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			479 lines
		
	
	
		
			21 KiB
		
	
	
	
		
			HTML
		
	
	
	
| <?xml version="1.0" encoding="ISO-8859-1"?>
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| <!DOCTYPE html
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| <head>
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|    <meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=iso-8859-1" />
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|    <meta name="AUTHOR" content="pme@gcc.gnu.org (Phil Edwards)" />
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|    <meta name="KEYWORDS" content="HOWTO, libstdc++, GCC, g++, libg++, STL" />
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|    <meta name="DESCRIPTION" content="HOWTO for the libstdc++ chapter 21." />
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|    <meta name="GENERATOR" content="vi and eight fingers" />
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|    <title>libstdc++-v3 HOWTO:  Chapter 21: Strings</title>
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| <link rel="Start" href="../documentation.html" type="text/html"
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|   title="GNU C++ Standard Library" />
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|   title="General Utilities" />
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|   title="Localization" />
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| </head>
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| <body>
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| 
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| <h1 class="centered"><a name="top">Chapter 21:  Strings</a></h1>
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| 
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| <p>Chapter 21 deals with the C++ strings library (a welcome relief).
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| </p>
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| 
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| 
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| <!-- ####################################################### -->
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| <hr />
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| <h1>Contents</h1>
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| <ul>
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|    <li><a href="#1">MFC's CString</a></li>
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|    <li><a href="#2">A case-insensitive string class</a></li>
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|    <li><a href="#3">Breaking a C++ string into tokens</a></li>
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|    <li><a href="#4">Simple transformations</a></li>
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|    <li><a href="#5">Making strings of arbitrary character types</a></li>
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|    <li><a href="#6">Shrink-to-fit strings</a></li>
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| </ul>
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| 
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| <hr />
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| 
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| <!-- ####################################################### -->
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| 
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| <h2><a name="1">MFC's CString</a></h2>
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|    <p>A common lament seen in various newsgroups deals with the Standard
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|       string class as opposed to the Microsoft Foundation Class called
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|       CString.  Often programmers realize that a standard portable
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|       answer is better than a proprietary nonportable one, but in porting
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|       their application from a Win32 platform, they discover that they
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|       are relying on special functions offered by the CString class.
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|    </p>
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|    <p>Things are not as bad as they seem.  In
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|       <a href="http://gcc.gnu.org/ml/gcc/1999-04n/msg00236.html">this
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|       message</a>, Joe Buck points out a few very important things:
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|    </p>
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|       <ul>
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|          <li>The Standard <code>string</code> supports all the operations
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|              that CString does, with three exceptions.
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|          </li>
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|          <li>Two of those exceptions (whitespace trimming and case 
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|              conversion) are trivial to implement.  In fact, we do so
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|              on this page.
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|          </li>
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|          <li>The third is <code>CString::Format</code>, which allows formatting
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|              in the style of <code>sprintf</code>.  This deserves some mention:
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|          </li>
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|       </ul>
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|    <p><a name="1.1internal"> <!-- Coming from Chapter 27 -->
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|       The old libg++ library had a function called form(), which did much
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|       the same thing.  But for a Standard solution, you should use the
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|       stringstream classes.  These are the bridge between the iostream
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|       hierarchy and the string class, and they operate with regular
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|       streams seamlessly because they inherit from the iostream
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|       hierarchy.  An quick example:
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|       </a>
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|    </p>
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|    <pre>
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|    #include <iostream>
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|    #include <string>
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|    #include <sstream>
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| 
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|    string f (string& incoming)     // incoming is "foo  N"
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|    {
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|        istringstream   incoming_stream(incoming);
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|        string          the_word;
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|        int             the_number;
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| 
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|        incoming_stream >> the_word        // extract "foo"
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|                        >> the_number;     // extract N
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| 
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|        ostringstream   output_stream;
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|        output_stream << "The word was " << the_word
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|                      << " and 3*N was " << (3*the_number);
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| 
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|        return output_stream.str();
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|    } </pre>
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|    <p>A serious problem with CString is a design bug in its memory
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|       allocation.  Specifically, quoting from that same message:
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|    </p>
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|    <pre>
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|    CString suffers from a common programming error that results in
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|    poor performance.  Consider the following code:
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|    
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|    CString n_copies_of (const CString& foo, unsigned n)
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|    {
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|            CString tmp;
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|            for (unsigned i = 0; i < n; i++)
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|                    tmp += foo;
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|            return tmp;
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|    }
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|    
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|    This function is O(n^2), not O(n).  The reason is that each +=
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|    causes a reallocation and copy of the existing string.  Microsoft
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|    applications are full of this kind of thing (quadratic performance
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|    on tasks that can be done in linear time) -- on the other hand,
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|    we should be thankful, as it's created such a big market for high-end
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|    ix86 hardware. :-)
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|    
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|    If you replace CString with string in the above function, the
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|    performance is O(n).
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|    </pre>
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|    <p>Joe Buck also pointed out some other things to keep in mind when
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|       comparing CString and the Standard string class:
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|    </p>
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|       <ul>
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|          <li>CString permits access to its internal representation; coders
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|              who exploited that may have problems moving to <code>string</code>.
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|          </li>
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|          <li>Microsoft ships the source to CString (in the files
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|              MFC\SRC\Str{core,ex}.cpp), so you could fix the allocation
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|              bug and rebuild your MFC libraries.
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|              <em><strong>Note:</strong> It looks like the the CString shipped
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|              with VC++6.0 has fixed this, although it may in fact have been
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|              one of the VC++ SPs that did it.</em>
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|          </li>
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|          <li><code>string</code> operations like this have O(n) complexity
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|              <em>if the implementors do it correctly</em>.  The libstdc++
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|              implementors did it correctly.  Other vendors might not.
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|          </li>
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|          <li>While parts of the SGI STL are used in libstdc++-v3, their
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|              string class is not.  The SGI <code>string</code> is essentially
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|              <code>vector<char></code> and does not do any reference
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|              counting like libstdc++-v3's does.  (It is O(n), though.)
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|              So if you're thinking about SGI's string or rope classes,
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|              you're now looking at four possibilities:  CString, the
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|              libstdc++ string, the SGI string, and the SGI rope, and this
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|              is all before any allocator or traits customizations!  (More
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|              choices than you can shake a stick at -- want fries with that?)
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|          </li>
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|       </ul>
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|    <p>Return <a href="#top">to top of page</a> or
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|       <a href="../faq/index.html">to the FAQ</a>.
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|    </p>
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| 
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| <hr />
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| <h2><a name="2">A case-insensitive string class</a></h2>
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|    <p>The well-known-and-if-it-isn't-well-known-it-ought-to-be
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|       <a href="http://www.gotw.ca/gotw/index.htm">Guru of the Week</a>
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|       discussions held on Usenet covered this topic in January of 1998.
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|       Briefly, the challenge was, "write a 'ci_string' class which
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|       is identical to the standard 'string' class, but is
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|       case-insensitive in the same way as the (common but nonstandard)
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|       C function stricmp():"
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|    </p>
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|    <pre>
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|    ci_string s( "AbCdE" );
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| 
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|    // case insensitive
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|    assert( s == "abcde" );
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|    assert( s == "ABCDE" );
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| 
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|    // still case-preserving, of course
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|    assert( strcmp( s.c_str(), "AbCdE" ) == 0 );
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|    assert( strcmp( s.c_str(), "abcde" ) != 0 ); </pre>
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| 
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|    <p>The solution is surprisingly easy.  The original answer pages
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|       on the GotW website were removed into cold storage, in
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|       preparation for
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|       <a href="http://cseng.aw.com/bookpage.taf?ISBN=0-201-61562-2">a
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|       published book of GotW notes</a>.  Before being
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|       put on the web, of course, it was posted on Usenet, and that
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|       posting containing the answer is <a href="gotw29a.txt">available
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|       here</a>.
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|    </p>
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|    <p>See?  Told you it was easy!</p>
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|    <p><strong>Added June 2000:</strong>  The May issue of <u>C++ Report</u>
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|       contains
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|       a fascinating article by Matt Austern (yes, <em>the</em> Matt Austern)
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|       on why case-insensitive comparisons are not as easy as they seem,
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|       and why creating a class is the <em>wrong</em> way to go about it in
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|       production code.  (The GotW answer mentions one of the principle
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|       difficulties; his article mentions more.)
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|    </p>
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|    <p>Basically, this is "easy" only if you ignore some things,
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|       things which may be too important to your program to ignore.  (I chose
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|       to ignore them when originally writing this entry, and am surprised
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|       that nobody ever called me on it...)  The GotW question and answer
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|       remain useful instructional tools, however.
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|    </p>
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|    <p><strong>Added September 2000:</strong>  James Kanze provided a link to a
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|       <a href="http://www.unicode.org/unicode/reports/tr21/">Unicode
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|       Technical Report discussing case handling</a>, which provides some
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|       very good information.
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|    </p>
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|    <p>Return <a href="#top">to top of page</a> or
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|       <a href="../faq/index.html">to the FAQ</a>.
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|    </p>
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| 
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| <hr />
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| <h2><a name="3">Breaking a C++ string into tokens</a></h2>
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|    <p>The Standard C (and C++) function <code>strtok()</code> leaves a lot to
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|       be desired in terms of user-friendliness.  It's unintuitive, it
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|       destroys the character string on which it operates, and it requires
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|       you to handle all the memory problems.  But it does let the client
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|       code decide what to use to break the string into pieces; it allows
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|       you to choose the "whitespace," so to speak.
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|    </p>
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|    <p>A C++ implementation lets us keep the good things and fix those
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|       annoyances.  The implementation here is more intuitive (you only
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|       call it once, not in a loop with varying argument), it does not
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|       affect the original string at all, and all the memory allocation
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|       is handled for you.
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|    </p>
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|    <p>It's called stringtok, and it's a template function.  It's given
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|       <a href="stringtok_h.txt">in this file</a> in a less-portable form than
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|       it could be, to keep this example simple (for example, see the
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|       comments on what kind of string it will accept).  The author uses
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|       a more general (but less readable) form of it for parsing command
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|       strings and the like.  If you compiled and ran this code using it:
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|    </p>
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|    <pre>
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|    std::list<string>  ls;
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|    stringtok (ls, " this  \t is\t\n  a test  ");
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|    for (std::list<string>const_iterator i = ls.begin();
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|         i != ls.end(); ++i)
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|    {
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|        std::cerr << ':' << (*i) << ":\n";
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|    } </pre>
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|    <p>You would see this as output:
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|    </p>
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|    <pre>
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|    :this:
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|    :is:
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|    :a:
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|    :test: </pre>
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|    <p>with all the whitespace removed.  The original <code>s</code> is still
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|       available for use, <code>ls</code> will clean up after itself, and
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|       <code>ls.size()</code> will return how many tokens there were.
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|    </p>
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|    <p>As always, there is a price paid here, in that stringtok is not
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|       as fast as strtok.  The other benefits usually outweight that, however.
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|       <a href="stringtok_std_h.txt">Another version of stringtok is given
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|       here</a>, suggested by Chris King and tweaked by Petr Prikryl,
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|       and this one uses the
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|       transformation functions mentioned below.  If you are comfortable
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|       with reading the new function names, this version is recommended
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|       as an example.
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|    </p>
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|    <p><strong>Added February 2001:</strong>  Mark Wilden pointed out that the
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|       standard <code>std::getline()</code> function can be used with standard
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|       <a href="../27_io/howto.html">istringstreams</a> to perform
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|       tokenizing as well.  Build an istringstream from the input text,
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|       and then use std::getline with varying delimiters (the three-argument
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|       signature) to extract tokens into a string.
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|    </p>
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|    <p>Return <a href="#top">to top of page</a> or
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|       <a href="../faq/index.html">to the FAQ</a>.
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|    </p>
 | |
| 
 | |
| <hr />
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| <h2><a name="4">Simple transformations</a></h2>
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|    <p>Here are Standard, simple, and portable ways to perform common
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|       transformations on a <code>string</code> instance, such as "convert
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|       to all upper case."  The word transformations is especially
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|       apt, because the standard template function
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|       <code>transform<></code> is used.
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|    </p>
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|    <p>This code will go through some iterations (no pun).  Here's the
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|       simplistic version usually seen on Usenet:
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|    </p>
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|    <pre>
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|    #include <string>
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|    #include <algorithm>
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|    #include <cctype>      // old <ctype.h>
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| 
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|    struct ToLower
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|    {
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|      char operator() (char c) const  { return std::tolower(c); }
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|    };
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| 
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|    struct ToUpper
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|    {
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|      char operator() (char c) const  { return std::toupper(c); }
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|    };
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| 
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|    int main()
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|    {
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|      std::string  s ("Some Kind Of Initial Input Goes Here");
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| 
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|      // Change everything into upper case
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|      std::transform (s.begin(), s.end(), s.begin(), ToUpper());
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| 
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|      // Change everything into lower case
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|      std::transform (s.begin(), s.end(), s.begin(), ToLower());
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| 
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|      // Change everything back into upper case, but store the
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|      // result in a different string
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|      std::string  capital_s;
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|      capital_s.resize(s.size());
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|      std::transform (s.begin(), s.end(), capital_s.begin(), ToUpper());
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|    } </pre>
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|    <p><span class="larger"><strong>Note</strong></span> that these calls all
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|       involve the global C locale through the use of the C functions
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|       <code>toupper/tolower</code>.  This is absolutely guaranteed to work --
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|       but <em>only</em> if the string contains <em>only</em> characters
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|       from the basic source character set, and there are <em>only</em>
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|       96 of those.  Which means that not even all English text can be
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|       represented (certain British spellings, proper names, and so forth).
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|       So, if all your input forevermore consists of only those 96
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|       characters (hahahahahaha), then you're done.
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|    </p>
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|    <p><span class="larger"><strong>Note</strong></span> that the
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|       <code>ToUpper</code> and <code>ToLower</code> function objects
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|       are needed because <code>toupper</code> and <code>tolower</code>
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|       are overloaded names (declared in <code><cctype></code> and
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|       <code><locale></code>) so the template-arguments for
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|       <code>transform<></code> cannot be deduced, as explained in
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|       <a href="http://gcc.gnu.org/ml/libstdc++/2002-11/msg00180.html">this
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|       message</a>.  <!-- section 14.8.2.4 clause 16 in ISO 14882:1998
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|       if you're into that sort of thing -->
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|       At minimum, you can write short wrappers like
 | |
|    </p>
 | |
|    <pre>
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|    char toLower (char c)
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|    {
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|       return std::tolower(c);
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|    } </pre>
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|    <p>The correct method is to use a facet for a particular locale
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|       and call its conversion functions.  These are discussed more in
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|       Chapter 22; the specific part is
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|       <a href="../22_locale/howto.html#7">Correct Transformations</a>,
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|       which shows the final version of this code.  (Thanks to James Kanze
 | |
|       for assistance and suggestions on all of this.)
 | |
|    </p>
 | |
|    <p>Another common operation is trimming off excess whitespace.  Much
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|       like transformations, this task is trivial with the use of string's
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|       <code>find</code> family.  These examples are broken into multiple
 | |
|       statements for readability:
 | |
|    </p>
 | |
|    <pre>
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|    std::string  str (" \t blah blah blah    \n ");
 | |
| 
 | |
|    // trim leading whitespace
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|    string::size_type  notwhite = str.find_first_not_of(" \t\n");
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|    str.erase(0,notwhite);
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| 
 | |
|    // trim trailing whitespace
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|    notwhite = str.find_last_not_of(" \t\n"); 
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|    str.erase(notwhite+1); </pre>
 | |
|    <p>Obviously, the calls to <code>find</code> could be inserted directly
 | |
|       into the calls to <code>erase</code>, in case your compiler does not
 | |
|       optimize named temporaries out of existence.
 | |
|    </p>
 | |
|    <p>Return <a href="#top">to top of page</a> or
 | |
|       <a href="../faq/index.html">to the FAQ</a>.
 | |
|    </p>
 | |
| 
 | |
| <hr />
 | |
| <h2><a name="5">Making strings of arbitrary character types</a></h2>
 | |
|    <p>The <code>std::basic_string</code> is tantalizingly general, in that
 | |
|       it is parameterized on the type of the characters which it holds.
 | |
|       In theory, you could whip up a Unicode character class and instantiate
 | |
|       <code>std::basic_string<my_unicode_char></code>, or assuming
 | |
|       that integers are wider than characters on your platform, maybe just
 | |
|       declare variables of type <code>std::basic_string<int></code>.
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|    </p>
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|    <p>That's the theory.  Remember however that basic_string has additional
 | |
|       type parameters, which take default arguments based on the character
 | |
|       type (called CharT here):
 | |
|    </p>
 | |
|    <pre>
 | |
|       template <typename CharT,
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|                 typename Traits = char_traits<CharT>,
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|                 typename Alloc = allocator<CharT> >
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|       class basic_string { .... };</pre>
 | |
|    <p>Now, <code>allocator<CharT></code> will probably Do The Right
 | |
|       Thing by default, unless you need to implement your own allocator
 | |
|       for your characters.
 | |
|    </p>
 | |
|    <p>But <code>char_traits</code> takes more work.  The char_traits
 | |
|       template is <em>declared</em> but not <em>defined</em>.
 | |
|       That means there is only
 | |
|    </p>
 | |
|    <pre>
 | |
|       template <typename CharT>
 | |
|         struct char_traits
 | |
|         {
 | |
|             static void foo (type1 x, type2 y);
 | |
|             ...
 | |
|         };</pre>
 | |
|    <p>and functions such as char_traits<CharT>::foo() are not
 | |
|       actually defined anywhere for the general case.  The C++ standard
 | |
|       permits this, because writing such a definition to fit all possible
 | |
|       CharT's cannot be done.  (For a time, in earlier versions of GCC,
 | |
|       there was a mostly-correct implementation that let programmers be
 | |
|       lazy.  :-)  But it broke under many situations, so it was removed.
 | |
|       You are no longer allowed to be lazy and non-portable.)
 | |
|    </p>
 | |
|    <p>The C++ standard also requires that char_traits be specialized for
 | |
|       instantiations of <code>char</code> and <code>wchar_t</code>, and it
 | |
|       is these template specializations that permit entities like
 | |
|       <code>basic_string<char,char_traits<char>></code> to work.
 | |
|    </p>
 | |
|    <p>If you want to use character types other than char and wchar_t,
 | |
|       such as <code>unsigned char</code> and <code>int</code>, you will
 | |
|       need to write specializations for them at the present time.  If you
 | |
|       want to use your own special character class, then you have
 | |
|       <a href="http://gcc.gnu.org/ml/libstdc++/2002-08/msg00163.html">a lot
 | |
|       of work to do</a>, especially if you with to use i18n features
 | |
|       (facets require traits information but don't have a traits argument).
 | |
|    </p>
 | |
|    <p>One example of how to specialize char_traits is given <a
 | |
|       href="http://gcc.gnu.org/ml/libstdc++/2002-08/msg00260.html">in
 | |
|       this message</a>, which was then put into the file <code>
 | |
|       include/ext/pod_char_traits.h</code> at a later date.  We agree
 | |
|       that the way it's used with basic_string (scroll down to main())
 | |
|       doesn't look nice, but that's because <a
 | |
|       href="http://gcc.gnu.org/ml/libstdc++/2002-08/msg00236.html">the
 | |
|       nice-looking first attempt</a> turned out to <a
 | |
|       href="http://gcc.gnu.org/ml/libstdc++/2002-08/msg00242.html">not
 | |
|       be conforming C++</a>, due to the rule that CharT must be a POD.
 | |
|       (See how tricky this is?)
 | |
|    </p>
 | |
|    <p>Other approaches were suggested in that same thread, such as providing
 | |
|       more specializations and/or some helper types in the library to assist
 | |
|       users writing such code.  So far nobody has had the time...
 | |
|       <a href="../17_intro/contribute.html">do you?</a>
 | |
|    </p>
 | |
|    <p>Return <a href="#top">to top of page</a> or
 | |
|       <a href="../faq/index.html">to the FAQ</a>.
 | |
|    </p>
 | |
| 
 | |
| <hr />
 | |
| <h2><a name="6">Shrink-to-fit strings</a></h2>
 | |
|    <!-- referenced by faq/index.html#5_9, update link if numbering changes -->
 | |
|    <p>From GCC 3.4 calling <code>s.reserve(res)</code> on a
 | |
|       <code>string s</code> with <code>res < s.capacity()</code> will
 | |
|       reduce the string's capacity to <code>std::max(s.size(), res)</code>.
 | |
|    </p>
 | |
|    <p>This behaviour is suggested, but not required by the standard. Prior
 | |
|       to GCC 3.4 the following alternative can be used instead
 | |
|    </p>
 | |
|    <pre>
 | |
|       std::string(str.data(), str.size()).swap(str);
 | |
|    </pre>
 | |
|    <p>This is similar to the idiom for reducing a <code>vector</code>'s
 | |
|       memory usage (see <a href='../faq/index.html#5_9'>FAQ 5.9</a>) but
 | |
|       the regular copy constructor cannot be used because libstdc++'s
 | |
|       <code>string</code> is Copy-On-Write.
 | |
|    </p>
 | |
|       
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| 
 | |
| <!-- ####################################################### -->
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| 
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| <hr />
 | |
| <p class="fineprint"><em>
 | |
| See <a href="../17_intro/license.html">license.html</a> for copying conditions.
 | |
| Comments and suggestions are welcome, and may be sent to
 | |
| <a href="mailto:libstdc++@gcc.gnu.org">the libstdc++ mailing list</a>.
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| </em></p>
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| 
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