/usr/include/d/gtkd-3/glib/Str.d is in libgtkd-3-dev 3.7.5-2build1.
This file is owned by root:root, with mode 0o644.
The actual contents of the file can be viewed below.
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* This file is part of gtkD.
*
* gtkD is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
* it under the terms of the GNU Lesser General Public License
* as published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 3
* of the License, or (at your option) any later version, with
* some exceptions, please read the COPYING file.
*
* gtkD is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
* but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
* MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
* GNU Lesser General Public License for more details.
*
* You should have received a copy of the GNU Lesser General Public License
* along with gtkD; if not, write to the Free Software
* Foundation, Inc., 51 Franklin St, Fifth Floor, Boston, MA 02110, USA
*/
// generated automatically - do not change
// find conversion definition on APILookup.txt
// implement new conversion functionalities on the wrap.utils pakage
module glib.Str;
private import core.stdc.stdio;
private import core.stdc.string;
private import glib.ErrorG;
private import glib.GException;
private import glib.Str;
private import glib.c.functions;
public import glib.c.types;
public import gobject.c.types;
public import gtkc.glibtypes;
/** */
public struct Str
{
/*
* Convert C-style 0 terminated string s to char[] string.
* copied from phobos
*/
public static string toString(const(char)* s, size_t len = 0)
{
if ( s is null )
return cast(string)null;
if ( len == 0 )
len = strlen(s);
return s[0 .. len].idup;
}
/*
* Convert array of chars s[] to a C-style 0 terminated string.
* copied from phobos
*/
public static char* toStringz(string s)
{
if ( s is null ) return null;
char[] copy;
if (s.length == 0)
{
copy = "\0".dup;
}
else
{
// Need to make a copy
copy = new char[s.length + 1];
copy[0..s.length] = s[];
copy[s.length] = 0;
}
return copy.ptr;
}
/** */
public static char** toStringzArray(string[] args)
{
if ( args is null )
{
return null;
}
char** argv = (new char*[args.length]).ptr;
int argc = 0;
foreach (string p; args)
{
argv[argc++] = cast(char*)(p.dup~'\0');
}
argv[argc] = null;
return argv;
}
/** */
public static char*** toStringzArray(string[][] args)
{
if ( args is null )
{
return null;
}
char**[] argv = new char**[args.length];
int argc = 0;
foreach( string[] p; args )
{
argv[argc++] = toStringzArray(p);
}
argv[argc] = null;
return argv.ptr;
}
/** */
public static string[] toStringArray(const(char*)* args)
{
if ( args is null )
{
return null;
}
string[] argv;
while ( *args !is null )
{
argv ~= toString(*args);
args++;
}
return argv;
}
/** */
public static string[] toStringArray(const(char*)* args, size_t len)
{
string[] argv = new string[len];
for ( int i; i < len; i++ )
{
argv[i] = toString(args[i]);
}
return argv;
}
/** */
public static string[][] toStringArray(char*** args)
{
string[][] argv;
if ( args is null )
{
return null;
}
while ( *args !is null )
{
argv ~= toStringArray(*args);
args++;
}
return argv;
}
/** */
public static void freeString(char* str)
{
g_free(str);
}
/** */
public static void freeStringArray(char** str)
{
g_strfreev(str);
}
/** */
public static void freeStringArray(char*** str)
{
while ( *str !is null )
{
g_strfreev(*str);
str++;
}
g_free(str);
}
/**
*/
/**
* 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.
*
* Params:
* c = an ASCII character
*
* Returns: If @c is a decimal digit (according to g_ascii_isdigit()),
* its numeric value. Otherwise, -1.
*/
public static int asciiDigitValue(char c)
{
return g_ascii_digit_value(c);
}
/**
* 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.
*
* Params:
* buffer = A buffer to place the resulting string in
* bufLen = The length of the buffer.
* d = The #gdouble to convert
*
* Returns: The pointer to the buffer with the converted string.
*/
public static string asciiDtostr(string buffer, int bufLen, double d)
{
auto retStr = g_ascii_dtostr(Str.toStringz(buffer), bufLen, d);
scope(exit) Str.freeString(retStr);
return Str.toString(retStr);
}
/**
* 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().
*
* Params:
* buffer = A buffer to place the resulting string in
* bufLen = The length of the buffer.
* format = The printf()-style format to use for the
* code to use for converting.
* d = The #gdouble to convert
*
* Returns: The pointer to the buffer with the converted string.
*/
public static string asciiFormatd(string buffer, int bufLen, string format, double d)
{
auto retStr = g_ascii_formatd(Str.toStringz(buffer), bufLen, Str.toStringz(format), d);
scope(exit) Str.freeString(retStr);
return Str.toString(retStr);
}
/**
* 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.
*
* Params:
* s1 = string to compare with @s2
* s2 = string to compare with @s1
*
* Returns: 0 if the strings match, a negative value if @s1 < @s2,
* or a positive value if @s1 > @s2.
*/
public static int asciiStrcasecmp(string s1, string s2)
{
return g_ascii_strcasecmp(Str.toStringz(s1), Str.toStringz(s2));
}
/**
* Converts all upper case ASCII letters to lower case ASCII letters.
*
* Params:
* str = a string
* len = length of @str in bytes, or -1 if @str is nul-terminated
*
* Returns: 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.)
*/
public static string asciiStrdown(string str, ptrdiff_t len)
{
auto retStr = g_ascii_strdown(Str.toStringz(str), len);
scope(exit) Str.freeString(retStr);
return Str.toString(retStr);
}
/**
* 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.
*
* Params:
* s1 = string to compare with @s2
* s2 = string to compare with @s1
* n = number of characters to compare
*
* Returns: 0 if the strings match, a negative value if @s1 < @s2,
* or a positive value if @s1 > @s2.
*/
public static int asciiStrncasecmp(string s1, string s2, size_t n)
{
return g_ascii_strncasecmp(Str.toStringz(s1), Str.toStringz(s2), n);
}
/**
* 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.
*
* Params:
* nptr = the string to convert to a numeric value.
* endptr = if non-%NULL, it returns the
* character after the last character used in the conversion.
*
* Returns: the #gdouble value.
*/
public static double asciiStrtod(string nptr, out string endptr)
{
char* outendptr = null;
auto p = g_ascii_strtod(Str.toStringz(nptr), &outendptr);
endptr = Str.toString(outendptr);
return p;
}
/**
* 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).
*
* Params:
* nptr = the string to convert to a numeric value.
* endptr = if non-%NULL, it returns the
* character after the last character used in the conversion.
* base = to be used for the conversion, 2..36 or 0
*
* Returns: the #gint64 value or zero on error.
*
* Since: 2.12
*/
public static long asciiStrtoll(string nptr, out string endptr, uint base)
{
char* outendptr = null;
auto p = g_ascii_strtoll(Str.toStringz(nptr), &outendptr, base);
endptr = Str.toString(outendptr);
return p;
}
/**
* 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).
*
* Params:
* nptr = the string to convert to a numeric value.
* endptr = if non-%NULL, it returns the
* character after the last character used in the conversion.
* base = to be used for the conversion, 2..36 or 0
*
* Returns: the #guint64 value or zero on error.
*
* Since: 2.2
*/
public static ulong asciiStrtoull(string nptr, out string endptr, uint base)
{
char* outendptr = null;
auto p = g_ascii_strtoull(Str.toStringz(nptr), &outendptr, base);
endptr = Str.toString(outendptr);
return p;
}
/**
* Converts all lower case ASCII letters to upper case ASCII letters.
*
* Params:
* str = a string
* len = length of @str in bytes, or -1 if @str is nul-terminated
*
* Returns: 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.)
*/
public static string asciiStrup(string str, ptrdiff_t len)
{
auto retStr = g_ascii_strup(Str.toStringz(str), len);
scope(exit) Str.freeString(retStr);
return Str.toString(retStr);
}
/**
* 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.
*
* Params:
* c = any character
*
* Returns: the result of converting @c to lower case. If @c is
* not an ASCII upper case letter, @c is returned unchanged.
*/
public static char asciiTolower(char c)
{
return g_ascii_tolower(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.
*
* Params:
* c = any character
*
* Returns: the result of converting @c to upper case. If @c is not
* an ASCII lower case letter, @c is returned unchanged.
*/
public static char asciiToupper(char c)
{
return g_ascii_toupper(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.
*
* Params:
* c = an ASCII character.
*
* Returns: If @c is a hex digit (according to g_ascii_isxdigit()),
* its numeric value. Otherwise, -1.
*/
public static int asciiXdigitValue(char c)
{
return g_ascii_xdigit_value(c);
}
/**
* Calculates the maximum space needed to store the output
* of the sprintf() function.
*
* Params:
* format = the format string. See the printf() documentation
* args = the parameters to be inserted into the format string
*
* Returns: the maximum space needed to store the formatted string
*/
public static size_t printfStringUpperBound(string format, void* args)
{
return g_printf_string_upper_bound(Str.toStringz(format), args);
}
/**
* 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.
*
* Params:
* dest = destination buffer.
* src = source string.
*
* Returns: a pointer to trailing nul byte.
*/
public static string stpcpy(string dest, string src)
{
auto retStr = g_stpcpy(Str.toStringz(dest), Str.toStringz(src));
scope(exit) Str.freeString(retStr);
return Str.toString(retStr);
}
/**
* Looks whether the string @str begins with @prefix.
*
* Params:
* str = a nul-terminated string
* prefix = the nul-terminated prefix to look for
*
* Returns: %TRUE if @str begins with @prefix, %FALSE otherwise.
*
* Since: 2.2
*/
public static bool hasPrefix(string str, string prefix)
{
return g_str_has_prefix(Str.toStringz(str), Str.toStringz(prefix)) != 0;
}
/**
* Looks whether the string @str ends with @suffix.
*
* Params:
* str = a nul-terminated string
* suffix = the nul-terminated suffix to look for
*
* Returns: %TRUE if @str end with @suffix, %FALSE otherwise.
*
* Since: 2.2
*/
public static bool hasSuffix(string str, string suffix)
{
return g_str_has_suffix(Str.toStringz(str), Str.toStringz(suffix)) != 0;
}
/**
* Determines if a string is pure ASCII. A string is pure ASCII if it
* contains no bytes with the high bit set.
*
* Params:
* str = a string
*
* Returns: %TRUE if @str is ASCII
*
* Since: 2.40
*/
public static bool isAscii(string str)
{
return g_str_is_ascii(Str.toStringz(str)) != 0;
}
/**
* 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).
*
* Params:
* searchTerm = the search term from the user
* potentialHit = the text that may be a hit
* acceptAlternates = %TRUE to accept ASCII alternates
*
* Returns: %TRUE if @potential_hit is a hit
*
* Since: 2.40
*/
public static bool matchString(string searchTerm, string potentialHit, bool acceptAlternates)
{
return g_str_match_string(Str.toStringz(searchTerm), Str.toStringz(potentialHit), acceptAlternates) != 0;
}
/**
* 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][.codeset][@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.
*
* Params:
* str = a string, in UTF-8
* fromLocale = the source locale, if known
*
* Returns: a string in plain ASCII
*
* Since: 2.40
*/
public static string toAscii(string str, string fromLocale)
{
auto retStr = g_str_to_ascii(Str.toStringz(str), Str.toStringz(fromLocale));
scope(exit) Str.freeString(retStr);
return Str.toString(retStr);
}
/**
* 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.
*
* Params:
* str = a string
* translitLocale = the language code (like 'de' or
* 'en_GB') from which @string originates
* asciiAlternates = a
* return location for ASCII alternates
*
* Returns: the folded tokens
*
* Since: 2.40
*/
public static string[] tokenizeAndFold(string str, string translitLocale, out string[] asciiAlternates)
{
char** outasciiAlternates = null;
auto retStr = g_str_tokenize_and_fold(Str.toStringz(str), Str.toStringz(translitLocale), &outasciiAlternates);
asciiAlternates = Str.toStringArray(outasciiAlternates);
scope(exit) Str.freeStringArray(retStr);
return Str.toStringArray(retStr);
}
/**
* 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
* |[<!-- language="C" -->
* g_ascii_strup (g_strcanon (str, "abc", '?'))
* ]|
*
* Params:
* str = a nul-terminated array of bytes
* validChars = bytes permitted in @string
* substitutor = replacement character for disallowed bytes
*
* Returns: @string
*/
public static string strcanon(string str, string validChars, char substitutor)
{
auto retStr = g_strcanon(Str.toStringz(str), Str.toStringz(validChars), substitutor);
scope(exit) Str.freeString(retStr);
return Str.toString(retStr);
}
/**
* A case-insensitive string comparison, corresponding to the standard
* strcasecmp() function on platforms which support it.
*
* Deprecated: See g_strncasecmp() for a discussion of why this
* function is deprecated and how to replace it.
*
* Params:
* s1 = a string
* s2 = a string to compare with @s1
*
* Returns: 0 if the strings match, a negative value if @s1 < @s2,
* or a positive value if @s1 > @s2.
*/
public static int strcasecmp(string s1, string s2)
{
return g_strcasecmp(Str.toStringz(s1), Str.toStringz(s2));
}
/**
* 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().
*
* Params:
* str = a string to remove the trailing whitespace from
*
* Returns: @string
*/
public static string strchomp(string str)
{
auto retStr = g_strchomp(Str.toStringz(str));
scope(exit) Str.freeString(retStr);
return Str.toString(retStr);
}
/**
* 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().
*
* Params:
* str = a string to remove the leading whitespace from
*
* Returns: @string
*/
public static string strchug(string str)
{
auto retStr = g_strchug(Str.toStringz(str));
scope(exit) Str.freeString(retStr);
return Str.toString(retStr);
}
/**
* Compares @str1 and @str2 like strcmp(). Handles %NULL
* gracefully by sorting it before non-%NULL strings.
* Comparing two %NULL pointers returns 0.
*
* Params:
* str1 = a C string or %NULL
* str2 = another C string or %NULL
*
* Returns: an integer less than, equal to, or greater than zero, if @str1 is <, == or > than @str2.
*
* Since: 2.16
*/
public static int strcmp0(string str1, string str2)
{
return g_strcmp0(Str.toStringz(str1), Str.toStringz(str2));
}
/**
* Replaces all escaped characters with their one byte equivalent.
*
* This function does the reverse conversion of g_strescape().
*
* Params:
* source = a string to compress
*
* Returns: a newly-allocated copy of @source with all escaped
* character compressed
*/
public static string strcompress(string source)
{
auto retStr = g_strcompress(Str.toStringz(source));
scope(exit) Str.freeString(retStr);
return Str.toString(retStr);
}
/**
* 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
* |[<!-- language="C" -->
* g_ascii_strup (g_strdelimit (str, "abc", '?'))
* ]|
*
* Params:
* str = the string to convert
* delimiters = a string containing the current delimiters,
* or %NULL to use the standard delimiters defined in #G_STR_DELIMITERS
* newDelimiter = the new delimiter character
*
* Returns: @string
*/
public static string strdelimit(string str, string delimiters, char newDelimiter)
{
auto retStr = g_strdelimit(Str.toStringz(str), Str.toStringz(delimiters), newDelimiter);
scope(exit) Str.freeString(retStr);
return Str.toString(retStr);
}
/**
* Converts a string to lower case.
*
* Deprecated: This function is totally broken for the reasons discussed
* in the g_strncasecmp() docs - use g_ascii_strdown() or g_utf8_strdown()
* instead.
*
* Params:
* str = the string to convert.
*
* Returns: the string
*/
public static string strdown(string str)
{
auto retStr = g_strdown(Str.toStringz(str));
scope(exit) Str.freeString(retStr);
return Str.toString(retStr);
}
/**
* Duplicates a string. If @str is %NULL it returns %NULL.
* The returned string should be freed with g_free()
* when no longer needed.
*
* Params:
* str = the string to duplicate
*
* Returns: a newly-allocated copy of @str
*/
public static string strdup(string str)
{
auto retStr = g_strdup(Str.toStringz(str));
scope(exit) Str.freeString(retStr);
return Str.toString(retStr);
}
/**
* 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.
*
* Params:
* format = a standard printf() format string, but notice
* [string precision pitfalls][string-precision]
* args = the list of parameters to insert into the format string
*
* Returns: a newly-allocated string holding the result
*/
public static string strdupVprintf(string format, void* args)
{
auto retStr = g_strdup_vprintf(Str.toStringz(format), args);
scope(exit) Str.freeString(retStr);
return Str.toString(retStr);
}
/**
* 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.
*
* Params:
* strArray = a %NULL-terminated array of strings
*
* Returns: a new %NULL-terminated array of strings.
*/
public static string[] strdupv(string[] strArray)
{
return Str.toStringArray(g_strdupv(Str.toStringzArray(strArray)));
}
/**
* 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:
* |[
* int saved_errno;
*
* ret = read (blah);
* saved_errno = errno;
*
* g_strerror (saved_errno);
* ]|
*
* Params:
* errnum = the system error number. See the standard C %errno
* documentation
*
* Returns: a UTF-8 string describing the error code. If the error code
* is unknown, it returns a string like "unknown error (<code>)".
*/
public static string strerror(int errnum)
{
return Str.toString(g_strerror(errnum));
}
/**
* 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.
*
* Params:
* source = a string to escape
* exceptions = a string of characters not to escape in @source
*
* Returns: a newly-allocated copy of @source with certain
* characters escaped. See above.
*/
public static string strescape(string source, string exceptions)
{
auto retStr = g_strescape(Str.toStringz(source), Str.toStringz(exceptions));
scope(exit) Str.freeString(retStr);
return Str.toString(retStr);
}
/**
* Frees a %NULL-terminated array of strings, as well as each
* string it contains.
*
* If @str_array is %NULL, this function simply returns.
*
* Params:
* strArray = a %NULL-terminated array of strings to free
*/
public static void strfreev(string[] strArray)
{
g_strfreev(Str.toStringzArray(strArray));
}
/**
* 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.
*
* Params:
* separator = a string to insert between each of the
* strings, or %NULL
* strArray = a %NULL-terminated array of strings to join
*
* Returns: a newly-allocated string containing all of the strings joined
* together, with @separator between them
*/
public static string strjoinv(string separator, string[] strArray)
{
auto retStr = g_strjoinv(Str.toStringz(separator), Str.toStringzArray(strArray));
scope(exit) Str.freeString(retStr);
return Str.toString(retStr);
}
/**
* 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.
*
* Params:
* dest = destination buffer, already containing one nul-terminated string
* src = source buffer
* destSize = length of @dest buffer in bytes (not length of existing string
* inside @dest)
*
* Returns: size of attempted result, which is MIN (dest_size, strlen
* (original dest)) + strlen (src), so if retval >= dest_size,
* truncation occurred.
*/
public static size_t strlcat(string dest, string src, size_t destSize)
{
return g_strlcat(Str.toStringz(dest), Str.toStringz(src), destSize);
}
/**
* 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.
*
* Params:
* dest = destination buffer
* src = source buffer
* destSize = length of @dest in bytes
*
* Returns: length of @src
*/
public static size_t strlcpy(string dest, string src, size_t destSize)
{
return g_strlcpy(Str.toStringz(dest), Str.toStringz(src), destSize);
}
/**
* 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.
*
* Deprecated: 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.
*
* Params:
* s1 = a string
* s2 = a string to compare with @s1
* n = the maximum number of characters to compare
*
* Returns: 0 if the strings match, a negative value if @s1 < @s2,
* or a positive value if @s1 > @s2.
*/
public static int strncasecmp(string s1, string s2, uint n)
{
return g_strncasecmp(Str.toStringz(s1), Str.toStringz(s2), 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.
*
* Params:
* str = the string to duplicate
* n = the maximum number of bytes to copy from @str
*
* Returns: a newly-allocated buffer containing the first @n bytes
* of @str, nul-terminated
*/
public static string strndup(string str, size_t n)
{
auto retStr = g_strndup(Str.toStringz(str), n);
scope(exit) Str.freeString(retStr);
return Str.toString(retStr);
}
/**
* Creates a new string @length bytes long filled with @fill_char.
* The returned string should be freed when no longer needed.
*
* Params:
* length = the length of the new string
* fillChar = the byte to fill the string with
*
* Returns: a newly-allocated string filled the @fill_char
*/
public static string strnfill(size_t length, char fillChar)
{
auto retStr = g_strnfill(length, fillChar);
scope(exit) Str.freeString(retStr);
return Str.toString(retStr);
}
/**
* 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().
*
* Params:
* str = the string to reverse
*
* Returns: the same pointer passed in as @string
*/
public static string strreverse(string str)
{
auto retStr = g_strreverse(Str.toStringz(str));
scope(exit) Str.freeString(retStr);
return Str.toString(retStr);
}
/**
* Searches the string @haystack for the last occurrence
* of the string @needle.
*
* Params:
* haystack = a nul-terminated string
* needle = the nul-terminated string to search for
*
* Returns: a pointer to the found occurrence, or
* %NULL if not found.
*/
public static string strrstr(string haystack, string needle)
{
auto retStr = g_strrstr(Str.toStringz(haystack), Str.toStringz(needle));
scope(exit) Str.freeString(retStr);
return Str.toString(retStr);
}
/**
* Searches the string @haystack for the last occurrence
* of the string @needle, limiting the length of the search
* to @haystack_len.
*
* Params:
* haystack = a nul-terminated string
* haystackLen = the maximum length of @haystack
* needle = the nul-terminated string to search for
*
* Returns: a pointer to the found occurrence, or
* %NULL if not found.
*/
public static string strrstrLen(string haystack, ptrdiff_t haystackLen, string needle)
{
auto retStr = g_strrstr_len(Str.toStringz(haystack), haystackLen, Str.toStringz(needle));
scope(exit) Str.freeString(retStr);
return Str.toString(retStr);
}
/**
* Returns a string describing the given signal, e.g. "Segmentation fault".
* You should use this function in preference to strsignal(), because it
* returns a string in UTF-8 encoding, and since not all platforms support
* the strsignal() function.
*
* Params:
* signum = the signal number. See the `signal` documentation
*
* Returns: a UTF-8 string describing the signal. If the signal is unknown,
* it returns "unknown signal (<signum>)".
*/
public static string strsignal(int signum)
{
return Str.toString(g_strsignal(signum));
}
/**
* 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().
*
* Params:
* str = 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 is reached.
* maxTokens = the maximum number of pieces to split @string into.
* If this is less than 1, the string is split completely.
*
* Returns: a newly-allocated %NULL-terminated array of strings. Use
* g_strfreev() to free it.
*/
public static string[] strsplit(string str, string delimiter, int maxTokens)
{
return Str.toStringArray(g_strsplit(Str.toStringz(str), Str.toStringz(delimiter), maxTokens));
}
/**
* 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.
*
* Params:
* str = The string to be tokenized
* delimiters = A nul-terminated string containing bytes that are used
* to split the string.
* maxTokens = The maximum number of tokens to split @string into.
* If this is less than 1, the string is split completely
*
* Returns: a newly-allocated %NULL-terminated array of strings. Use
* g_strfreev() to free it.
*
* Since: 2.4
*/
public static string[] strsplitSet(string str, string delimiters, int maxTokens)
{
return Str.toStringArray(g_strsplit_set(Str.toStringz(str), Str.toStringz(delimiters), maxTokens));
}
/**
* Searches the string @haystack for the first occurrence
* of the string @needle, limiting the length of the search
* to @haystack_len.
*
* Params:
* haystack = a string
* haystackLen = the maximum length of @haystack. Note that -1 is
* a valid length, if @haystack is nul-terminated, meaning it will
* search through the whole string.
* needle = the string to search for
*
* Returns: a pointer to the found occurrence, or
* %NULL if not found.
*/
public static string strstrLen(string haystack, ptrdiff_t haystackLen, string needle)
{
auto retStr = g_strstr_len(Str.toStringz(haystack), haystackLen, Str.toStringz(needle));
scope(exit) Str.freeString(retStr);
return Str.toString(retStr);
}
/**
* 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.
*
* Params:
* nptr = the string to convert to a numeric value.
* endptr = if non-%NULL, it returns the
* character after the last character used in the conversion.
*
* Returns: the #gdouble value.
*/
public static double strtod(string nptr, out string endptr)
{
char* outendptr = null;
auto p = g_strtod(Str.toStringz(nptr), &outendptr);
endptr = Str.toString(outendptr);
return p;
}
/**
* Converts a string to upper case.
*
* Deprecated: This function is totally broken for the reasons
* discussed in the g_strncasecmp() docs - use g_ascii_strup()
* or g_utf8_strup() instead.
*
* Params:
* str = the string to convert
*
* Returns: the string
*/
public static string strup(string str)
{
auto retStr = g_strup(Str.toStringz(str));
scope(exit) Str.freeString(retStr);
return Str.toString(retStr);
}
/** */
public static GType strvGetType()
{
return g_strv_get_type();
}
/**
* Returns the length of the given %NULL-terminated
* string array @str_array.
*
* Params:
* strArray = a %NULL-terminated array of strings
*
* Returns: length of @str_array.
*
* Since: 2.6
*/
public static uint strvLength(string[] strArray)
{
return g_strv_length(Str.toStringzArray(strArray));
}
/**
* Checks if @strv contains @str. @strv must not be %NULL.
*
* Params:
* strv = a %NULL-terminated array of strings
* str = a string
*
* Returns: %TRUE if @str is an element of @strv, according to g_str_equal().
*
* Since: 2.44
*/
public static bool strvContains(string strv, string str)
{
return g_strv_contains(Str.toStringz(strv), Str.toStringz(str)) != 0;
}
/**
* 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.
*
* Params:
* str = the return location for the newly-allocated string.
* format = a standard printf() format string, but notice
* [string precision pitfalls][string-precision]
* args = the list of arguments to insert in the output.
*
* Returns: the number of bytes printed.
*
* Since: 2.4
*/
public static int vasprintf(string[] str, string format, void* args)
{
return g_vasprintf(Str.toStringzArray(str), Str.toStringz(format), args);
}
/**
* An implementation of the standard vprintf() function which supports
* positional parameters, as specified in the Single Unix Specification.
*
* Params:
* format = a standard printf() format string, but notice
* [string precision pitfalls][string-precision]
* args = the list of arguments to insert in the output.
*
* Returns: the number of bytes printed.
*
* Since: 2.2
*/
public static int vprintf(string format, void* args)
{
return g_vprintf(Str.toStringz(format), 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.
*
* Params:
* str = the buffer to hold the output.
* n = the maximum number of bytes to produce (including the
* terminating nul character).
* format = a standard printf() format string, but notice
* string precision pitfalls][string-precision]
* args = the list of arguments to insert in the output.
*
* Returns: the number of bytes which would be produced if the buffer
* was large enough.
*/
public static int vsnprintf(string str, gulong n, string format, void* args)
{
return g_vsnprintf(Str.toStringz(str), n, Str.toStringz(format), args);
}
/**
* An implementation of the standard vsprintf() function which supports
* positional parameters, as specified in the Single Unix Specification.
*
* Params:
* str = the buffer to hold the output.
* format = a standard printf() format string, but notice
* [string precision pitfalls][string-precision]
* args = the list of arguments to insert in the output.
*
* Returns: the number of bytes printed.
*
* Since: 2.2
*/
public static int vsprintf(string str, string format, void* args)
{
return g_vsprintf(Str.toStringz(str), Str.toStringz(format), args);
}
/**
* An implementation of the standard fprintf() function which supports
* positional parameters, as specified in the Single Unix Specification.
*
* Params:
* file = the stream to write to.
* format = a standard printf() format string, but notice
* [string precision pitfalls][string-precision]
* args = the list of arguments to insert in the output.
*
* Returns: the number of bytes printed.
*
* Since: 2.2
*/
public static int vfprintf(FILE* file, string format, void* args)
{
return g_vfprintf(file, Str.toStringz(format), args);
}
/**
* 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.
*
* Params:
* str = a string
* base = base of a parsed number
* min = a lower bound (inclusive)
* max = an upper bound (inclusive)
* outNum = a return location for a number
*
* Returns: %TRUE if @str was a number, otherwise %FALSE.
*
* Since: 2.54
*
* Throws: GException on failure.
*/
public static bool asciiStringToSigned(string str, uint base, long min, long max, out long outNum)
{
GError* err = null;
auto p = g_ascii_string_to_signed(Str.toStringz(str), base, min, max, &outNum, &err) != 0;
if (err !is null)
{
throw new GException( new ErrorG(err) );
}
return p;
}
/**
* 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.
*
* Params:
* str = a string
* base = base of a parsed number
* min = a lower bound (inclusive)
* max = an upper bound (inclusive)
* outNum = a return location for a number
*
* Returns: %TRUE if @str was a number, otherwise %FALSE.
*
* Since: 2.54
*
* Throws: GException on failure.
*/
public static bool asciiStringToUnsigned(string str, uint base, ulong min, ulong max, out ulong outNum)
{
GError* err = null;
auto p = g_ascii_string_to_unsigned(Str.toStringz(str), base, min, max, &outNum, &err) != 0;
if (err !is null)
{
throw new GException( new ErrorG(err) );
}
return p;
}
}
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