wxWidgets/interface/wxcrt.h

124 lines
3.7 KiB
C
Raw Normal View History

/////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
// Name: wxcrt.h
// Purpose: interface of global functions
// Author: wxWidgets team
// RCS-ID: $Id$
// Licence: wxWindows license
/////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
/** @ingroup group_funcmacro_string */
//@{
/**
@returns @true if the pointer is either @NULL or points to an empty string,
@false otherwise.
@header{wx/wxcrt.h}
*/
bool wxIsEmpty(const char* p);
/**
This is a safe version of standard function @e strlen(): it does exactly
the same thing (i.e. returns the length of the string) except that it
returns 0 if @a p is the @NULL pointer.
@header{wx/wxcrt.h}
*/
size_t wxStrlen(const char* p);
/**
This function complements the standard C function @e stricmp() which
performs case-insensitive comparison.
@returns A negative value, 0, or positive value if @a p1 is less than,
equal to or greater than @a p2. The comparison is case-sensitive.
@header{wx/wxcrt.h}
*/
int wxStrcmp(const char* p1, const char* p2);
/**
This function complements the standard C function @e strcmp() which performs
case-sensitive comparison.
@returns A negative value, 0, or positive value if @a p1 is less than,
equal to or greater than @e p2. The comparison is case-insensitive.
@header{wx/wxcrt.h}
*/
int wxStricmp(const char* p1, const char* p2);
/**
@deprecated Use wxString instead.
This macro is defined as:
@code
#define wxStringEq(s1, s2) (s1 && s2 && (strcmp(s1, s2) == 0))
@endcode
@header{wx/wxcrt.h}
*/
bool wxStringEq(const wxString& s1, const wxString& s2);
/**
@deprecated Use wxString::Find() instead.
Returns @true if the substring @a s1 is found within @a s2, ignoring case
if @a exact is @false. If @a subString is @false, no substring matching is
done.
@header{wx/wxcrt.h}
*/
bool wxStringMatch(const wxString& s1, const wxString& s2,
bool subString = true, bool exact = false);
/**
This is a convenience function wrapping wxStringTokenizer which simply
returns all tokens found in the given @a string in an array.
Please see wxStringTokenizer::wxStringTokenizer() for a description of the
other parameters.
@header{wx/wxcrt.h}
*/
wxArrayString wxStringTokenize(const wxString& string,
const wxString& delims = wxDEFAULT_DELIMITERS,
wxStringTokenizerMode mode = wxTOKEN_DEFAULT);
/**
This function replaces the dangerous standard function @e sprintf() and is
like @e snprintf() available on some platforms. The only difference with
@e sprintf() is that an additional argument - buffer size - is taken and
the buffer is never overflowed.
Returns the number of characters copied to the buffer or -1 if there is not
enough space.
@see wxVsnprintf(), wxString::Printf()
@header{wx/wxcrt.h}
*/
int wxSnprintf(wxChar* buf, size_t len, const wxChar* format, ...);
/**
The same as wxSnprintf() but takes a @c va_list argument instead of an
arbitrary number of parameters.
@note If @c wxUSE_PRINTF_POS_PARAMS is set to 1, then this function
supports positional arguments (see wxString::Printf() for more
information). However other functions of the same family (wxPrintf(),
wxSprintf(), wxFprintf(), wxVfprintf(), wxVfprintf(), wxVprintf(),
wxVsprintf()) currently do not to support positional parameters even
when @c wxUSE_PRINTF_POS_PARAMS is 1.
@see wxSnprintf(), wxString::PrintfV()
@header{wx/wxcrt.h}
*/
int wxVsnprintf(wxChar* buf, size_t len,
const wxChar* format, va_list argPtr);
//@}