trusty (3) string.3bobcat.gz

Provided by: libbobcat-dev_3.19.01-1ubuntu1_amd64 bug

NAME

       FBB::String - Several operations on std::string objects

SYNOPSIS

       #include <bobcat/string>
       Linking option: -lbobcat

DESCRIPTION

       This  class  offers  facilities  for often used transformations on std::string objects, but which are not
       supported by the std::string class itself. All members of FBB::String are static.

NAMESPACE

       FBB
       All members, operators and manipulators, mentioned in this man-page, are defined in the namespace FBB.

INHERITS FROM

       --

ENUMERATION

       o      Type:
              This enumeration indicates the nature of the contents of an element in the array returned  by  the
              overloaded split members (see below).

              DQUOTE,  a  subset of the characters in the matching string element was delimited by double quotes
              in the in the string that was parsed by the split members.

              DQUOTE_UNTERMINATED, the contents of the string that was parsed by the split  members  started  at
              some point with a double quote, but the matching ending double quote was lacking.

              ESCAPED_END,   the  contents  of  the  string that was parsed by the split members ended in a mere
              backslash.

              NORMAL, a normal string;

              SEPARATOR, a separator;

              SQUOTE, a subset of the characters in the matching string element was delimited by quotes  in  the
              in the string that was parsed by the split members.

              SQUOTE_UNTERMINATED,  the  contents  of the string that was parsed by the split members started at
              some point with a quote, but the matching ending quote was lacking.

TYPEDEF

       The typedef SplitPair represents std::pair<std::string, String::Type> and is used in the  second  variant
       of the split member (see below).

HISTORY

       Initially  this  class was derived from std::string. Deriving from std::string, however, is considerd bad
       design as std::string was not designed as a base-class.

       FBB::String offers a series of static member functions providing the facilities originally implemented as
       non-static members.

STATIC MEMBER FUNCTIONS

       o      char const **argv(std::vector<std::string> const &words):
              Returns  a pointer to an allocated series of pointers to the C strings stored in the vector words.
              The caller is responsible for returning the array of pointers to the common pool, but  should  not
              delete  the  C-strings  to  which  the  pointers  point. The last element of the returned array is
              guaranteed to be a 0-pointer.

       o      int casecmp(std::string const &lhs, std::string const &rhs):
              Performs a case-insensitive comparison between the two std::string objects. A  negative  value  is
              returned  if  lhs  should  be  ordered before rhs; 0 is returned if the two strings have identical
              contents; a positive value is returned if the lhs object should be ordered beyond rhs.

       o      std::string escape(std::string const &str, char const *series = "’\"\\"):
              Returns a copy of the str object in which all characters in series are  prefixed  by  a  backslash
              character.

       o      std::string lc(std::string const &str) const:
              Returns a copy of the str object in which all letters were transformed to lower case letters.

       o      std::string trim(std::string const &str):
              Returns a copy of the str object from which the leading and trailing blanks have been removed.

       o      std::vector<std::string> split(Type *type, std::string const &str, char const *separators = " \t",
              bool addEmpty = false):
              Returns a vector containing the elements in str which are separated from each other  by  at  least
              one  of  the  characters  found  in  *separators.  The  member’s  first parameter points to a Type
              variable, which will show DQUOTE_UNTERMINATED, SQUOTE_UNTERMINATED, or ESCAPED_END in cases  where
              the  contents of str are ill-formed, or NORMAL if str’s contents shows not syntactic errors (i.e.,
              ill-formed strings or escape-sequences). If the corresponding  argument  equals  0  then  no  Type
              indication is provided.

              If the parameter addEmpty is set to true, then individual separators encountered in str are stored
              as empty strings in words (e.g., if two elements are separated by three  blank  spaces,  then  the
              returned vector contains three empty strings between the two elements).

              If  an  element  in  str  contains a double quote ("), then all characters from the initial double
              quote through the matching double quote character are processed as follows: the surrounding double
              quotes  are removed, and the remaining characters are unescaped using the String::unescape member.
              The resulting unescaped string is added to the element currently under construction. E.g., if  str
              contains

                  string="\"hello world\""

              then the element becomes

                  string="hello world"

              If  an  element  in str contains a single quote (), then all characters between the initial quote
              and  the  matching  quote  character  are  literally  appended  to  the  element  currently  under
              construction. E.g., if str contains

                  string=’"hello\ world"’

              then the element becomes

                  string="hello\ world"

              Backslash  characters  encountered in str outside of single or double quoted strings are unescaped
              (using String::unescape) and the resulting character is appended to the  element  currently  under
              construction.

              E.g., if str contains

                  string=\"hello\ world\"

              then the element becomes

                  string="hello world"

       o      std::vector<SplitPair> split(std::string const &str, char const *separators = " \t", bool addEmpty
              = false):
              Same functionality as the previous split member, but the words vector is  filled  with  pairs,  of
              which  the  first elements represent the recognized strings, and the second elements are values of
              the String::Type enumeration. If addEmpty is requested,  then  the  string  elements  contain  the
              actual  contents  of  the separator, while the Type elements are set to SEPARATOR. If the returned
              vector is not empty then the second  member  of  the  last  element  may  be  DQUOTE_UNTERMINATED,
              SQUOTE_UNTERMINATED, or ESCAPED_END in cases where the contents of str are ill-formed.

       o      size_t  split(std::vector<std::string>  *words, std::string const &str, char const *separators = "
              \t", bool addEmpty = false):
              Fills words with all elements of the str object, separated by any of the characters in separators.
              If the parameter addEmpty is set to true, the individual separators are stored as empty strings in
              words. If a word starts with " or  all characters until a matching terminating " or  at the  end
              of a word are considered as one word.  The surrounding quotes are not stored. The function returns
              the number of elements in the vector pointed to by words. This vector is initially cleared.

       o      size_t  split(std::vector<SplitPair> *words, std::string const &str, char const  *separators  =  "
              \t", bool addEmpty = false):
              Same  functionality  as the former member, but the words vector is filled with pairs, of which the
              first elements are the recognized strings, and the second  elements  values  of  the  String::Type
              enumeration. If addEmpty is requested, then the string elements contain the actual contents of the
              separator, while the Type elements are set to SEPARATOR.

       o      std::string unescape(std::string const &str):
              Returns a copy of the str object in which the escaped (i.e., prefixed by a  backslash)  characters
              have been interpreted. All standard escape characters (\a, \b, \f, \n, \r, \t, \v) are recognized.
              If an escape character is followed by x the next two characters are interpreted as  a  hexadecimal
              number.  If  an  escape  character  is  followed by an octal digit, then the next three characters
              following the backslash are interpreted as an octal number. In all other cases, the  backslash  is
              removed and the character following the backslash is kept.

       o      std::string uc(std::string const &str):
              Returns a copy of the str object in which all letters were capitalized.

EXAMPLE

       #include <iostream>
       #include <vector>

       #include <bobcat/string>

       using namespace std;
       using namespace FBB;

       char const *type[] =
       {
           "DQUOTE_UNTERMINATED",
           "SQUOTE_UNTERMINATED",
           "ESCAPED_END",
           "SEPARATOR",
           "NORMAL",
           "DQUOTE",
           "SQUOTE",
       };

       int main(int argc, char **argv)
       {
           cout << "Program’s name in uppercase: " << String::uc(argv[0]) << endl;

           if (argc == 1)
               cout << "Provide any argument to suppress SEPARATOR fields\n";

           while (true)
           {
               cout << "Enter a line, or empty line to stop:" << endl;

               String line;
               if (!getline(cin, line) || !line.length())
                   break;

               vector<String::SplitPair> splitpair;
               cout << "Split into " << line.split(&splitpair, " \t", argc == 1) <<
                       " fields\n";
               for
               (
                   vector<String::SplitPair>::iterator it = splitpair.begin();
                       it != splitpair.end();
                           ++it
               )
                   cout << (it - splitpair.begin() + 1) << ": " <<
                           type[it->second] << ": `" << it->first <<
                           "’, unescaped: `" << String(it->first).unescape() <<
                           "’" << endl;
           }
           return 0;
       }

FILES

       bobcat/string - defines the class interface

SEE ALSO

       bobcat(7)

BUGS

       None Reported.

DISTRIBUTION FILES

       o      bobcat_3.19.01-x.dsc: detached signature;

       o      bobcat_3.19.01-x.tar.gz: source archive;

       o      bobcat_3.19.01-x_i386.changes: change log;

       o      libbobcat1_3.19.01-x_*.deb: debian package holding the libraries;

       o      libbobcat1-dev_3.19.01-x_*.deb: debian package holding the libraries, headers and manual pages;

       o      http://sourceforge.net/projects/bobcat: public archive location;

BOBCAT

       Bobcat is an acronym of `Brokken’s Own Base Classes And Templates’.

       This is free software, distributed under the terms of the GNU General Public License (GPL).

AUTHOR

       Frank B. Brokken (f.b.brokken@rug.nl).