strxfrm(3) | transform a string under locale |
strxfrm_l, strxfrm(3) | transform a string under locale |
STRXFRM(3) | MidnightBSD Library Functions Manual | STRXFRM(3) |
strxfrm
—
transform a string under locale
Standard C Library (libc, -lc)
#include
<string.h>
size_t
strxfrm
(char
* restrict dst, const
char * restrict src,
size_t n);
size_t
strxfrm_l
(char
* restrict dst, const
char *restrict src,
size_t n,
locale_t loc);
The
strxfrm
()
function transforms a null-terminated string pointed to by
src according to the current locale collation if any,
then copies the transformed string into dst. Not more
than n characters are copied into
dst, including the terminating null character added.
If n is set to 0 (it helps to determine an actual size
needed for transformation), dst is permitted to be a
NULL pointer.
Comparing two strings using
strcmp
()
after strxfrm
() is equal to comparing two original
strings with
strcoll
().
strxfrm_l
()
does the same, however takes an explicit locale rather than the global
locale.
Upon successful completion, strxfrm
() and
strxfrm_l
() return the length of the transformed
string not including the terminating null character. If this value is
n or more, the contents of dst
are indeterminate.
The strxfrm
() function conforms to
ISO/IEC 9899:1990 (“ISO C90”).
The strxfrm_l
() function conforms to
IEEE Std 1003.1-2008 (“POSIX.1”).
June 4, 1993 | midnightbsd-3.1 |