///////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////// // Name: tokenzr.h // Purpose: interface of wxStringTokenizer // Author: wxWidgets team // RCS-ID: $Id$ // Licence: wxWindows license ///////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////// /** The behaviour of wxStringTokenizer is governed by the wxStringTokenizer::wxStringTokenizer() or wxStringTokenizer::SetString() with the parameter @e mode, which may be one of the following: */ enum wxStringTokenizerMode { wxTOKEN_INVALID = -1, ///< Invalid tokenizer mode. /** Default behaviour: wxStringTokenizer will behave in the same way as @c strtok() (::wxTOKEN_STRTOK) if the delimiters string only contains white space characters but, unlike the standard function, it will behave like ::wxTOKEN_RET_EMPTY, returning empty tokens if this is not the case. This is helpful for parsing strictly formatted data where the number of fields is fixed but some of them may be empty (i.e. @c TAB or comma delimited text files). */ wxTOKEN_DEFAULT, /** In this mode, the empty tokens in the middle of the string will be returned, i.e. @c "a::b:" will be tokenized in three tokens @c 'a', @c '' and @c 'b'. Notice that all trailing delimiters are ignored in this mode, not just the last one, i.e. a string @c "a::b::" would still result in the same set of tokens. */ wxTOKEN_RET_EMPTY, /** In this mode, empty trailing tokens (including the one after the last delimiter character) will be returned as well. The string @c "a::b:" will be tokenized in four tokens: the already mentioned ones and another empty one as the last one and a string @c "a::b::" will have five tokens. */ wxTOKEN_RET_EMPTY_ALL, /** In this mode, the delimiter character after the end of the current token (there may be none if this is the last token) is returned appended to the token. Otherwise, it is the same mode as ::wxTOKEN_RET_EMPTY. Notice that there is no mode like this one but behaving like ::wxTOKEN_RET_EMPTY_ALL instead of ::wxTOKEN_RET_EMPTY, use ::wxTOKEN_RET_EMPTY_ALL and wxStringTokenizer::GetLastDelimiter() to emulate it. */ wxTOKEN_RET_DELIMS, /** In this mode the class behaves exactly like the standard @c strtok() function: the empty tokens are never returned. */ wxTOKEN_STRTOK }; /** @class wxStringTokenizer wxStringTokenizer helps you to break a string up into a number of tokens. It replaces the standard C function @c strtok() and also extends it in a number of ways. To use this class, you should create a wxStringTokenizer object, give it the string to tokenize and also the delimiters which separate tokens in the string (by default, white space characters will be used). Then wxStringTokenizer::GetNextToken() may be called repeatedly until wxStringTokenizer::HasMoreTokens() returns @false. For example: @code wxStringTokenizer tokenizer("first:second:third:fourth", ":"); while ( tokenizer.HasMoreTokens() ) { wxString token = tokenizer.GetNextToken(); // process token here } @endcode @library{wxbase} @category{data} @see ::wxStringTokenize() */ class wxStringTokenizer : public wxObject { public: /** Default constructor. You must call SetString() before calling any other methods. */ wxStringTokenizer(); /** Constructor. Pass the string to tokenize, a string containing delimiters, and the @a mode specifying how the string should be tokenized. @see SetString() */ wxStringTokenizer(const wxString& str, const wxString& delims = " \t\r\n", wxStringTokenizerMode mode = wxTOKEN_DEFAULT); /** Returns the number of tokens remaining in the input string. The number of tokens returned by this function is decremented each time GetNextToken() is called and when it reaches 0, HasMoreTokens() returns @false. */ size_t CountTokens() const; /** Returns the delimiter which ended scan for the last token returned by GetNextToken() or @c NUL if there had been no calls to this function yet or if it returned the trailing empty token in ::wxTOKEN_RET_EMPTY_ALL mode. @since 2.7.0 */ wxChar GetLastDelimiter() const; /** Returns the next token or empty string if the end of string was reached. */ wxString GetNextToken(); /** Returns the current position (i.e. one index after the last returned token or 0 if GetNextToken() has never been called) in the original string. */ size_t GetPosition() const; /** Returns the part of the starting string without all token already extracted. */ wxString GetString() const; /** Returns @true if the tokenizer has further tokens, @false if none are left. */ bool HasMoreTokens() const; /** Initializes the tokenizer. Pass the string to tokenize, a string containing delimiters, and the @a mode specifying how the string should be tokenized. */ void SetString(const wxString& to_tokenize, const wxString& delims = " \t\r\n", wxStringTokenizerMode mode = wxTOKEN_DEFAULT); }; /** @addtogroup group_funcmacro_string */ //@{ /** This is a convenience function wrapping wxStringTokenizer which simply returns all tokens found in the given @a str as an array. Please see wxStringTokenizer::wxStringTokenizer for the description of the other parameters. @return The array with the parsed tokens. @header{wx/string.h} */ wxArrayString wxStringTokenize(const wxString& str, const wxString& delims = wxDEFAULT_DELIMITERS, wxStringTokenizerMode mode = wxTOKEN_DEFAULT); //@}