--- l2.pod 2001/05/10 19:46:01 1.1
+++ l2.pod 2001/05/10 20:00:31 1.2
@@ -1,9 +1,10 @@
##
-## Str - String Library
-## Copyright (c) 1999-2000 Ralf S. Engelschall <rse@engelschall.com>
+## L2 - OSSP Logging Library
+## Copyright (c) 2001 The OSSP Project (http://www.ossp.org/)
+## Copyright (c) 2001 Cable & Wireless Deutschland (http://www.cw.com/de/)
##
-## This file is part of Str, a string handling and manipulation
-## library which can be found at http://www.engelschall.com/sw/str/.
+## This file is part of OSSP L2, a flexible logging library which
+## can be found at http://www.ossp.com/pkg/l2/.
##
## Permission to use, copy, modify, and distribute this software for
## any purpose with or without fee is hereby granted, provided that
@@ -22,750 +23,31 @@
## OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT
## OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF
## SUCH DAMAGE.
+##
+## l2.pod: Unix manual page
##
-## str.pod: Unix manual page
-##
-
-# Parts of this manual page (the str_format description) is:
-#
-# Copyright (c) 1990, 1991, 1993
-# The Regents of the University of California. All rights reserved.
-#
-# This code is derived from software contributed to Berkeley by
-# Chris Torek and the American National Standards Committee X3,
-# on Information Processing Systems.
-#
-# Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without
-# modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions
-# are met:
-# 1. Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright
-# notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer.
-# 2. Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright
-# notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the
-# documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution.
-# 3. All advertising materials mentioning features or use of this software
-# must display the following acknowledgement:
-# This product includes software developed by the University of
-# California, Berkeley and its contributors.
-# 4. Neither the name of the University nor the names of its contributors
-# may be used to endorse or promote products derived from this software
-# without specific prior written permission.
-#
-# THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE REGENTS AND CONTRIBUTORS ``AS IS'' AND
-# ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE
-# IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE
-# ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE REGENTS OR CONTRIBUTORS BE LIABLE
-# FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL
-# DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS
-# OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION)
-# HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT
-# LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY
-# OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF
-# SUCH DAMAGE.
=pod
=head1 NAME
-B<Str> - String Library
+B<L2> - Logging Library
=head1 VERSION
-Str STR_VERSION_STR
+L2 L2_VERSION_STR
=head1 SYNOPSIS
-B<str_len>,
-B<str_copy>,
-B<str_dup>,
-B<str_concat>,
-B<str_splice>,
-B<str_compare>,
-B<str_span>,
-B<str_locate>,
-B<str_token>,
-B<str_parse>,
-B<str_format>,
-B<str_hash>,
-B<str_base64>.
+...
=head1 DESCRIPTION
-The B<Str> library is a generic string library written in ANSI C which
-provides functions for handling, matching, parsing, searching and
-formatting of C strings. So it can be considered as a superset of POSIX
-string(3), but its main intention is to provide a more convinient and
-compact API plus a more generalized functionality.
+The B<L2> library is...
=head1 FUNCTIONS
The following functions are provided by the B<Str> API:
-=over 4
-
-=item str_size_t B<str_len>(const char *I<s>);
-
-This function determines the length of string I<s>, i.e., the number
-of characters starting at I<s> that precede the terminating C<NUL>
-character. It returns C<NULL> if I<s> is C<NULL>.
-
-=item char *B<str_copy>(char *I<s>, const char *I<t>, size_t I<n>);
-
-This copies the characters in string I<t> into the string I<s>, but never more
-than I<n> characters (if I<n> is greater than C<0>). The two involved strings
-can overlap and the characters in I<s> are always C<NUL>-terminated. The
-string I<s> has to be large enough to hold all characters to be copied.
-function returns C<NULL> if I<s> or I<t> are C<NULL>. Else it returns the
-pointer to the written C<NUL>-terminating character in I<s>.
-
-=item char *B<str_dup>(const char *I<s>, str_size_t I<n>);
-
-This returns a copy of the characters in string I<s>, but never more than I<n>
-characters if I<n> is greater than C<0>. It returns C<NULL> if I<s> is
-C<NULL>. The returned string has to be deallocated later with free(3).
-
-=item char *B<str_concat>(char *I<s>, ...);
-
-This functions concatenates the characters of all string arguments into a new
-allocated string and returns this new string. If I<s> is C<NULL> the function
-returns C<NULL>. Else it returns the pointer to the written final
-C<NUL>-terminating character in I<s>. The returned string later has to be
-deallicated with free(3).
-
-=item char *B<str_splice>(char *I<s>, str_size_t I<off>, str_size_t I<n>, char *I<t>, str_size_t I<m>);
-
-This splices the string I<t> into string I<s>, i.e., the I<n> characters
-at offset I<off> in I<s> are removed and at their location the string
-I<t> is inserted (or just the first I<m> characters of I<t> if I<m> is
-greater than C<0>). It returns C<NULL> if I<s> or I<t> are C<NULL>.
-Else the string I<s> is returned. The function supports also the
-situation where I<t> is a sub-string of I<s> as long as the area
-I<s+off>...I<s+off+n> and I<t>...I<t+m> do not overlap. The caller
-always has to make sure that enough room exists in I<s>.
-
-=item int B<str_compare>(const char *I<s>, const char *I<t>, str_size_t I<n>, int I<mode>);
-
-This performs a lexicographical comparison of the two strings I<s>
-and I<t> (but never compares more than I<n> characters of them)
-and returns one of three return values: a value lower than C<0> if
-I<s> is lexicographically lower than I<t>, a vlue of exactly C<0>
-if I<s> and I<t> are equal and a value greater than C<0> if I<s> is
-lexicographically higher than I<t>. Per default (I<mode> is C<0>) the
-comparison is case-sensitive, but if C<STR_NOCASE> is used for I<mode>
-the comparison is done in a case-insensitive way.
-
-=item char *B<str_span>(const char *I<s>, size_t I<n>, const char *I<charset>, int I<mode>);
-
-This functions spans a string I<s> according to the characters specified in
-I<charset>. If I<mode> is C<0>, this means that I<s> is spanned from left to
-right starting at I<s> (and ending either when reaching the terminating C<NUL>
-character or already after I<n> spanned characters) as long as the characters
-of I<s> are contained in I<charset>.
-
-Alternatively one can use a I<mode> of C<STR_COMPLEMENT> to indicate that I<s>
-is spanned as long as the characters of I<s> are I<not> contained in
-I<charset>, i.e., I<charset> then specifies the complement of the spanning
-characters.
-
-In both cases one can additionally "or" (with the C operator ``C<|>'')
-C<STR_RIGHT> into I<mode> to indicate that the spanning is done right to
-left starting at the terminating C<NUL> character of I<s> (and ending
-either when reaching I<s> or already after I<n> spanned characters).
-
-=item char *B<str_locate>(const char *I<s>, str_size_t I<n>, const char *I<t>);
-
-This functions searches for the (smaller) string I<t> inside (larger) string
-I<s>. If I<n> is not C<0>, the search is performed only inside the first I<n>
-characters of I<s>.
-
-=item char *B<str_token>(char **I<s>, const char *I<delim>, const char *I<quote>, const char *I<comment>, int I<mode>);
-
-This function considers the string I<s> to consist of a sequence of
-zero or more text tokens separated by spans of one or more characters
-from the separator string I<delim>. However, text between matched pairs
-of quotemarks (characters in I<quote>) is treated as plain text, never
-as delimiter (separator) text. Each call of this function returns a
-pointer to the first character of the first token of I<s>. The token is
-C<NUL>-terminated, i.e., the string I<s> is processed in a destructive
-way. If there are quotation marks or escape sequences, the input
-string is rewritten with quoted sections and escape sequences properly
-interpreted.
-
-This function keeps track of its parsing position in the string between
-separate calls by simply adjusting the callers I<s> pointer, so that
-subsequent calls with the same pointer variable I<s> will start
-processing from the position immediately after the last returned token.
-In this way subsequent calls will work through the string I<s> until no
-tokens remain. When no token remains in I<s>, C<NULL> is returned. The
-string of token separators (I<delim>) and the string of quote characters
-(I<quote>) may be changed from call to call.
-
-If a character in the string I<s> is not quoted or escaped, and is in the
-I<comment> set, then it is overwritten with a C<NUL> character and the rest of
-the string is ignored. The characters to be used as quote characters are
-specified in the I<quote> set, and must be used in balanced pairs. If there
-is more than one flavor of quote character, one kind of quote character may be
-used to quote another kind. If an unbalanced quote is found, the function
-silently act as if one had been placed at the end of the input string. The
-I<delim> and I<quote> strings must be disjoint, i.e., they have to share
-no characters.
-
-The I<mode> argument can be used to modify the processing of the string
-(default for I<mode> is C<0>): C<STR_STRIPQUOTES> forces I<quote>
-characters to be stripped from quoted tokens; C<STR_BACKSLASHESC>
-enables the interpretation (and expansion) of backslash escape sequences
-(`B<\x>') through ANSI-C rules; C<STR_SKIPDELIMS> forces that after the
-terminating C<NUL> is written and the token returned, further delimiters
-are skipped (this allows one to make sure that the delimiters for
-one word don't become part of the next word if one change delimiters
-between calls); and C<STR_TRIGRAPHS> enables the recognition and
-expansion of ANSI C Trigraph sequences (as a side effect this enables
-C<STR_BACKSLASHESC>, too).
-
-=item int B<str_parse>(const char *I<s>, const char *I<pop>, ...);
-
-This parses the string I<s> according to the parsing operation specified
-by I<pop>. If the parsing operation succeeds, C<TRUE> is returned. Else
-C<FALSE> is returned.
-
-The I<pop> string usually has one of the following two syntax variants:
-`B<m> I<delim> I<regex> I<delim> I<flags>*' (for matching operations)
-and `B<s> I<delim> I<regex> I<delim> I<subst> I<delim> I<flags>*' (for
-substitution operations). For more details about the syntax variants
-and semantic of the I<pop> argument see section B<GORY DETAILS, Parsing
-Specification> below. The syntax of the I<regex> part in I<pop> is
-mostly equivalent to Perl 5's regular expression syntax. For the
-complete and gory details see perlre(1). A brief summary you can find
-under section B<GORY DETAILS, Perl Regular Expressions> below.
-
-=item int B<str_format>(char *I<s>, str_size_t I<n>, const char *I<fmt>, ...);
-
-This formats a new string according to I<fmt> and optionally following
-arguments and writes it into the string I<s>, but never more than I<n>
-characters at all. It returns the number of written characters. If I<s> is
-C<NULL> it just calculates the number of characters which would be written.
-
-The function generates the output string under the control of the I<fmt>
-format string that specifies how subsequent arguments (or arguments accessed
-via the variable-length argument facilities of stdarg(3)) are converted for
-output.
-
-The format string I<fmt> is composed of zero or more directives:
-ordinary characters (not B<%>), which are copied unchanged to the output
-stream; and conversion specifications, each of which results in fetching
-zero or more subsequent arguments. Each conversion specification is
-introduced by the character B<%>. The arguments must correspond properly
-(after type promotion) with the conversion specifier. Which conversion
-specifications are supported are described in detail under B<GORY
-DETAILS, Format Specification> below.
-
-=item unsigned long B<str_hash>(const char *I<s>, str_size_t I<n>, int I<mode>);
-
-This function calculates a hash value of string I<s> (or of its first I<n>
-characters if I<n> is equal to C<0>). The following hashing functions
-are supported and can be selected with I<mode>: STR_HASH_DJBX33 (Daniel
-J. Berstein, Times 33 Hash with Addition), STR_HASH_BJDDJ (Bob
-Jenkins, Dr. Dobbs Journal), and STR_HASH_MACRC32 (Mark Adler, Cyclic
-Redundancy Check with 32-Bit). This function is intended for fast use
-in hashing algorithms and I<not> for use as cryptographically strong
-message digests.
-
-=item int B<str_base64>(char *I<s>, str_size_t I<n>, unsigned char *I<ucp>, str_size_t I<ucn>, int I<mode>);
-
-This function Base64 encodes I<ucn> bytes starting at I<ucp> and writes
-the resulting string into I<s> (but never more than I<n> characters are
-written). The I<mode> for this operation has to be C<STR_BASE64_ENCODE>.
-Additionally one can OR the value C<STR_BASE64_STRICT> to enable strict
-encoding where after every 72th output character a newline character is
-inserted. The function returns the number of output characters written.
-If I<s> is C<NULL> the function just calculates the number of required
-output characters.
-
-Alternatively, if I<mode> is C<STR_BASE64_DECODE> the string I<s> (or
-the first I<n> characters only if I<n> is not C<0>) is decoded and the
-output bytes written at I<ucp>. Again, if I<ucp> is C<NULL> only the
-number of required output bytes are calculated.
-
-=back
-
-=head1 GORY DETAILS
-
-In this part of the documentation more complex topics are documented in
-detail.
-
-=head2 Perl Regular Expressions
-
-The regular expressions used in B<Str> are more or less Perl compatible
-(they are provided by a stripped down and built-in version of the
-I<PCRE> library). So the syntax description in perlre(1) applies
-and don't has to be repeated here again. For a deeper understanding
-and details you should have a look at the book `I<Mastering Regular
-Expressions>' (see also the perlbook(1) manpage) by I<Jeffrey Friedl>.
-For convinience reasons we give you only a brief summary of Perl
-compatible regular expressions:
-
-The following metacharacters have their standard egrep(1) meanings:
-
- \ Quote the next metacharacter
- ^ Match the beginning of the line
- . Match any character (except newline)
- $ Match the end of the line (or before newline at the end)
- | Alternation
- () Grouping
- [] Character class
-
-The following standard quantifiers are recognized:
-
- * Match 0 or more times (greedy)
- *? Match 0 or more times (non greedy)
- + Match 1 or more times (greedy)
- +? Match 1 or more times (non greedy)
- ? Match 1 or 0 times (greedy)
- ?? Match 1 or 0 times (non greedy)
- {n} Match exactly n times (greedy)
- {n}? Match exactly n times (non greedy)
- {n,} Match at least n times (greedy)
- {n,}? Match at least n times (non greedy)
- {n,m} Match at least n but not more than m times (greedy)
- {n,m}? Match at least n but not more than m times (non greedy)
-
-The following backslash sequences are recognized:
-
- \t Tab (HT, TAB)
- \n Newline (LF, NL)
- \r Return (CR)
- \f Form feed (FF)
- \a Alarm (bell) (BEL)
- \e Escape (think troff) (ESC)
- \033 Octal char
- \x1B Hex char
- \c[ Control char
- \l Lowercase next char
- \u Uppercase next char
- \L Lowercase till \E
- \U Uppercase till \E
- \E End case modification
- \Q Quote (disable) pattern metacharacters till \E
-
-The following non zero-width assertions are recognized:
-
- \w Match a "word" character (alphanumeric plus "_")
- \W Match a non-word character
- \s Match a whitespace character
- \S Match a non-whitespace character
- \d Match a digit character
- \D Match a non-digit character
-
-The following zero-width assertions are recognized:
-
- \b Match a word boundary
- \B Match a non-(word boundary)
- \A Match only at beginning of string
- \Z Match only at end of string, or before newline at the end
- \z Match only at end of string
- \G Match only where previous m//g left off (works only with /g)
-
-The following regular expression extensions are recognized:
-
- (?#text) An embedded comment
- (?:pattern) This is for clustering, not capturing (simple)
- (?imsx-imsx:pattern) This is for clustering, not capturing (full)
- (?=pattern) A zero-width positive lookahead assertion
- (?!pattern) A zero-width negative lookahead assertion
- (?<=pattern) A zero-width positive lookbehind assertion
- (?<!pattern) A zero-width negative lookbehind assertion
- (?>pattern) An "independent" subexpression
- (?(cond)yes-re) Conditional expression (simple)
- (?(cond)yes-re|no-re) Conditional expression (full)
- (?imsx-imsx) One or more embedded pattern-match modifiers
-
-=head2 Parsing Specification
-
-The B<str_parse>(const char *I<s>, const char *I<pop>, ...) function
-is a very flexible but complex one. The argument I<s> is the string on
-which the parsing operation specified by argument I<pop> is applied.
-The parsing semantics are highly influenced by Perl's `B<=~>' matching
-operator, because one of the main goals of str_parse(3) is to allow one
-to rewrite typical Perl matching constructs into C.
-
-Now to the gory details. In general, the I<pop> argument of str_parse(3)
-has one of the following two syntax variants:
-
-=over 4
-
-=item B<Matching:> `B<m> I<delim> I<regex> I<delim> I<flags>*':
-
-This matches I<s> against the Perl-style regular expression I<regex>
-under the control of zero or more I<flags> which control the parsing
-semantics. The stripped down I<pop> syntax `I<regex>' is equivalent to
-`B<m/>I<regex>B</>'.
-
-For each grouping pair of parenthesis in I<regex>, the text in I<s>
-which was grouped by the parenthesis is extracted into new strings.
-These per default are allocated as seperate strings and returned to the
-caller through following `B<char **>' arguments. The caller is required
-to free(3) them later.
-
-=item B<Substitution:> `B<s> I<delim> I<regex> I<delim> I<subst> I<delim> I<flags>*':
-
-This matches I<s> against the Perl-style regular expression I<regex>
-under the control of zero or more I<flags> which control the parsing
-semantics. As a result of the operation, a new string formed which
-consists of I<s> but with the part which matched I<regex> replaced by
-I<subst>. The result string is returned to the caller through a `B<char
-**>' argument. The caller is required to free(3) this later.
-
-For each grouping pair of parenthesis in I<regex>, the text in I<s>
-which was grouped by the parenthesis is extracted into new strings
-and can be referenced for expansion via `B<$n>' (n=1,..) in I<subst>.
-Additionally any str_format(3) style `B<%>' constructs in I<subst> are
-expanded through additional caller supplied arguments.
-
-=back
-
-The following I<flags> are supported:
-
-=over 4
-
-=item B<b>
-
-If the I<bundle> flag `B<b>' is specified, the extracted strings are
-bundled together into a single chunk of memory and its address is
-returned to the caller with a additional `B<char **>' argument which has
-to preceed the regular string arguments. The caller then has to free(3)
-only this chunk of memory in order to free all extracted strings at
-once.
-
-=item B<i>
-
-If the case-I<insensitive> flag `B<i>' is specified, I<regex>
-is matched in case-insensitive way.
-
-=item B<o>
-
-If the I<once> flag `B<o>' is specified, this indicates to the B<Str>
-library that the whole I<pop> string is constant and that its internal
-pre-processing (it is compiled into a deterministic finite automaton
-(DFA) internally) has to be done only once (the B<Str> library then
-caches the DFA which corresponds to the I<pop> argument).
-
-=item B<x>
-
-If the I<extended> flag `B<x>' is specified, the I<regex>'s legibility
-is extended by permitting embedded whitespace and comments to allow one
-to write down complex regular expressions more cleary and even in a
-documented way.
-
-=item B<m>
-
-If the I<multiple> lines flag `B<m>' is specified, the string I<s> is
-treated as multiple lines. That is, this changes the regular expression
-meta characters `B<^>' and `B<$>' from matching at only the very start
-or end of the string I<s> to the start or end of any line anywhere
-within the string I<s>.
-
-=item B<s>
-
-If the I<single> line flag `B<s>' is specified, the string I<s> is
-treated as single line. That is, this changes the regular expression
-meta character `B<.>' to match any character whatsoever, even a newline,
-which it normally would not match.
-
-=back
-
-
-=head1 CONVERSION SPECIFICATION
-
-In the format string of str_format(3) each conversion specification is
-introduced by the character B<%>. After the B<%>, the following appear
-in sequence:
-
-=over 4
-
-=item o
-
-An optional field, consisting of a decimal digit string followed by a B<$>,
-specifying the next argument to access. If this field is not provided, the
-argument following the last argument accessed will be used. Arguments are
-numbered starting at B<1>. If unaccessed arguments in the format string are
-interspersed with ones that are accessed the results will be indeterminate.
-
-=item o
-
-Zero or more of the following flags:
-
-A B<#> character specifying that the value should be converted to an
-``alternate form''. For B<c>, B<d>, B<i>, B<n>, B<p>, B<s>, and B<u>,
-conversions, this option has no effect. For B<o> conversions, the precision
-of the number is increased to force the first character of the output string
-to a zero (except if a zero value is printed with an explicit precision of
-zero). For B<x> and B<X> conversions, a non-zero result has the string B<0x>
-(or B<0X> for B<X> conversions) prepended to it. For B<e>, B<E>, B<f>, B<g>,
-and B<G>, conversions, the result will always contain a decimal point, even if
-no digits follow it (normally, a decimal point appears in the results of those
-conversions only if a digit follows). For B<g> and B<G> conversions, trailing
-zeros are not removed from the result as they would otherwise be.
-
-A zero `B<0>' character specifying zero padding. For all conversions except
-B<n>, the converted value is padded on the left with zeros rather than blanks.
-If a precision is given with a numeric conversion (B<d>, B<i>, B<o>, B<u>,
-B<i>, B<x>, and B<X>), the `B<0>' flag is ignored.
-
-A negative field width flag `B<->' indicates the converted value is to be left
-adjusted on the field boundary. Except for B<n> conversions, the converted
-value is padded on the right with blanks, rather than on the left with blanks
-or zeros. A `B<->' overrides a `B<0>' if both are given.
-
-A space, specifying that a blank should be left before a positive number
-produced by a signed conversion (B<d>, B<e>, B<E>, B<f>, B<g>, B<G>, or B<i>).
-
-A `B<+>' character specifying that a sign always be placed before a number
-produced by a signed conversion. A `B<+>' overrides a space if both are used.
-
-=item o
-
-An optional decimal digit string specifying a minimum field width.
-If the converted value has fewer characters than the field width, it will
-be padded with spaces on the left (or right, if the left-adjustment
-flag has been given) to fill out
-the field width.
-
-=item o
-
-An optional precision, in the form of a period `B<.>' followed by an
-optional digit string. If the digit string is omitted, the precision is
-taken as zero. This gives the minimum number of digits to appear for
-B<d>, B<i>, B<o>, B<u>, B<x>, and B<X> conversions, the number of digits
-to appear after the decimal-point for B<e>, B<E>, and B<f> conversions,
-the maximum number of significant digits for B<g> and B<G> conversions,
-or the maximum number of characters to be printed from a string for B<s>
-conversions.
-
-=item o
-
-The optional character B<h>, specifying that a following B<d>, B<i>, B<o>,
-B<u>, B<x>, or B<X> conversion corresponds to a `C<short int>' or `C<unsigned
-short int>' argument, or that a following B<n> conversion corresponds to a
-pointer to a `C<short int> argument.
-
-=item o
-
-The optional character B<l> (ell) specifying that a following B<d>, B<i>,
-B<o>, B<u>, B<x>, or B<X> conversion applies to a pointer to a `C<long int>'
-or `C<unsigned long int>' argument, or that a following B<n> conversion
-corresponds to a pointer to a `C<long int> argument.
-
-=item o
-
-The optional character B<q>, specifying that a following B<d>, B<i>, B<o>,
-B<u>, B<x>, or B<X> conversion corresponds to a `C<quad int>' or `C<unsigned
-quad int>' argument, or that a following B<n> conversion corresponds to a
-pointer to a `C<quad int>' argument.
-
-=item o
-
-The character B<L> specifying that a following B<e>, B<E>, B<f>, B<g>, or B<G>
-conversion corresponds to a `C<long double>' argument.
-
-=item o
-
-A character that specifies the type of conversion to be applied.
-
-=back
-
-A field width or precision, or both, may be indicated by an asterisk `B<*>' or
-an asterisk followed by one or more decimal digits and a `B<$>' instead of a
-digit string. In this case, an `C<int>' argument supplies the field width or
-precision. A negative field width is treated as a left adjustment flag
-followed by a positive field width; a negative precision is treated as though
-it were missing. If a single format directive mixes positional (`B<nn$>') and
-non-positional arguments, the results are undefined.
-
-The conversion specifiers and their meanings are:
-
-=over 4
-
-=item B<diouxX>
-
-The `C<int>' (or appropriate variant) argument is converted to signed decimal
-(B<d> and B<i>), unsigned octal (B<o>), unsigned decimal (B<u>), or unsigned
-hexadecimal (B<x> and B<X>) notation. The letters B<abcdef> are used for B<x>
-conversions; the letters B<ABCDEF> are used for B<X> conversions. The
-precision, if any, gives the minimum number of digits that must appear; if the
-converted value requires fewer digits, it is padded on the left with zeros.
-
-=item B<DOU>
-
-The `C<long int> argument is converted to signed decimal, unsigned octal, or
-unsigned decimal, as if the format had been B<ld>, B<lo>, or B<lu>
-respectively. These conversion characters are deprecated, and will eventually
-disappear.
-
-=item B<eE>
-
-The `C<double>' argument is rounded and converted in the style
-`[-]d.dddB<e>+-dd' where there is one digit before the decimal-point character
-and the number of digits after it is equal to the precision; if the precision
-is missing, it is taken as 6; if the precision is zero, no decimal-point
-character appears. An B<E> conversion uses the letter B<E> (rather than B<e>)
-to introduce the exponent. The exponent always contains at least two digits;
-if the value is zero, the exponent is 00.
-
-=item B<f>
-
-The `C<double>' argument is rounded and converted to decimal notation in the
-style `[-]ddd.ddd>' where the number of digits after the decimal-point
-character is equal to the precision specification. If the precision is
-missing, it is taken as 6; if the precision is explicitly zero, no
-decimal-point character appears. If a decimal point appears, at least one
-digit appears before it.
-
-=item B<g>
-
-The `C<double>' argument is converted in style B<f> or B<e> (or B<E> for B<G>
-conversions). The precision specifies the number of significant digits. If
-the precision is missing, 6 digits are given; if the precision is zero, it is
-treated as 1. Style B<e> is used if the exponent from its conversion is less
-than -4 or greater than or equal to the precision. Trailing zeros are removed
-from the fractional part of the result; a decimal point appears only if it is
-followed by at least one digit.
-
-=item B<c>
-
-The `C<int>' argument is converted to an `C<unsigned char>, and the resulting
-character is written.
-
-=item B<s>
-
-The `C<char *>' argument is expected to be a pointer to an array of character
-type (pointer to a string). Characters from the array are written up to (but
-not including) a terminating C<NUL> character; if a precision is specified, no
-more than the number specified are written. If a precision is given, no null
-character need be present; if the precision is not specified, or is greater
-than the size of the array, the array must contain a terminating C<NUL>
-character.
-
-=item B<p>
-
-The `C<void *> pointer argument is printed in hexadecimal (as if by `B<%#x>'
-or `C<%#lx>).
-
-=item B<n>
-
-The number of characters written so far is stored into the integer indicated
-by the `C<int *>' (or variant) pointer argument. No argument is converted.
-
-=item B<%>
-
-A `B<%>' is written. No argument is converted. The complete conversion
-specification is `B<%%>.
-
-=back
-
-In no case does a non-existent or small field width cause truncation of a
-field; if the result of a conversion is wider than the field width, the field
-is expanded to contain the conversion result.
-
-=head1 EXAMPLES
-
-In the following a few snippets of selected use cases of B<Str> are
-presented:
-
-=over 4
-
-=item B<Splice a String into Another>
-
- char *v1 = "foo bar quux";
- char *v2 = "baz";
- str_splice(v1, 3, 5, v2, 0):
- /* now we have v1 = "foobazquux" */
- ....
-
-=item B<Tokenize a String>
-
- char *var = " foo \t " bar 'baz'" q'uu'x #comment";
- char *tok, *p;
- p = var;
- while ((tok = str_token(p, ":", "\"'", "#", 0)) != NULL) {
- /* here we enter three times:
- 1. tok = "foo"
- 2. tok = " bar 'baz'"
- 3. tok = "quux" */
- ...
- }
-
-=item B<Match a String>
-
- char *var = "foo:bar";
- if (str_parse(var, "^.+?:.+$/)) {
- /* var matched */
- ...
- }
-
-=item B<Match a String and Go Ahead with Details>
-
- char *var = "foo:bar";
- char *cp, *v1, *v2;
- if (str_parse(var, "m/^(.+?):(.+)$/b", &cp, &v1, &v2)) {
- ...
- /* now we have:
- cp = "foo\0bar\0" and v1 and v2 pointing
- into it, i.e., v1 = "foo", v2 = "bar" */
- ...
- free(cp);
- }
-
-=item B<Substitute Text in a String>
-
- char *var = "foo:bar";
- char *subst = "quux";
- char *new;
- str_parse(var, "s/^(.+?):(.+)$/$1-%s-$2/", &new, subst);
- ...
- /* now we have: var = "foo:bar", new = "foo:quux:bar" */
- ...
- free(new);
-
-=item B<Format a String>
-
- char *v0 = "abc..."; /* length not guessable */
- char *v1 = "foo";
- void *v2 = 0xDEAD;
- int v3 = 42;
- char *cp;
- int n;
-
- n = str_format(NULL, 0, "%s|%5s-%x-%04d", v0, v1, v2, v3);
- cp = malloc(n);
- str_format(cp, n, "%s-%x-%04d", v1, v2, v3);
- /* now we have cp = "abc...| foo-DEAD-0042" */
- ...
- free(cp);
-
-=back
-
-=head1 SEE ALSO
-
-string(3), printf(3), perlre(1).
-
-=head1 HISTORY
-
-The B<Str> library was written in November and December 1999 by Ralf
-S. Engelschall. As building blocks various existing code was used and
-recycled: for the str_token(3) implementation an anchient strtok(3)
-flavor from William Deich 1991 was cleaned up and adjusted. As the
-background parsing engine for str_parse(3) a heavily stripped down
-version of Philip Hazel's PCRE 2.08 library was used. The str_format(3)
-implementation was based on Panos Tsirigotis' sprintf(3) code as
-adjusted by the Apache Software Foundation 1998. The formatting engine
-was stripped down and enhanced to support internal extensions which were
-required by str_format(3) and str_parse(3).
-
-=head1 AUTHOR
-
- Ralf S. Engelschall
- rse@engelschall.com
- www.engelschall.com
-
=cut
|