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NAME

       binary - Library for handling binary data.

DESCRIPTION

       This  module  contains  functions  for  manipulating  byte-oriented  binaries.  Although  the majority of
       functions could be provided using bit-syntax, the functions in this library are highly optimized and  are
       expected  to  either  execute  faster or consume less memory, or both, than a counterpart written in pure
       Erlang.

       The module is provided according to Erlang Enhancement Proposal (EEP) 31.

   Note:
       The library handles byte-oriented data. For bitstrings that are not  binaries  (does  not  contain  whole
       octets of bits) a badarg exception is thrown from any of the functions in this module.

DATA TYPES

       cp()

              Opaque  data  type  representing  a  compiled  search pattern. Guaranteed to be a tuple() to allow
              programs to distinguish it from non-precompiled search patterns.

       part() = {Start :: integer() >= 0, Length :: integer()}

              A representaion of a part (or range) in a binary. Start is a zero-based offset into a binary() and
              Length is the length of that  part.  As  input  to  functions  in  this  module,  a  reverse  part
              specification  is  allowed,  constructed  with  a  negative Length, so that the part of the binary
              begins at Start + Length and is -Length long. This is useful for referencing the last N bytes of a
              binary as {size(Binary), -N}. The functions in this module always  return  part()s  with  positive
              Length.

EXPORTS

       at(Subject, Pos) -> byte()

              Types:

                 Subject = binary()
                 Pos = integer() >= 0

              Returns  the  byte  at  position  Pos  (zero-based)  in  binary  Subject  as an integer. If Pos >=
              byte_size(Subject), a badarg exception is raised.

       bin_to_list(Subject) -> [byte()]

              Types:

                 Subject = binary()

              Same as bin_to_list(Subject, {0,byte_size(Subject)}).

       bin_to_list(Subject, PosLen) -> [byte()]

              Types:

                 Subject = binary()
                 PosLen = part()

              Converts Subject to a list of byte()s, each representing the value of  one  byte.  part()  denotes
              which part of the binary() to convert.

              Example:

              1> binary:bin_to_list(<<"erlang">>, {1,3}).
              "rla"
              %% or [114,108,97] in list notation.

              If PosLen in any way references outside the binary, a badarg exception is raised.

       bin_to_list(Subject, Pos, Len) -> [byte()]

              Types:

                 Subject = binary()
                 Pos = integer() >= 0
                 Len = integer()

              Same as bin_to_list(Subject, {Pos, Len}).

       compile_pattern(Pattern) -> cp()

              Types:

                 Pattern = binary() | [binary()]

              Builds  an  internal structure representing a compilation of a search pattern, later to be used in
              functions match/3, matches/3, split/3, or replace/4. The cp()  returned  is  guaranteed  to  be  a
              tuple() to allow programs to distinguish it from non-precompiled search patterns.

              When  a list of binaries is specified, it denotes a set of alternative binaries to search for. For
              example, if [<<"functional">>,<<"programming">>]  is  specified  as  Pattern,  this  means  either
              <<"functional">>  or  <<"programming">>". The pattern is a set of alternatives; when only a single
              binary is specified, the set has only one element. The order of alternatives in a pattern  is  not
              significant.

              The list of binaries used for search alternatives must be flat and proper.

              If  Pattern  is not a binary or a flat proper list of binaries with length > 0, a badarg exception
              is raised.

       copy(Subject) -> binary()

              Types:

                 Subject = binary()

              Same as copy(Subject, 1).

       copy(Subject, N) -> binary()

              Types:

                 Subject = binary()
                 N = integer() >= 0

              Creates a binary with the content of Subject duplicated N times.

              This function always creates a new binary, even if N = 1. By using copy/1 on a binary  referencing
              a larger binary, one can free up the larger binary for garbage collection.

          Note:
              By  deliberately copying a single binary to avoid referencing a larger binary, one can, instead of
              freeing up the larger binary for later garbage collection,  create  much  more  binary  data  than
              needed.  Sharing  binary  data  is usually good. Only in special cases, when small parts reference
              large binaries and the large binaries are no longer used in any process, deliberate copying can be
              a good idea.

              If N < 0, a badarg exception is raised.

       decode_unsigned(Subject) -> Unsigned

              Types:

                 Subject = binary()
                 Unsigned = integer() >= 0

              Same as decode_unsigned(Subject, big).

       decode_unsigned(Subject, Endianness) -> Unsigned

              Types:

                 Subject = binary()
                 Endianness = big | little
                 Unsigned = integer() >= 0

              Converts the binary digit representation, in big endian or little endian, of a positive integer in
              Subject to an Erlang integer().

              Example:

              1> binary:decode_unsigned(<<169,138,199>>,big).
              11111111

       encode_unsigned(Unsigned) -> binary()

              Types:

                 Unsigned = integer() >= 0

              Same as encode_unsigned(Unsigned, big).

       encode_unsigned(Unsigned, Endianness) -> binary()

              Types:

                 Unsigned = integer() >= 0
                 Endianness = big | little

              Converts  a  positive  integer  to  the  smallest  possible  representation  in  a  binary   digit
              representation, either big endian or little endian.

              Example:

              1> binary:encode_unsigned(11111111, big).
              <<169,138,199>>

       first(Subject) -> byte()

              Types:

                 Subject = binary()

              Returns  the  first byte of binary Subject as an integer. If the size of Subject is zero, a badarg
              exception is raised.

       last(Subject) -> byte()

              Types:

                 Subject = binary()

              Returns the last byte of binary Subject as an integer. If the size of Subject is  zero,  a  badarg
              exception is raised.

       list_to_bin(ByteList) -> binary()

              Types:

                 ByteList = iodata()

              Works exactly as erlang:list_to_binary/1, added for completeness.

       longest_common_prefix(Binaries) -> integer() >= 0

              Types:

                 Binaries = [binary()]

              Returns the length of the longest common prefix of the binaries in list Binaries.

              Example:

              1> binary:longest_common_prefix([<<"erlang">>, <<"ergonomy">>]).
              2
              2> binary:longest_common_prefix([<<"erlang">>, <<"perl">>]).
              0

              If Binaries is not a flat list of binaries, a badarg exception is raised.

       longest_common_suffix(Binaries) -> integer() >= 0

              Types:

                 Binaries = [binary()]

              Returns the length of the longest common suffix of the binaries in list Binaries.

              Example:

              1> binary:longest_common_suffix([<<"erlang">>, <<"fang">>]).
              3
              2> binary:longest_common_suffix([<<"erlang">>, <<"perl">>]).
              0

              If Binaries is not a flat list of binaries, a badarg exception is raised.

       match(Subject, Pattern) -> Found | nomatch

              Types:

                 Subject = binary()
                 Pattern = binary() | [binary()] | cp()
                 Found = part()

              Same as match(Subject, Pattern, []).

       match(Subject, Pattern, Options) -> Found | nomatch

              Types:

                 Subject = binary()
                 Pattern = binary() | [binary()] | cp()
                 Found = part()
                 Options = [Option]
                 Option = {scope, part()}
                 part() = {Start :: integer() >= 0, Length :: integer()}

              Searches for the first occurrence of Pattern in Subject and returns the position and length.

              The  function  returns {Pos, Length} for the binary in Pattern, starting at the lowest position in
              Subject.

              Example:

              1> binary:match(<<"abcde">>, [<<"bcde">>, <<"cd">>],[]).
              {1,4}

              Even though <<"cd">> ends before <<"bcde">>, <<"bcde">> begins first and is  therefore  the  first
              match. If two overlapping matches begin at the same position, the longest is returned.

              Summary of the options:

                {scope, {Start, Length}}:
                  Only  the  specified  part is searched. Return values still have offsets from the beginning of
                  Subject. A negative Length is allowed as described in section Data Types in this manual.

              If none of the strings in Pattern is found, the atom nomatch is returned.

              For a description of Pattern, see function compile_pattern/1.

              If {scope, {Start,Length}} is specified in the options such that Start > size of Subject, Start  +
              Length < 0 or Start + Length > size of Subject, a badarg exception is raised.

       matches(Subject, Pattern) -> Found

              Types:

                 Subject = binary()
                 Pattern = binary() | [binary()] | cp()
                 Found = [part()]

              Same as matches(Subject, Pattern, []).

       matches(Subject, Pattern, Options) -> Found

              Types:

                 Subject = binary()
                 Pattern = binary() | [binary()] | cp()
                 Found = [part()]
                 Options = [Option]
                 Option = {scope, part()}
                 part() = {Start :: integer() >= 0, Length :: integer()}

              As  match/2,  but  Subject  is  searched  until  exhausted and a list of all non-overlapping parts
              matching Pattern is returned (in order).

              The first and longest match is preferred to a shorter,  which  is  illustrated  by  the  following
              example:

              1> binary:matches(<<"abcde">>,
                                [<<"bcde">>,<<"bc">>,<<"de">>],[]).
              [{1,4}]

              The  result  shows  that <<"bcde">> is selected instead of the shorter match <<"bc">> (which would
              have given raise to one more match, <<"de">>). This corresponds to the behavior of  POSIX  regular
              expressions  (and  programs  like  awk), but is not consistent with alternative matches in re (and
              Perl), where instead lexical ordering in the search pattern selects which string matches.

              If none of the strings in a pattern is found, an empty list is returned.

              For a description of Pattern, see compile_pattern/1. For a description of available  options,  see
              match/3.

              If  {scope, {Start,Length}} is specified in the options such that Start > size of Subject, Start +
              Length < 0 or Start + Length is > size of Subject, a badarg exception is raised.

       part(Subject, PosLen) -> binary()

              Types:

                 Subject = binary()
                 PosLen = part()

              Extracts the part of binary Subject described by PosLen.

              A negative length can be used to extract bytes at the end of a binary:

              1> Bin = <<1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10>>.
              2> binary:part(Bin, {byte_size(Bin), -5}).
              <<6,7,8,9,10>>

          Note:
              part/2 and part/3 are also available in the  erlang  module  under  the  names  binary_part/2  and
              binary_part/3. Those BIFs are allowed in guard tests.

              If PosLen in any way references outside the binary, a badarg exception is raised.

       part(Subject, Pos, Len) -> binary()

              Types:

                 Subject = binary()
                 Pos = integer() >= 0
                 Len = integer()

              Same as part(Subject, {Pos, Len}).

       referenced_byte_size(Binary) -> integer() >= 0

              Types:

                 Binary = binary()

              If a binary references a larger binary (often described as being a subbinary), it can be useful to
              get  the  size of the referenced binary. This function can be used in a program to trigger the use
              of copy/1. By copying a binary, one can dereference the original, possibly large,  binary  that  a
              smaller binary is a reference to.

              Example:

              store(Binary, GBSet) ->
                NewBin =
                    case binary:referenced_byte_size(Binary) of
                        Large when Large > 2 * byte_size(Binary) ->
                           binary:copy(Binary);
                        _ ->
                           Binary
                    end,
                gb_sets:insert(NewBin,GBSet).

              In  this  example,  we chose to copy the binary content before inserting it in gb_sets:set() if it
              references a binary more than twice the data size we want to  keep.  Of  course,  different  rules
              apply when copying to different programs.

              Binary  sharing  occurs  whenever  binaries  are  taken  apart. This is the fundamental reason why
              binaries are fast, decomposition can always be done with O(1) complexity.  In  rare  circumstances
              this  data  sharing  is  however undesirable, why this function together with copy/1 can be useful
              when optimizing for memory use.

              Example of binary sharing:

              1> A = binary:copy(<<1>>, 100).
              <<1,1,1,1,1 ...
              2> byte_size(A).
              100
              3> binary:referenced_byte_size(A)
              100
              4> <<_:10/binary,B:10/binary,_/binary>> = A.
              <<1,1,1,1,1 ...
              5> byte_size(B).
              10
              6> binary:referenced_byte_size(B)
              100

          Note:
              Binary data is shared among processes. If another process  still  references  the  larger  binary,
              copying  the  part  this  process  uses  only consumes more memory and does not free up the larger
              binary for garbage collection. Use this kind of intrusive functions with extreme care and only  if
              a real problem is detected.

       replace(Subject, Pattern, Replacement) -> Result

              Types:

                 Subject = binary()
                 Pattern = binary() | [binary()] | cp()
                 Replacement = Result = binary()

              Same as replace(Subject, Pattern, Replacement,[]).

       replace(Subject, Pattern, Replacement, Options) -> Result

              Types:

                 Subject = binary()
                 Pattern = binary() | [binary()] | cp()
                 Replacement = binary()
                 Options = [Option]
                 Option = global | {scope, part()} | {insert_replaced, InsPos}
                 InsPos = OnePos | [OnePos]
                 OnePos = integer() >= 0
                   An integer() =< byte_size(Replacement)
                 Result = binary()

              Constructs  a  new  binary  by replacing the parts in Subject matching Pattern with the content of
              Replacement.

              If the matching subpart of Subject giving raise to the  replacement  is  to  be  inserted  in  the
              result,  option  {insert_replaced,  InsPos}  inserts  the  matching  part  into Replacement at the
              specified position (or positions) before inserting Replacement into Subject.

              Example:

              1> binary:replace(<<"abcde">>,<<"b">>,<<"[]">>, [{insert_replaced,1}]).
              <<"a[b]cde">>
              2> binary:replace(<<"abcde">>,[<<"b">>,<<"d">>],<<"[]">>,[global,{insert_replaced,1}]).
              <<"a[b]c[d]e">>
              3> binary:replace(<<"abcde">>,[<<"b">>,<<"d">>],<<"[]">>,[global,{insert_replaced,[1,1]}]).
              <<"a[bb]c[dd]e">>
              4> binary:replace(<<"abcde">>,[<<"b">>,<<"d">>],<<"[-]">>,[global,{insert_replaced,[1,2]}]).
              <<"a[b-b]c[d-d]e">>

              If any position specified in InsPos > size of  the  replacement  binary,  a  badarg  exception  is
              raised.

              Options global and {scope, part()} work as for split/3. The return type is always a binary().

              For a description of Pattern, see compile_pattern/1.

       split(Subject, Pattern) -> Parts

              Types:

                 Subject = binary()
                 Pattern = binary() | [binary()] | cp()
                 Parts = [binary()]

              Same as split(Subject, Pattern, []).

       split(Subject, Pattern, Options) -> Parts

              Types:

                 Subject = binary()
                 Pattern = binary() | [binary()] | cp()
                 Options = [Option]
                 Option = {scope, part()} | trim | global | trim_all
                 Parts = [binary()]

              Splits  Subject  into a list of binaries based on Pattern. If option global is not specified, only
              the first occurrence of Pattern in Subject gives rise to a split.

              The parts of Pattern found in Subject are not included in the result.

              Example:

              1> binary:split(<<1,255,4,0,0,0,2,3>>, [<<0,0,0>>,<<2>>],[]).
              [<<1,255,4>>, <<2,3>>]
              2> binary:split(<<0,1,0,0,4,255,255,9>>, [<<0,0>>, <<255,255>>],[global]).
              [<<0,1>>,<<4>>,<<9>>]

              Summary of options:

                {scope, part()}:
                  Works as in match/3 and matches/3. Notice that this only defines the scope of the  search  for
                  matching  strings, it does not cut the binary before splitting. The bytes before and after the
                  scope are kept in the result. See the example below.

                trim:
                  Removes trailing empty parts of the result (as does trim in re:split/3.

                trim_all:
                  Removes all empty parts of the result.

                global:
                  Repeats the split until Subject is exhausted. Conceptually option global makes split  work  on
                  the  positions  returned  by  matches/3,  while  it normally works on the position returned by
                  match/3.

              Example of the difference between a scope and taking the binary apart before splitting:

              1> binary:split(<<"banana">>, [<<"a">>],[{scope,{2,3}}]).
              [<<"ban">>,<<"na">>]
              2> binary:split(binary:part(<<"banana">>,{2,3}), [<<"a">>],[]).
              [<<"n">>,<<"n">>]

              The return type is always a list of binaries that are all referencing Subject. This means that the
              data in Subject is not copied to new binaries, and that Subject cannot be garbage collected  until
              the results of the split are no longer referenced.

              For a description of Pattern, see compile_pattern/1.

Ericsson AB                                       stdlib 3.4.3                                      binary(3erl)