Defined in header <wchar.h> | ||
---|---|---|
(1) | ||
wchar_t* wcstok( wchar_t* str, const wchar_t* delim, wchar_t **ptr ); | (since C95) (until C99) | |
wchar_t *wcstok(wchar_t * restrict str, const wchar_t * restrict delim, wchar_t **restrict ptr); | (since C99) | |
wchar_t *wcstok_s( wchar_t *restrict str, rsize_t *restrict strmax, const wchar_t *restrict delim, wchar_t **restrict ptr); | (2) | (since C11) |
str
. The separator characters are identified by null-terminated wide string pointed to by delim
.str != NULL
, the call is treated as the first call to wcstok
for this particular wide string. The function searches for the first wide character which is not contained in delim
. str
at all, and the function returns a null pointer. delim
. str
has only one token, and future calls to wcstok
will return a null pointer L'\0'
and the parser state (typically a pointer to the following wide character) is stored in the user-provided location *ptr
. str == NULL
, the call is treated as a subsequent call to wcstok
: the function continues from where it left in the previous invocation with the same *ptr
. The behavior is the same as if the pointer to the wide character that follows the last detected token is passed as str
. str
into *strmax
. Repeat calls (with null str
) must pass both strmax
and ptr
with the values stored by the previous call. Also, the following errors are detected at runtime and call the currently installed constraint handler function, without storing anything in the object pointed to by ptr
strmax
, delim
, or ptr
is a null pointer str
), *ptr
is a null pointer *strmax
is zero or greater than RSIZE_MAX/sizeof(wchar_t)
*strmax
)) without encountering the null terminator wcstok_s
is only guaranteed to be available if __STDC_LIB_EXT1__
is defined by the implementation and if the user defines __STDC_WANT_LIB_EXT1__
to the integer constant 1
before including wchar.h
.str | - | pointer to the null-terminated wide string to tokenize |
delim | - | pointer to the null-terminated wide string identifying delimiters |
ptr | - | pointer to an object of type wchar_t* , which is used by both wcstok and wcstok_s to store the internal state of the parser |
strmax | - | pointer to an object which initially holds the size of str : wcstok_s stores the number of characters that remain to be examined |
Returns pointer to the beginning of the next token or null pointer if there are no more tokens.
This function is destructive: it writes the L'\0'
characters in the elements of the string str
. In particular, a wide string literal cannot be used as the first argument of wcstok
.
Unlike strtok
, wcstok
does not update static storage: it stores the parser state in the user-provided location.
Unlike most other tokenizers, the delimiters in wcstok
can be different for each subsequent token, and can even depend on the contents of the previous tokens.
#include <wchar.h> #include <stdio.h> int main(void) { wchar_t input[] = L"A bird came down the walk"; printf("Parsing the input string '%ls'\n", input); wchar_t *buffer; wchar_t *token = wcstok(input, L" ", &buffer); while(token) { printf("%ls\n", token); token = wcstok(NULL, L" ", &buffer); } printf("Contents of the input string now: '"); for(size_t n = 0; n < sizeof input / sizeof *input; ++n) input[n] ? printf("%lc", input[n]) : printf("\\0"); puts("'"); }
Output:
Parsing the input string 'A bird came down the walk' A bird came down the walk Contents of the input string now: 'A\0bird\0came\0down\0the\0walk\0'
(C11) | finds the next token in a byte string (function) |
C++ documentation for wcstok |
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