strings for a
certain number of columns, then %Ns is not a correct solution
anyway, since it fails to take wide characters (see g_unichar_iswide()
)
into account.
Note also that there are various printf()
parameters which are platform
dependent. GLib provides platform independent macros for these parameters
which should be used instead. A common example is G_GUINT64_FORMAT
, which
should be used instead of %llu
or similar parameters for formatting
64-bit integers. These macros are all named G_*_FORMAT
; see
Basic Types.
gchar *
g_strdup (const gchar *str
);
Duplicates a string. If str
is NULL
it returns NULL
.
The returned string should be freed with g_free()
when no longer needed.
gchar * g_strndup (const gchar *str
,gsize n
);
Duplicates the first n
bytes of a string, returning a newly-allocated
buffer n
+ 1 bytes long which will always be nul-terminated. If str
is less than n
bytes long the buffer is padded with nuls. If str
is
NULL
it returns NULL
. The returned value should be freed when no longer
needed.
To copy a number of characters from a UTF-8 encoded string,
use g_utf8_strncpy()
instead.
gchar **
g_strdupv (gchar **str_array
);
Copies NULL
-terminated array of strings. The copy is a deep copy;
the new array should be freed by first freeing each string, then
the array itself. g_strfreev()
does this for you. If called
on a NULL
value, g_strdupv()
simply returns NULL
.
gchar * g_strnfill (gsize length
,gchar fill_char
);
Creates a new string length
bytes long filled with fill_char
.
The returned string should be freed when no longer needed.
gchar * g_stpcpy (gchar *dest
,const char *src
);
Copies a nul-terminated string into the dest buffer, include the trailing nul, and return a pointer to the trailing nul byte. This is useful for concatenating multiple strings together without having to repeatedly scan for the end.
gchar * g_strstr_len (const gchar *haystack
,gssize haystack_len
,const gchar *needle
);
Searches the string haystack
for the first occurrence
of the string needle
, limiting the length of the search
to haystack_len
.
gchar * g_strrstr (const gchar *haystack
,const gchar *needle
);
Searches the string haystack
for the last occurrence
of the string needle
.
gchar * g_strrstr_len (const gchar *haystack
,gssize haystack_len
,const gchar *needle
);
Searches the string haystack
for the last occurrence
of the string needle
, limiting the length of the search
to haystack_len
.
gboolean g_str_has_prefix (const gchar *str
,const gchar *prefix
);
Looks whether the string str
begins with prefix
.
Since: 2.2
gboolean g_str_has_suffix (const gchar *str
,const gchar *suffix
);
Looks whether the string str
ends with suffix
.
Since: 2.2
int g_strcmp0 (const char *str1
,const char *str2
);
Compares str1
and str2
like strcmp()
. Handles NULL
gracefully by sorting it before non-NULL
strings.
Comparing two NULL
pointers returns 0.
Since: 2.16
gchar * g_str_to_ascii (const gchar *str
,const gchar *from_locale
);
Transliterate str
to plain ASCII.
For best results, str
should be in composed normalised form.
This function performs a reasonably good set of character replacements. The particular set of replacements that is done may change by version or even by runtime environment.
If the source language of str
is known, it can used to improve the
accuracy of the translation by passing it as from_locale
. It should
be a valid POSIX locale string (of the form
"language_territory[modifier
]").
If from_locale
is NULL
then the current locale is used.
If you want to do translation for no specific locale, and you want it
to be done independently of the currently locale, specify "C" for
from_locale
.
Since: 2.40
gchar ** g_str_tokenize_and_fold (const gchar *string
,const gchar *translit_locale
,gchar ***ascii_alternates
);
Tokenises string
and performs folding on each token.
A token is a non-empty sequence of alphanumeric characters in the
source string, separated by non-alphanumeric characters. An
"alphanumeric" character for this purpose is one that matches
g_unichar_isalnum()
or g_unichar_ismark()
.
Each token is then (Unicode) normalised and case-folded. If
ascii_alternates
is non-NULL
and some of the returned tokens
contain non-ASCII characters, ASCII alternatives will be generated.
The number of ASCII alternatives that are generated and the method
for doing so is unspecified, but translit_locale
(if specified) may
improve the transliteration if the language of the source string is
known.
string |
a string |
|
translit_locale |
the language code (like 'de' or
'en_GB') from which |
[nullable] |
ascii_alternates |
a return location for ASCII alternates. |
[out][transfer full][array zero-terminated=1] |
Since: 2.40
gboolean g_str_match_string (const gchar *search_term
,const gchar *potential_hit
,gboolean accept_alternates
);
Checks if a search conducted for search_term
should match
potential_hit
.
This function calls g_str_tokenize_and_fold()
on both
search_term
and potential_hit
. ASCII alternates are never taken
for search_term
but will be taken for potential_hit
according to
the value of accept_alternates
.
A hit occurs when each folded token in search_term
is a prefix of a
folded token from potential_hit
.
Depending on how you're performing the search, it will typically be
faster to call g_str_tokenize_and_fold()
on each string in
your corpus and build an index on the returned folded tokens, then
call g_str_tokenize_and_fold()
on the search term and
perform lookups into that index.
As some examples, searching for "fred" would match the potential hit "Smith, Fred" and also "Frédéric". Searching for "Fréd" would match "Frédéric" but not "Frederic" (due to the one-directional nature of accent matching). Searching "fo" would match "Foo" and "Bar Foo Baz", but not "SFO" (because no word as "fo" as a prefix).
search_term |
the search term from the user |
|
potential_hit |
the text that may be a hit |
|
accept_alternates |
|
Since: 2.40
gsize g_strlcpy (gchar *dest
,const gchar *src
,gsize dest_size
);
Portability wrapper that calls strlcpy()
on systems which have it,
and emulates strlcpy()
otherwise. Copies src
to dest
; dest
is
guaranteed to be nul-terminated; src
must be nul-terminated;
dest_size
is the buffer size, not the number of bytes to copy.
At most dest_size
- 1 characters will be copied. Always nul-terminates
(unless dest_size
is 0). This function does not allocate memory. Unlike
strncpy()
, this function doesn't pad dest
(so it's often faster). It
returns the size of the attempted result, strlen (src), so if
retval
>= dest_size
, truncation occurred.
Caveat: strlcpy()
is supposedly more secure than strcpy()
or strncpy()
,
but if you really want to avoid screwups, g_strdup()
is an even better
idea.
gsize g_strlcat (gchar *dest
,const gchar *src
,gsize dest_size
);
Portability wrapper that calls strlcat()
on systems which have it,
and emulates it otherwise. Appends nul-terminated src
string to dest
,
guaranteeing nul-termination for dest
. The total size of dest
won't
exceed dest_size
.
At most dest_size
- 1 characters will be copied. Unlike strncat()
,
dest_size
is the full size of dest, not the space left over. This
function does not allocate memory. It always nul-terminates (unless
dest_size
== 0 or there were no nul characters in the dest_size
characters of dest to start with).
Caveat: this is supposedly a more secure alternative to strcat()
or
strncat()
, but for real security g_strconcat()
is harder to mess up.
gchar * g_strdup_printf (const gchar *format
,...
);
Similar to the standard C sprintf()
function but safer, since it
calculates the maximum space required and allocates memory to hold
the result. The returned string should be freed with g_free()
when no
longer needed.
format |
a standard |
|
... |
the parameters to insert into the format string |
gchar * g_strdup_vprintf (const gchar *format
,va_list args
);
Similar to the standard C vsprintf()
function but safer, since it
calculates the maximum space required and allocates memory to hold
the result. The returned string should be freed with g_free()
when
no longer needed.
See also g_vasprintf()
, which offers the same functionality, but
additionally returns the length of the allocated string.
format |
a standard |
|
args |
the list of parameters to insert into the format string |
gint g_printf (gchar const *format
,...
);
An implementation of the standard printf()
function which supports
positional parameters, as specified in the Single Unix Specification.
As with the standard printf()
, this does not automatically append a trailing
new-line character to the message, so typically format
should end with its
own new-line character.
format |
a standard |
|
... |
the arguments to insert in the output. |
Since: 2.2
gint g_vprintf (gchar const *format
,va_list args
);
An implementation of the standard vprintf()
function which supports
positional parameters, as specified in the Single Unix Specification.
format |
a standard |
|
args |
the list of arguments to insert in the output. |
Since: 2.2
gint g_fprintf (FILE *file
,gchar const *format
,...
);
An implementation of the standard fprintf()
function which supports
positional parameters, as specified in the Single Unix Specification.
file |
the stream to write to. |
[not nullable] |
format |
a standard |
|
... |
the arguments to insert in the output. |
Since: 2.2
gint g_vfprintf (FILE *file
,gchar const *format
,va_list args
);
An implementation of the standard fprintf()
function which supports
positional parameters, as specified in the Single Unix Specification.
file |
the stream to write to. |
[not nullable] |
format |
a standard |
|
args |
the list of arguments to insert in the output. |
Since: 2.2
gint g_sprintf (gchar *string
,gchar const *format
,...
);
An implementation of the standard sprintf()
function which supports
positional parameters, as specified in the Single Unix Specification.
Note that it is usually better to use g_snprintf()
, to avoid the
risk of buffer overflow.
See also g_strdup_printf()
.
string |
A pointer to a memory buffer to contain the resulting string. It is up to the caller to ensure that the allocated buffer is large enough to hold the formatted result |
|
format |
a standard |
|
... |
the arguments to insert in the output. |
Since: 2.2
gint g_vsprintf (gchar *string
,gchar const *format
,va_list args
);
An implementation of the standard vsprintf()
function which supports
positional parameters, as specified in the Single Unix Specification.
string |
the buffer to hold the output. |
|
format |
a standard |
|
args |
the list of arguments to insert in the output. |
Since: 2.2
gint g_snprintf (gchar *string
,gulong n
,gchar const *format
,...
);
A safer form of the standard sprintf()
function. The output is guaranteed
to not exceed n
characters (including the terminating nul character), so
it is easy to ensure that a buffer overflow cannot occur.
See also g_strdup_printf()
.
In versions of GLib prior to 1.2.3, this function may return -1 if the output was truncated, and the truncated string may not be nul-terminated. In versions prior to 1.3.12, this function returns the length of the output string.
The return value of g_snprintf()
conforms to the snprintf()
function as standardized in ISO C99. Note that this is different from
traditional snprintf()
, which returns the length of the output string.
The format string may contain positional parameters, as specified in the Single Unix Specification.
string |
the buffer to hold the output. |
|
n |
the maximum number of bytes to produce (including the terminating nul character). |
|
format |
a standard |
|
... |
the arguments to insert in the output. |
gint g_vsnprintf (gchar *string
,gulong n
,gchar const *format
,va_list args
);
A safer form of the standard vsprintf()
function. The output is guaranteed
to not exceed n
characters (including the terminating nul character), so
it is easy to ensure that a buffer overflow cannot occur.
See also g_strdup_vprintf()
.
In versions of GLib prior to 1.2.3, this function may return -1 if the output was truncated, and the truncated string may not be nul-terminated. In versions prior to 1.3.12, this function returns the length of the output string.
The return value of g_vsnprintf()
conforms to the vsnprintf()
function
as standardized in ISO C99. Note that this is different from traditional
vsnprintf()
, which returns the length of the output string.
The format string may contain positional parameters, as specified in the Single Unix Specification.
gint g_vasprintf (gchar **string
,gchar const *format
,va_list args
);
An implementation of the GNU vasprintf()
function which supports
positional parameters, as specified in the Single Unix Specification.
This function is similar to g_vsprintf()
, except that it allocates a
string to hold the output, instead of putting the output in a buffer
you allocate in advance.
string |
the return location for the newly-allocated string. |
|
format |
a standard |
|
args |
the list of arguments to insert in the output. |
Since: 2.4
gsize g_printf_string_upper_bound (const gchar *format
,va_list args
);
Calculates the maximum space needed to store the output
of the sprintf()
function.
gboolean
g_str_is_ascii (const gchar *str
);
Determines if a string is pure ASCII. A string is pure ASCII if it contains no bytes with the high bit set.
Since: 2.40
gboolean
g_ascii_isalnum (gchar c
);
Determines whether a character is alphanumeric.
Unlike the standard C library isalnum()
function, this only
recognizes standard ASCII letters and ignores the locale,
returning FALSE
for all non-ASCII characters. Also, unlike
the standard library function, this takes a char, not an int,
so don't call it on EOF
, but no need to cast to guchar before
passing a possibly non-ASCII character in.
gboolean
g_ascii_isalpha (gchar c
);
Determines whether a character is alphabetic (i.e. a letter).
Unlike the standard C library isalpha()
function, this only
recognizes standard ASCII letters and ignores the locale,
returning FALSE
for all non-ASCII characters. Also, unlike
the standard library function, this takes a char, not an int,
so don't call it on EOF
, but no need to cast to guchar before
passing a possibly non-ASCII character in.
gboolean
g_ascii_iscntrl (gchar c
);
Determines whether a character is a control character.
Unlike the standard C library iscntrl()
function, this only
recognizes standard ASCII control characters and ignores the
locale, returning FALSE
for all non-ASCII characters. Also,
unlike the standard library function, this takes a char, not
an int, so don't call it on EOF
, but no need to cast to guchar
before passing a possibly non-ASCII character in.
gboolean
g_ascii_isdigit (gchar c
);
Determines whether a character is digit (0-9).
Unlike the standard C library isdigit()
function, this takes
a char, not an int, so don't call it on EOF
, but no need to
cast to guchar before passing a possibly non-ASCII character in.
gboolean
g_ascii_isgraph (gchar c
);
Determines whether a character is a printing character and not a space.
Unlike the standard C library isgraph()
function, this only
recognizes standard ASCII characters and ignores the locale,
returning FALSE
for all non-ASCII characters. Also, unlike
the standard library function, this takes a char, not an int,
so don't call it on EOF
, but no need to cast to guchar before
passing a possibly non-ASCII character in.
gboolean
g_ascii_islower (gchar c
);
Determines whether a character is an ASCII lower case letter.
Unlike the standard C library islower()
function, this only
recognizes standard ASCII letters and ignores the locale,
returning FALSE
for all non-ASCII characters. Also, unlike
the standard library function, this takes a char, not an int,
so don't call it on EOF
, but no need to worry about casting
to guchar before passing a possibly non-ASCII character in.
gboolean
g_ascii_isprint (gchar c
);
Determines whether a character is a printing character.
Unlike the standard C library isprint()
function, this only
recognizes standard ASCII characters and ignores the locale,
returning FALSE
for all non-ASCII characters. Also, unlike
the standard library function, this takes a char, not an int,
so don't call it on EOF
, but no need to cast to guchar before
passing a possibly non-ASCII character in.
gboolean
g_ascii_ispunct (gchar c
);
Determines whether a character is a punctuation character.
Unlike the standard C library ispunct()
function, this only
recognizes standard ASCII letters and ignores the locale,
returning FALSE
for all non-ASCII characters. Also, unlike
the standard library function, this takes a char, not an int,
so don't call it on EOF
, but no need to cast to guchar before
passing a possibly non-ASCII character in.
gboolean
g_ascii_isspace (gchar c
);
Determines whether a character is a white-space character.
Unlike the standard C library isspace()
function, this only
recognizes standard ASCII white-space and ignores the locale,
returning FALSE
for all non-ASCII characters. Also, unlike
the standard library function, this takes a char, not an int,
so don't call it on EOF
, but no need to cast to guchar before
passing a possibly non-ASCII character in.
gboolean
g_ascii_isupper (gchar c
);
Determines whether a character is an ASCII upper case letter.
Unlike the standard C library isupper()
function, this only
recognizes standard ASCII letters and ignores the locale,
returning FALSE
for all non-ASCII characters. Also, unlike
the standard library function, this takes a char, not an int,
so don't call it on EOF
, but no need to worry about casting
to guchar before passing a possibly non-ASCII character in.
gboolean
g_ascii_isxdigit (gchar c
);
Determines whether a character is a hexadecimal-digit character.
Unlike the standard C library isxdigit()
function, this takes
a char, not an int, so don't call it on EOF
, but no need to
cast to guchar before passing a possibly non-ASCII character in.
gint
g_ascii_digit_value (gchar c
);
Determines the numeric value of a character as a decimal digit.
Differs from g_unichar_digit_value()
because it takes a char, so
there's no worry about sign extension if characters are signed.
gint
g_ascii_xdigit_value (gchar c
);
Determines the numeric value of a character as a hexidecimal
digit. Differs from g_unichar_xdigit_value()
because it takes
a char, so there's no worry about sign extension if characters
are signed.
gint g_ascii_strcasecmp (const gchar *s1
,const gchar *s2
);
Compare two strings, ignoring the case of ASCII characters.
Unlike the BSD strcasecmp()
function, this only recognizes standard
ASCII letters and ignores the locale, treating all non-ASCII
bytes as if they are not letters.
This function should be used only on strings that are known to be in encodings where the bytes corresponding to ASCII letters always represent themselves. This includes UTF-8 and the ISO-8859-* charsets, but not for instance double-byte encodings like the Windows Codepage 932, where the trailing bytes of double-byte characters include all ASCII letters. If you compare two CP932 strings using this function, you will get false matches.
Both s1
and s2
must be non-NULL
.
gint g_ascii_strncasecmp (const gchar *s1
,const gchar *s2
,gsize n
);
Compare s1
and s2
, ignoring the case of ASCII characters and any
characters after the first n
in each string.
Unlike the BSD strcasecmp()
function, this only recognizes standard
ASCII letters and ignores the locale, treating all non-ASCII
characters as if they are not letters.
The same warning as in g_ascii_strcasecmp()
applies: Use this
function only on strings known to be in encodings where bytes
corresponding to ASCII letters always represent themselves.
gchar * g_ascii_strup (const gchar *str
,gssize len
);
Converts all lower case ASCII letters to upper case ASCII letters.
a newly allocated string, with all the lower case
characters in str
converted to upper case, with semantics that
exactly match g_ascii_toupper()
. (Note that this is unlike the
old g_strup()
, which modified the string in place.)
gchar * g_ascii_strdown (const gchar *str
,gssize len
);
Converts all upper case ASCII letters to lower case ASCII letters.
a newly-allocated string, with all the upper case
characters in str
converted to lower case, with semantics that
exactly match g_ascii_tolower()
. (Note that this is unlike the
old g_strdown()
, which modified the string in place.)
gchar
g_ascii_tolower (gchar c
);
Convert a character to ASCII lower case.
Unlike the standard C library tolower()
function, this only
recognizes standard ASCII letters and ignores the locale, returning
all non-ASCII characters unchanged, even if they are lower case
letters in a particular character set. Also unlike the standard
library function, this takes and returns a char, not an int, so
don't call it on EOF
but no need to worry about casting to guchar
before passing a possibly non-ASCII character in.
gchar
g_ascii_toupper (gchar c
);
Convert a character to ASCII upper case.
Unlike the standard C library toupper()
function, this only
recognizes standard ASCII letters and ignores the locale, returning
all non-ASCII characters unchanged, even if they are upper case
letters in a particular character set. Also unlike the standard
library function, this takes and returns a char, not an int, so
don't call it on EOF
but no need to worry about casting to guchar
before passing a possibly non-ASCII character in.
GString *
g_string_ascii_up (GString *string
);
Converts all lowercase ASCII letters to uppercase ASCII letters.
passed-in string
pointer, with all the
lowercase characters converted to uppercase in place,
with semantics that exactly match g_ascii_toupper()
.
[transfer none]
GString *
g_string_ascii_down (GString *string
);
Converts all uppercase ASCII letters to lowercase ASCII letters.
passed-in string
pointer, with all the
uppercase characters converted to lowercase in place,
with semantics that exactly match g_ascii_tolower()
.
[transfer none]
gchar *
g_strup (gchar *string
);
g_strup
has been deprecated since version 2.2 and should not be used in newly-written code.
This function is totally broken for the reasons
discussed in the g_strncasecmp()
docs - use g_ascii_strup()
or g_utf8_strup()
instead.
Converts a string to upper case.
gchar *
g_strdown (gchar *string
);
g_strdown
has been deprecated since version 2.2 and should not be used in newly-written code.
This function is totally broken for the reasons discussed
in the g_strncasecmp()
docs - use g_ascii_strdown()
or g_utf8_strdown()
instead.
Converts a string to lower case.
gint g_strcasecmp (const gchar *s1
,const gchar *s2
);
g_strcasecmp
has been deprecated since version 2.2 and should not be used in newly-written code.
See g_strncasecmp()
for a discussion of why this
function is deprecated and how to replace it.
A case-insensitive string comparison, corresponding to the standard
strcasecmp()
function on platforms which support it.
gint g_strncasecmp (const gchar *s1
,const gchar *s2
,guint n
);
g_strncasecmp
has been deprecated since version 2.2 and should not be used in newly-written code.
The problem with g_strncasecmp()
is that it does
the comparison by calling toupper()
/tolower()
. These functions
are locale-specific and operate on single bytes. However, it is
impossible to handle things correctly from an internationalization
standpoint by operating on bytes, since characters may be multibyte.
Thus g_strncasecmp()
is broken if your string is guaranteed to be
ASCII, since it is locale-sensitive, and it's broken if your string
is localized, since it doesn't work on many encodings at all,
including UTF-8, EUC-JP, etc.
There are therefore two replacement techniques: g_ascii_strncasecmp()
,
which only works on ASCII and is not locale-sensitive, and
g_utf8_casefold()
followed by strcmp()
on the resulting strings,
which is good for case-insensitive sorting of UTF-8.
A case-insensitive string comparison, corresponding to the standard
strncasecmp()
function on platforms which support it. It is similar
to g_strcasecmp()
except it only compares the first n
characters of
the strings.
gchar *
g_strreverse (gchar *string
);
Reverses all of the bytes in a string. For example,
g_strreverse ("abcdef")
will result in "fedcba".
Note that g_strreverse()
doesn't work on UTF-8 strings
containing multibyte characters. For that purpose, use
g_utf8_strreverse()
.
gint64 g_ascii_strtoll (const gchar *nptr
,gchar **endptr
,guint base
);
Converts a string to a gint64 value.
This function behaves like the standard strtoll()
function
does in the C locale. It does this without actually
changing the current locale, since that would not be
thread-safe.
This function is typically used when reading configuration
files or other non-user input that should be locale independent.
To handle input from the user you should normally use the
locale-sensitive system strtoll()
function.
If the correct value would cause overflow, G_MAXINT64
or G_MININT64
is returned, and ERANGE
is stored in errno
.
If the base is outside the valid range, zero is returned, and
EINVAL
is stored in errno
. If the
string conversion fails, zero is returned, and endptr
returns nptr
(if endptr
is non-NULL
).
nptr |
the string to convert to a numeric value. |
|
endptr |
if non- |
[out][transfer none][optional] |
base |
to be used for the conversion, 2..36 or 0 |
Since: 2.12
guint64 g_ascii_strtoull (const gchar *nptr
,gchar **endptr
,guint base
);
Converts a string to a guint64 value.
This function behaves like the standard strtoull()
function
does in the C locale. It does this without actually
changing the current locale, since that would not be
thread-safe.
This function is typically used when reading configuration
files or other non-user input that should be locale independent.
To handle input from the user you should normally use the
locale-sensitive system strtoull()
function.
If the correct value would cause overflow, G_MAXUINT64
is returned, and ERANGE
is stored in errno
.
If the base is outside the valid range, zero is returned, and
EINVAL
is stored in errno
.
If the string conversion fails, zero is returned, and endptr
returns
nptr
(if endptr
is non-NULL
).
nptr |
the string to convert to a numeric value. |
|
endptr |
if non- |
[out][transfer none][optional] |
base |
to be used for the conversion, 2..36 or 0 |
Since: 2.2
gdouble g_ascii_strtod (const gchar *nptr
,gchar **endptr
);
Converts a string to a gdouble value.
This function behaves like the standard strtod()
function
does in the C locale. It does this without actually changing
the current locale, since that would not be thread-safe.
A limitation of the implementation is that this function
will still accept localized versions of infinities and NANs.
This function is typically used when reading configuration
files or other non-user input that should be locale independent.
To handle input from the user you should normally use the
locale-sensitive system strtod()
function.
To convert from a gdouble to a string in a locale-insensitive
way, use g_ascii_dtostr()
.
If the correct value would cause overflow, plus or minus HUGE_VAL
is returned (according to the sign of the value), and ERANGE
is
stored in errno
. If the correct value would cause underflow,
zero is returned and ERANGE
is stored in errno
.
This function resets errno
before calling strtod()
so that
you can reliably detect overflow and underflow.
nptr |
the string to convert to a numeric value. |
|
endptr |
if non- |
[out][transfer none][optional] |
gchar * g_ascii_dtostr (gchar *buffer
,gint buf_len
,gdouble d
);
Converts a gdouble to a string, using the '.' as decimal point.
This function generates enough precision that converting
the string back using g_ascii_strtod()
gives the same machine-number
(on machines with IEEE compatible 64bit doubles). It is
guaranteed that the size of the resulting string will never
be larger than G_ASCII_DTOSTR_BUF_SIZE
bytes, including the terminating
nul character, which is always added.
buffer |
A buffer to place the resulting string in |
|
buf_len |
The length of the buffer. |
|
d |
The gdouble to convert |
gchar * g_ascii_formatd (gchar *buffer
,gint buf_len
,const gchar *format
,gdouble d
);
Converts a gdouble to a string, using the '.' as
decimal point. To format the number you pass in
a printf()
-style format string. Allowed conversion
specifiers are 'e', 'E', 'f', 'F', 'g' and 'G'.
The returned buffer is guaranteed to be nul-terminated.
If you just want to want to serialize the value into a
string, use g_ascii_dtostr()
.
buffer |
A buffer to place the resulting string in |
|
buf_len |
The length of the buffer. |
|
format |
The |
|
d |
The gdouble to convert |
gdouble g_strtod (const gchar *nptr
,gchar **endptr
);
Converts a string to a gdouble value.
It calls the standard strtod()
function to handle the conversion, but
if the string is not completely converted it attempts the conversion
again with g_ascii_strtod()
, and returns the best match.
This function should seldom be used. The normal situation when reading
numbers not for human consumption is to use g_ascii_strtod()
. Only when
you know that you must expect both locale formatted and C formatted numbers
should you use this. Make sure that you don't pass strings such as comma
separated lists of values, since the commas may be interpreted as a decimal
point in some locales, causing unexpected results.
nptr |
the string to convert to a numeric value. |
|
endptr |
if non- |
[out][transfer none][optional] |
gboolean g_ascii_string_to_signed (const gchar *str
,guint base
,gint64 min
,gint64 max
,gint64 *out_num
,GError **error
);
A convenience function for converting a string to a signed number.
This function assumes that str
contains only a number of the given
base
that is within inclusive bounds limited by min
and max
. If
this is true, then the converted number is stored in out_num
. An
empty string is not a valid input. A string with leading or
trailing whitespace is also an invalid input.
base
can be between 2 and 36 inclusive. Hexadecimal numbers must
not be prefixed with "0x" or "0X". Such a problem does not exist
for octal numbers, since they were usually prefixed with a zero
which does not change the value of the parsed number.
Parsing failures result in an error with the G_NUMBER_PARSER_ERROR
domain. If the input is invalid, the error code will be
G_NUMBER_PARSER_ERROR_INVALID
. If the parsed number is out of
bounds - G_NUMBER_PARSER_ERROR_OUT_OF_BOUNDS
.
See g_ascii_strtoll()
if you have more complex needs such as
parsing a string which starts with a number, but then has other
characters.
str |
a string |
|
base |
base of a parsed number |
|
min |
a lower bound (inclusive) |
|
max |
an upper bound (inclusive) |
|
out_num |
a return location for a number. |
[out][optional] |
error |
a return location for GError |
Since: 2.54
gboolean g_ascii_string_to_unsigned (const gchar *str
,guint base
,guint64 min
,guint64 max
,guint64 *out_num
,GError **error
);
A convenience function for converting a string to an unsigned number.
This function assumes that str
contains only a number of the given
base
that is within inclusive bounds limited by min
and max
. If
this is true, then the converted number is stored in out_num
. An
empty string is not a valid input. A string with leading or
trailing whitespace is also an invalid input.
base
can be between 2 and 36 inclusive. Hexadecimal numbers must
not be prefixed with "0x" or "0X". Such a problem does not exist
for octal numbers, since they were usually prefixed with a zero
which does not change the value of the parsed number.
Parsing failures result in an error with the G_NUMBER_PARSER_ERROR
domain. If the input is invalid, the error code will be
G_NUMBER_PARSER_ERROR_INVALID
. If the parsed number is out of
bounds - G_NUMBER_PARSER_ERROR_OUT_OF_BOUNDS
.
See g_ascii_strtoull()
if you have more complex needs such as
parsing a string which starts with a number, but then has other
characters.
str |
a string |
|
base |
base of a parsed number |
|
min |
a lower bound (inclusive) |
|
max |
an upper bound (inclusive) |
|
out_num |
a return location for a number. |
[out][optional] |
error |
a return location for GError |
Since: 2.54
gchar *
g_strchug (gchar *string
);
Removes leading whitespace from a string, by moving the rest of the characters forward.
This function doesn't allocate or reallocate any memory;
it modifies string
in place. Therefore, it cannot be used on
statically allocated strings.
The pointer to string
is returned to allow the nesting of functions.
Also see g_strchomp()
and g_strstrip()
.
gchar *
g_strchomp (gchar *string
);
Removes trailing whitespace from a string.
This function doesn't allocate or reallocate any memory;
it modifies string
in place. Therefore, it cannot be used
on statically allocated strings.
The pointer to string
is returned to allow the nesting of functions.
Also see g_strchug()
and g_strstrip()
.
#define g_strstrip( string )
Removes leading and trailing whitespace from a string.
See g_strchomp()
and g_strchug()
.
gchar * g_strdelimit (gchar *string
,const gchar *delimiters
,gchar new_delimiter
);
Converts any delimiter characters in string
to new_delimiter
.
Any characters in string
which are found in delimiters
are
changed to the new_delimiter
character. Modifies string
in place,
and returns string
itself, not a copy. The return value is to
allow nesting such as
1 |
g_ascii_strup (g_strdelimit (str, "abc", '?')) |
string |
the string to convert |
|
delimiters |
a string containing the current delimiters,
or |
[nullable] |
new_delimiter |
the new delimiter character |
gchar * g_strescape (const gchar *source
,const gchar *exceptions
);
Escapes the special characters '\b', '\f', '\n', '\r', '\t', '\v', '\'
and '"' in the string source
by inserting a '\' before
them. Additionally all characters in the range 0x01-0x1F (everything
below SPACE) and in the range 0x7F-0xFF (all non-ASCII chars) are
replaced with a '\' followed by their octal representation.
Characters supplied in exceptions
are not escaped.
g_strcompress() does the reverse conversion.
gchar *
g_strcompress (const gchar *source
);
Replaces all escaped characters with their one byte equivalent.
This function does the reverse conversion of g_strescape()
.
gchar * g_strcanon (gchar *string
,const gchar *valid_chars
,gchar substitutor
);
For each character in string
, if the character is not in valid_chars
,
replaces the character with substitutor
. Modifies string
in place,
and return string
itself, not a copy. The return value is to allow
nesting such as
1 |
g_ascii_strup (g_strcanon (str, "abc", '?')) |
gchar ** g_strsplit (const gchar *string
,const gchar *delimiter
,gint max_tokens
);
Splits a string into a maximum of max_tokens
pieces, using the given
delimiter
. If max_tokens
is reached, the remainder of string
is
appended to the last token.
As an example, the result of g_strsplit (":a:bc::d:", ":", -1) is a
NULL
-terminated vector containing the six strings "", "a", "bc", "", "d"
and "".
As a special case, the result of splitting the empty string "" is an empty
vector, not a vector containing a single string. The reason for this
special case is that being able to represent a empty vector is typically
more useful than consistent handling of empty elements. If you do need
to represent empty elements, you'll need to check for the empty string
before calling g_strsplit()
.
string |
a string to split |
|
delimiter |
a string which specifies the places at which to split
the string. The delimiter is not included in any of the resulting
strings, unless |
|
max_tokens |
the maximum number of pieces to split |
gchar ** g_strsplit_set (const gchar *string
,const gchar *delimiters
,gint max_tokens
);
Splits string
into a number of tokens not containing any of the characters
in delimiter
. A token is the (possibly empty) longest string that does not
contain any of the characters in delimiters
. If max_tokens
is reached, the
remainder is appended to the last token.
For example the result of g_strsplit_set ("abc:def/ghi", ":/", -1) is a
NULL
-terminated vector containing the three strings "abc", "def",
and "ghi".
The result of g_strsplit_set (":def/ghi:", ":/", -1) is a NULL
-terminated
vector containing the four strings "", "def", "ghi", and "".
As a special case, the result of splitting the empty string "" is an empty
vector, not a vector containing a single string. The reason for this
special case is that being able to represent a empty vector is typically
more useful than consistent handling of empty elements. If you do need
to represent empty elements, you'll need to check for the empty string
before calling g_strsplit_set()
.
Note that this function works on bytes not characters, so it can't be used to delimit UTF-8 strings for anything but ASCII characters.
string |
The string to be tokenized |
|
delimiters |
A nul-terminated string containing bytes that are used to split the string. |
|
max_tokens |
The maximum number of tokens to split |
Since: 2.4
void
g_strfreev (gchar **str_array
);
Frees a NULL
-terminated array of strings, as well as each
string it contains.
If str_array
is NULL
, this function simply returns.
gchar * g_strconcat (const gchar *string1
,...
);
Concatenates all of the given strings into one long string. The
returned string should be freed with g_free()
when no longer needed.
The variable argument list must end with NULL
. If you forget the NULL
,
g_strconcat()
will start appending random memory junk to your string.
Note that this function is usually not the right function to use to assemble a translated message from pieces, since proper translation often requires the pieces to be reordered.
gchar * g_strjoin (const gchar *separator
,...
);
Joins a number of strings together to form one long string, with the
optional separator
inserted between each of them. The returned string
should be freed with g_free()
.
gchar * g_strjoinv (const gchar *separator
,gchar **str_array
);
Joins a number of strings together to form one long string, with the
optional separator
inserted between each of them. The returned string
should be freed with g_free()
.
If str_array
has no items, the return value will be an
empty string. If str_array
contains a single item, separator
will not
appear in the resulting string.
guint
g_strv_length (gchar **str_array
);
Returns the length of the given NULL
-terminated
string array str_array
.
Since: 2.6
gboolean g_strv_contains (const gchar * const *strv
,const gchar *str
);
Checks if strv
contains str
. strv
must not be NULL
.
Since: 2.44
const gchar *
g_strerror (gint errnum
);
Returns a string corresponding to the given error code, e.g. "no
such process". Unlike strerror()
, this always returns a string in
UTF-8 encoding, and the pointer is guaranteed to remain valid for
the lifetime of the process.
Note that the string may be translated according to the current locale.
The value of errno
will not be changed by this function. However, it may
be changed by intermediate function calls, so you should save its value
as soon as the call returns:
1 2 3 4 5 6 |
int saved_errno; ret = read (blah); saved_errno = errno; g_strerror (saved_errno); |
#define G_ASCII_DTOSTR_BUF_SIZE (29 + 10)
A good size for a buffer to be passed into g_ascii_dtostr()
.
It is guaranteed to be enough for all output of that function
on systems with 64bit IEEE-compatible doubles.
The typical usage would be something like:
1 2 3 |
char buf[G_ASCII_DTOSTR_BUF_SIZE]; fprintf (out, "value=%s\n", g_ascii_dtostr (buf, sizeof (buf), value)); |
Error codes returned by functions converting a string to a number.
Since: 2.54
#define G_NUMBER_PARSER_ERROR (g_number_parser_error_quark ())
Domain for errors returned by functions converting a string to a number.
Since: 2.54
#define G_STR_DELIMITERS "_-|> <."
The standard delimiters, used in g_strdelimit()
.
typedef gchar** GStrv;
A typedef alias for gchar**. This is mostly useful when used together with
g_auto()
.