c16rtomb, wcrtomb, c32rtomb(3) | convert a wide-character code to a character (restartable) |
c32rtomb, wcrtomb, c16rtomb(3) | convert a wide-character code to a character (restartable) |
wcrtomb, c16rtomb, c32rtomb(3) | convert a wide-character code to a character (restartable) |
WCRTOMB(3) | MidnightBSD Library Functions Manual | WCRTOMB(3) |
wcrtomb
, c16rtomb
,
c32rtomb
— convert a
wide-character code to a character (restartable)
Standard C Library (libc, -lc)
#include
<wchar.h>
size_t
wcrtomb
(char
* restrict s, wchar_t
c, mbstate_t * restrict
ps);
#include
<uchar.h>
size_t
c16rtomb
(char
* restrict s, char16_t
c, mbstate_t * restrict
ps);
size_t
c32rtomb
(char
* restrict s, char32_t
c, mbstate_t * restrict
ps);
The
wcrtomb
(),
c16rtomb
() and
c32rtomb
()
functions store a multibyte sequence representing the wide character
c, including any necessary shift sequences, to the
character array s, storing a maximum of
MB_CUR_MAX
bytes.
If s is NULL
, these
functions behave as if s pointed to an internal buffer
and c was a null wide character (L'\0').
The mbstate_t argument,
ps, is used to keep track of the shift state. If it is
NULL
, these functions use an internal, static
mbstate_t object, which is initialized to the initial
conversion state at program startup.
As certain multibyte characters may only be
represented by a series of 16-bit characters, the
c16rtomb
()
may need to invoked multiple times before a multibyte sequence is
returned.
These functions return the length (in bytes) of the multibyte sequence needed to represent c, or (size_t)-1 if c is not a valid wide character code.
The wcrtomb
(),
c16rtomb
() and c32rtomb
()
functions will fail if:
The wcrtomb
(),
c16rtomb
() and c32rtomb
()
functions conform to ISO/IEC 9899:2011
(“ISO C11”).
May 21, 2013 | midnightbsd-3.1 |