std::wcstok
Defined in header <cwchar> | | |
---|---|---|
wchar_t* wcstok( wchar_t* str, const wchar_t* delim, wchar_t ** ptr); | | |
Finds the next token in a null-terminated wide string pointed to by str
. The separator characters are identified by null-terminated wide string pointed to by delim
.
This function is designed to be called multiples times to obtain successive tokens from the same string.
- If
str !=
NULL
, the call is treated as the first call tostd::wcstok
for this particular wide string. The function searches for the first wide character which is not contained indelim
. - If no such wide character was found, there are no tokens in
str
at all, and the function returns a null pointer. - If such wide character was found, it is the beginning of the token. The function then searches from that point on for the first wide character that is contained in
delim
.- If no such wide character was found,
str
has only one token, and future calls tostd::wcstok
will return a null pointer - If such wide character was found, it is replaced by the null wide character
L'\0'
and the parser state (typically a pointer to the following wide character) is stored in the user-provided location*ptr
.
- If no such wide character was found,
- The function then returns the pointer to the beginning of the token
- If
str ==
NULL
, the call is treated as a subsequent calls tostd::wcstok
: the function continues from where it left in 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 asstr
.
Parameters
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 wcstok to store its internal state |
Return value
Pointer to the beginning of the next token or null pointer if there are no more tokens.
Note
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 std::wcstok
.
Unlike std::strtok
, this function does not update static storage: it stores the parser state in the user-provided location.
Unlike most other tokenizers, the delimiters in std::wcstok
can be different for each subsequent token, and can even depend on the contents of the previous tokens.
Example
#include <cwchar>
#include <iostream>
int main()
{
wchar_t input[100] = L"A bird came down the walk";
wchar_t* buffer;
wchar_t* token = std::wcstok(input, L" ", &buffer);
while (token) {
std::wcout << token << '\n';
token = std::wcstok(nullptr, L" ", &buffer);
}
}
Output:
A
bird
came
down
the
walk
See also
strtok | finds the next token in a byte string (function) |
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| C documentation for wcstok |
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