// Copyright 2013 The Chromium Authors. All rights reserved. // Use of this source code is governed by a BSD-style license that can be // found in the LICENSE file. // // This file defines utility functions for working with strings. #ifndef BASE_STRINGS_STRING_UTIL_H_ #define BASE_STRINGS_STRING_UTIL_H_ #include #include // va_list #include #include #include #include #include "base/compiler_specific.h" #include "base/strings/string_piece.h" // For implicit conversions. #include "build/build_config.h" // On Android, bionic's stdio.h defines an snprintf macro when being built with // clang. Undefine it here so it won't collide with base::snprintf(). #undef snprintf namespace base { // C standard-library functions that aren't cross-platform are provided as // "base::...", and their prototypes are listed below. These functions are // then implemented as inline calls to the platform-specific equivalents in the // platform-specific headers. // Wrapper for vsnprintf that always null-terminates and always returns the // number of characters that would be in an untruncated formatted // string, even when truncation occurs. int vsnprintf(char* buffer, size_t size, const char* format, va_list arguments) PRINTF_FORMAT(3, 0); // Some of these implementations need to be inlined. // We separate the declaration from the implementation of this inline // function just so the PRINTF_FORMAT works. inline int snprintf(char* buffer, size_t size, _Printf_format_string_ const char* format, ...) PRINTF_FORMAT(3, 4); inline int snprintf(char* buffer, size_t size, _Printf_format_string_ const char* format, ...) { va_list arguments; va_start(arguments, format); int result = vsnprintf(buffer, size, format, arguments); va_end(arguments); return result; } // BSD-style safe and consistent string copy functions. // Copies |src| to |dst|, where |dst_size| is the total allocated size of |dst|. // Copies at most |dst_size|-1 characters, and always NULL terminates |dst|, as // long as |dst_size| is not 0. Returns the length of |src| in characters. // If the return value is >= dst_size, then the output was truncated. // NOTE: All sizes are in number of characters, NOT in bytes. size_t strlcpy(char* dst, const char* src, size_t dst_size); // ASCII-specific tolower. The standard library's tolower is locale sensitive, // so we don't want to use it here. inline char ToLowerASCII(char c) { return (c >= 'A' && c <= 'Z') ? (c + ('a' - 'A')) : c; } // ASCII-specific toupper. The standard library's toupper is locale sensitive, // so we don't want to use it here. inline char ToUpperASCII(char c) { return (c >= 'a' && c <= 'z') ? (c + ('A' - 'a')) : c; } // Converts the given string to it's ASCII-lowercase equivalent. std::string ToLowerASCII(StringPiece str); // Converts the given string to it's ASCII-uppercase equivalent. std::string ToUpperASCII(StringPiece str); // Functor for case-insensitive ASCII comparisons for STL algorithms like // std::search. // // Note that a full Unicode version of this functor is not possible to write // because case mappings might change the number of characters, depend on // context (combining accents), and require handling UTF-16. If you need // proper Unicode support, use base::i18n::ToLower/FoldCase and then just // use a normal operator== on the result. template struct CaseInsensitiveCompareASCII { public: bool operator()(Char x, Char y) const { return ToLowerASCII(x) == ToLowerASCII(y); } }; // Like strcasecmp for case-insensitive ASCII characters only. Returns: // -1 (a < b) // 0 (a == b) // 1 (a > b) // (unlike strcasecmp which can return values greater or less than 1/-1). For // full Unicode support, use base::i18n::ToLower or base::i18h::FoldCase // and then just call the normal string operators on the result. int CompareCaseInsensitiveASCII(StringPiece a, StringPiece b); // Equality for ASCII case-insensitive comparisons. For full Unicode support, // use base::i18n::ToLower or base::i18h::FoldCase and then compare with either // == or !=. bool EqualsCaseInsensitiveASCII(StringPiece a, StringPiece b); // Contains the set of characters representing whitespace in the corresponding // encoding. Null-terminated. The ASCII versions are the whitespaces as defined // by HTML5, and don't include control characters. extern const char kWhitespaceASCII[]; // Replaces characters in |replace_chars| from anywhere in |input| with // |replace_with|. Each character in |replace_chars| will be replaced with // the |replace_with| string. Returns true if any characters were replaced. // |replace_chars| must be null-terminated. // NOTE: Safe to use the same variable for both |input| and |output|. bool ReplaceChars(const std::string& input, const StringPiece& replace_chars, const std::string& replace_with, std::string* output); enum TrimPositions { TRIM_NONE = 0, TRIM_LEADING = 1 << 0, TRIM_TRAILING = 1 << 1, TRIM_ALL = TRIM_LEADING | TRIM_TRAILING, }; // Removes characters in |trim_chars| from the beginning and end of |input|. // The 8-bit version only works on 8-bit characters, not UTF-8. // // It is safe to use the same variable for both |input| and |output| (this is // the normal usage to trim in-place). bool TrimString(const std::string& input, StringPiece trim_chars, std::string* output); // StringPiece versions of the above. The returned pieces refer to the original // buffer. StringPiece TrimString(StringPiece input, const StringPiece& trim_chars, TrimPositions positions); // Trims any whitespace from either end of the input string. // // The StringPiece versions return a substring referencing the input buffer. // The ASCII versions look only for ASCII whitespace. // // The std::string versions return where whitespace was found. // NOTE: Safe to use the same variable for both input and output. TrimPositions TrimWhitespaceASCII(const std::string& input, TrimPositions positions, std::string* output); // Returns true if the specified string matches the criteria. How can a wide // string be 8-bit or UTF8? It contains only characters that are < 256 (in the // first case) or characters that use only 8-bits and whose 8-bit // representation looks like a UTF-8 string (the second case). // // Note that IsStringUTF8 checks not only if the input is structurally // valid but also if it doesn't contain any non-character codepoint // (e.g. U+FFFE). It's done on purpose because all the existing callers want // to have the maximum 'discriminating' power from other encodings. If // there's a use case for just checking the structural validity, we have to // add a new function for that. // // IsStringASCII assumes the input is likely all ASCII, and does not leave early // if it is not the case. bool IsStringUTF8(const StringPiece& str); bool IsStringASCII(const StringPiece& str); // Reserves enough memory in |str| to accommodate |length_with_null| characters, // sets the size of |str| to |length_with_null - 1| characters, and returns a // pointer to the underlying contiguous array of characters. This is typically // used when calling a function that writes results into a character array, but // the caller wants the data to be managed by a string-like object. It is // convenient in that is can be used inline in the call, and fast in that it // avoids copying the results of the call from a char* into a string. // // |length_with_null| must be at least 2, since otherwise the underlying string // would have size 0, and trying to access &((*str)[0]) in that case can result // in a number of problems. // // Internally, this takes linear time because the resize() call 0-fills the // underlying array for potentially all // (|length_with_null - 1| * sizeof(string_type::value_type)) bytes. Ideally we // could avoid this aspect of the resize() call, as we expect the caller to // immediately write over this memory, but there is no other way to set the size // of the string, and not doing that will mean people who access |str| rather // than str.c_str() will get back a string of whatever size |str| had on entry // to this function (probably 0). char* WriteInto(std::string* str, size_t length_with_null); } // namespace base #if defined(OS_WIN) #include "base/strings/string_util_win.h" #elif defined(OS_POSIX) #include "base/strings/string_util_posix.h" #else #error Define string operations appropriately for your platform #endif #endif // BASE_STRINGS_STRING_UTIL_H_