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| -rw-r--r-- | libs/assimp/contrib/utf8cpp/doc/ReleaseNotes | 12 | ||||
| -rw-r--r-- | libs/assimp/contrib/utf8cpp/doc/utf8cpp.html | 1789 | 
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| diff --git a/libs/assimp/contrib/utf8cpp/doc/ReleaseNotes b/libs/assimp/contrib/utf8cpp/doc/ReleaseNotes deleted file mode 100644 index 364411a..0000000 --- a/libs/assimp/contrib/utf8cpp/doc/ReleaseNotes +++ /dev/null @@ -1,12 +0,0 @@ -utf8 cpp library -Release 2.3.4 - -A minor bug fix release. Thanks to all who reported bugs.  - -Note: Version 2.3.3 contained a regression, and therefore was removed. - -Changes from version 2.3.2 -- Bug fix [39]: checked.h Line 273 and unchecked.h Line 182 have an extra ';' -- Bug fix [36]: replace_invalid() only works with back_inserter - -Files included in the release: utf8.h, core.h, checked.h, unchecked.h, utf8cpp.html, ReleaseNotes diff --git a/libs/assimp/contrib/utf8cpp/doc/utf8cpp.html b/libs/assimp/contrib/utf8cpp/doc/utf8cpp.html deleted file mode 100644 index 6f2aacb..0000000 --- a/libs/assimp/contrib/utf8cpp/doc/utf8cpp.html +++ /dev/null @@ -1,1789 +0,0 @@ -<!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.01 Transitional//EN"> -<html> -  <head> -    <meta name="generator" content= -    "HTML Tidy for Linux/x86 (vers 1st November 2002), see www.w3.org"> -    <meta name="description" content= -    "A simple, portable and lightweigt C++ library for easy handling of UTF-8 encoded strings"> -    <meta name="keywords" content="UTF-8 C++ portable utf8 unicode generic templates"> -    <meta name="author" content="Nemanja Trifunovic"> -    <title> -      UTF8-CPP: UTF-8 with C++ in a Portable Way -    </title> -    <style type="text/css"> -    <!-- -    span.return_value { -      color: brown; -    } -    span.keyword { -      color: blue; -    } -    span.preprocessor { -      color: navy; -    } -    span.literal { -      color: olive; -    } -    span.comment { -      color: green; -    } -    code { -      font-weight: bold;  -    } -    ul.toc { -      list-style-type: none; -    } -    p.version { -      font-size: small; -      font-style: italic; -    } -    --> -        </style> -  </head> -  <body> -    <h1> -      UTF8-CPP: UTF-8 with C++ in a Portable Way -    </h1> -    <p> -      <a href="https://sourceforge.net/projects/utfcpp">The Sourceforge project page</a> -    </p> -    <div id="toc"> -      <h2> -        Table of Contents -      </h2> -      <ul class="toc"> -        <li> -          <a href="#introduction">Introduction</a> -        </li> -        <li> -          <a href="#examples">Examples of Use</a> -          <ul class="toc"> -            <li> -              <a href=#introsample>Introductionary Sample </a> -            </li> -            <li> -              <a href=#validfile>Checking if a file contains valid UTF-8 text</a> -            </li> -            <li> -              <a href=#fixinvalid>Ensure that a string contains valid UTF-8 text</a> -            </li> -          </ul> -        <li> -          <a href="#reference">Reference</a> -          <ul class="toc"> -            <li> -              <a href="#funutf8">Functions From utf8 Namespace </a> -            </li> -            <li> -              <a href="#typesutf8">Types From utf8 Namespace </a> -            </li> -            <li> -              <a href="#fununchecked">Functions From utf8::unchecked Namespace </a> -            </li> -            <li> -              <a href="#typesunchecked">Types From utf8::unchecked Namespace </a> -            </li> -          </ul> -        </li> -        <li> -          <a href="#points">Points of Interest</a> -        </li> -        <li> -          <a href="#links">Links</a> -        </li> -      </ul> -    </div> -    <h2 id="introduction"> -      Introduction -    </h2> -    <p> -      Many C++ developers miss an easy and portable way of handling Unicode encoded -      strings. The original C++ Standard (known as C++98 or C++03) is Unicode agnostic. -      C++11 provides some support for Unicode on core language and library level: -      u8, u, and U character and string literals, char16_t and char32_t character types, -      u16string and u32string library classes, and codecvt support for conversions  -      between Unicode encoding forms. -      In the meantime, developers use third party libraries like ICU, OS specific capabilities, or simply -      roll out their own solutions. -    </p> -    <p> -      In order to easily handle UTF-8 encoded Unicode strings, I came up with a small -      generic library. For anybody used to work with STL algorithms and iterators, it should be -      easy and natural to use. The code is freely available for any purpose - check out -      the license at the beginning of the utf8.h file. If you run into -      bugs or performance issues, please let me know and I'll do my best to address them. -    </p> -    <p> -      The purpose of this article is not to offer an introduction to Unicode in general, -      and UTF-8 in particular. If you are not familiar with Unicode, be sure to check out -      <a href="http://www.unicode.org/">Unicode Home Page</a> or some other source of -      information for Unicode. Also, it is not my aim to advocate the use of UTF-8 -      encoded strings in C++ programs; if you want to handle UTF-8 encoded strings from -      C++, I am sure you have good reasons for it. -    </p> -    <h2 id="examples"> -      Examples of use -    </h2> -    <h3 id="introsample"> -      Introductionary Sample -    </h3> -    <p> -      To illustrate the use of the library, let's start with a small but complete program  -      that opens a file containing UTF-8 encoded text, reads it line by line, checks each line -      for invalid UTF-8 byte sequences, and converts it to UTF-16 encoding and back to UTF-8: -    </p> -<pre> -<span class="preprocessor">#include <fstream></span> -<span class="preprocessor">#include <iostream></span> -<span class="preprocessor">#include <string></span> -<span class="preprocessor">#include <vector></span> -<span class="preprocessor">#include "utf8.h"</span> -<span class="keyword">using namespace</span> std; -<span class="keyword">int</span> main(<span class="keyword">int</span> argc, <span class="keyword">char</span>** argv) -{ -    <span class="keyword">if</span> (argc != <span class="literal">2</span>) { -        cout << <span class="literal">"\nUsage: docsample filename\n"</span>; -        <span class="keyword">return</span> <span class="literal">0</span>; -    } - -    <span class="keyword">const char</span>* test_file_path = argv[1]; -    <span class="comment">// Open the test file (contains UTF-8 encoded text)</span> -    ifstream fs8(test_file_path); -    <span class="keyword">if</span> (!fs8.is_open()) { -    cout << <span class= -"literal">"Could not open "</span> << test_file_path << endl; -    <span class="keyword">return</span> <span class="literal">0</span>; -    } - -    <span class="keyword">unsigned</span> line_count = <span class="literal">1</span>; -    string line; -    <span class="comment">// Play with all the lines in the file</span> -    <span class="keyword">while</span> (getline(fs8, line)) { -       <span class="comment">// check for invalid utf-8 (for a simple yes/no check, there is also utf8::is_valid function)</span> -        string::iterator end_it = utf8::find_invalid(line.begin(), line.end()); -        <span class="keyword">if</span> (end_it != line.end()) { -            cout << <span class= -"literal">"Invalid UTF-8 encoding detected at line "</span> << line_count << <span - class="literal">"\n"</span>; -            cout << <span class= -"literal">"This part is fine: "</span> << string(line.begin(), end_it) << <span - class="literal">"\n"</span>; -        } - -        <span class="comment">// Get the line length (at least for the valid part)</span> -        <span class="keyword">int</span> length = utf8::distance(line.begin(), end_it); -        cout << <span class= -"literal">"Length of line "</span> << line_count << <span class= -"literal">" is "</span> << length <<  <span class="literal">"\n"</span>; - -        <span class="comment">// Convert it to utf-16</span> -        vector<unsigned short> utf16line; -        utf8::utf8to16(line.begin(), end_it, back_inserter(utf16line)); - -        <span class="comment">// And back to utf-8</span> -        string utf8line;  -        utf8::utf16to8(utf16line.begin(), utf16line.end(), back_inserter(utf8line)); - -        <span class="comment">// Confirm that the conversion went OK:</span> -        <span class="keyword">if</span> (utf8line != string(line.begin(), end_it)) -            cout << <span class= -"literal">"Error in UTF-16 conversion at line: "</span> << line_count << <span - class="literal">"\n"</span>;         - -        line_count++; -    } -    <span class="keyword">return</span> <span class="literal">0</span>; -} -</pre> -    <p> -      In the previous code sample, for each line we performed -      a detection of invalid UTF-8 sequences with <code>find_invalid</code>; the number -      of characters (more precisely - the number of Unicode code points, including the end -      of line and even BOM if there is one) in each line was -      determined with a use of <code>utf8::distance</code>; finally, we have converted -      each line to UTF-16 encoding with <code>utf8to16</code> and back to UTF-8 with -      <code>utf16to8</code>. -    </p> -    <h3 id="validfile">Checking if a file contains valid UTF-8 text</h3> -<p> -Here is a function that checks whether the content of a file is valid UTF-8 encoded text without -reading the content into the memory: -</p> -<pre>     -<span class="keyword">bool</span> valid_utf8_file(i<span class="keyword">const char</span>* file_name) -{ -    ifstream ifs(file_name); -    <span class="keyword">if</span> (!ifs) -        <span class="keyword">return false</span>; <span class="comment">// even better, throw here</span> - -    istreambuf_iterator<<span class="keyword">char</span>> it(ifs.rdbuf()); -    istreambuf_iterator<<span class="keyword">char</span>> eos; - -    <span class="keyword">return</span> utf8::is_valid(it, eos); -} -</pre> -<p> -Because the function <code>utf8::is_valid()</code> works with input iterators, we were able -to pass an <code>istreambuf_iterator</code> to it and read the content of the file directly  -without loading it to the memory first.</p> -<p> -Note that other functions that take input iterator arguments can be used in a similar way. For -instance, to read the content of a UTF-8 encoded text file and convert the text to UTF-16, just  -do something like: -</p> -<pre> -    utf8::utf8to16(it, eos, back_inserter(u16string)); -</pre> -    <h3 id="fixinvalid">Ensure that a string contains valid UTF-8 text</h3> -<p> -If we have some text that "probably" contains UTF-8 encoded text and we want to -replace any invalid UTF-8 sequence with a replacement character, something like  -the following function may be used: -</p> -<pre> -<span class="keyword">void</span> fix_utf8_string(std::string& str) -{ -    std::string temp; -    utf8::replace_invalid(str.begin(), str.end(), back_inserter(temp)); -    str = temp; -} -</pre> -<p>The function will replace any invalid UTF-8 sequence with a Unicode replacement character.  -There is an overloaded function that enables the caller to supply their own replacement character. -</p> -    <h2 id="reference"> -      Reference -    </h2> -    <h3 id="funutf8"> -      Functions From utf8 Namespace -    </h3> -    <h4> -      utf8::append -    </h4> -    <p class="version"> -    Available in version 1.0 and later. -    </p> -    <p> -      Encodes a 32 bit code point as a UTF-8 sequence of octets and appends the sequence -      to a UTF-8 string. -    </p> -<pre> -<span class="keyword">template</span> <<span class= -"keyword">typename</span> octet_iterator> -octet_iterator append(uint32_t cp, octet_iterator result); -    -</pre> -    <p> -	  <code>octet_iterator</code>: an output iterator.<br> -      <code>cp</code>: a 32 bit integer representing a code point to append to the -      sequence.<br> -       <code>result</code>: an output iterator to the place in the sequence where to -      append the code point.<br> -       <span class="return_value">Return value</span>: an iterator pointing to the place -      after the newly appended sequence. -    </p> -    <p> -      Example of use: -    </p> -<pre> -<span class="keyword">unsigned char</span> u[<span class="literal">5</span>] = {<span -class="literal">0</span>,<span class="literal">0</span>,<span class= -"literal">0</span>,<span class="literal">0</span>,<span class="literal">0</span>}; -<span class="keyword">unsigned char</span>* end = append(<span class= -"literal">0x0448</span>, u); -assert (u[<span class="literal">0</span>] == <span class= -"literal">0xd1</span> && u[<span class="literal">1</span>] == <span class= -"literal">0x88</span> && u[<span class="literal">2</span>] == <span class= -"literal">0</span> && u[<span class="literal">3</span>] == <span class= -"literal">0</span> && u[<span class="literal">4</span>] == <span class= -"literal">0</span>); -</pre> -    <p> -      Note that <code>append</code> does not allocate any memory - it is the burden of -      the caller to make sure there is enough memory allocated for the operation. To make -      things more interesting, <code>append</code> can add anywhere between 1 and 4 -      octets to the sequence. In practice, you would most often want to use -      <code>std::back_inserter</code> to ensure that the necessary memory is allocated. -    </p> -    <p> -      In case of an invalid code point, a <code>utf8::invalid_code_point</code> exception -      is thrown. -    </p> -    <h4> -      utf8::next -    </h4> -    <p class="version"> -    Available in version 1.0 and later. -    </p> -    <p> -      Given the iterator to the beginning of the UTF-8 sequence, it returns the code -      point and moves the iterator to the next position. -    </p> -<pre> -<span class="keyword">template</span> <<span class= -"keyword">typename</span> octet_iterator>  -uint32_t next(octet_iterator& it, octet_iterator end); -    -</pre> -    <p> -	  <code>octet_iterator</code>: an input iterator.<br> -      <code>it</code>: a reference to an iterator pointing to the beginning of an UTF-8 -      encoded code point. After the function returns, it is incremented to point to the -      beginning of the next code point.<br> -       <code>end</code>: end of the UTF-8 sequence to be processed. If <code>it</code> -      gets equal to <code>end</code> during the extraction of a code point, an -      <code>utf8::not_enough_room</code> exception is thrown.<br> -       <span class="return_value">Return value</span>: the 32 bit representation of the -      processed UTF-8 code point. -    </p> -    <p> -      Example of use: -    </p> -<pre> -<span class="keyword">char</span>* twochars = <span class= -"literal">"\xe6\x97\xa5\xd1\x88"</span>; -<span class="keyword">char</span>* w = twochars; -<span class="keyword">int</span> cp = next(w, twochars + <span class="literal">6</span>); -assert (cp == <span class="literal">0x65e5</span>); -assert (w == twochars + <span class="literal">3</span>); -</pre> -    <p> -      This function is typically used to iterate through a UTF-8 encoded string. -    </p> -    <p> -      In case of an invalid UTF-8 seqence, a <code>utf8::invalid_utf8</code> exception is -      thrown. -    </p> -    <h4> -      utf8::peek_next -    </h4> -    <p class="version"> -    Available in version 2.1 and later. -    </p> -    <p> -      Given the iterator to the beginning of the UTF-8 sequence, it returns the code -      point for the following sequence without changing the value of the iterator.  -    </p> -<pre> -<span class="keyword">template</span> <<span class= -"keyword">typename</span> octet_iterator>  -uint32_t peek_next(octet_iterator it, octet_iterator end); -    -</pre> -    <p> -	  <code>octet_iterator</code>: an input iterator.<br> -      <code>it</code>: an iterator pointing to the beginning of an UTF-8 -      encoded code point.<br> -       <code>end</code>: end of the UTF-8 sequence to be processed. If <code>it</code> -      gets equal to <code>end</code> during the extraction of a code point, an -      <code>utf8::not_enough_room</code> exception is thrown.<br> -       <span class="return_value">Return value</span>: the 32 bit representation of the -      processed UTF-8 code point. -    </p> -    <p> -      Example of use: -    </p> -<pre> -<span class="keyword">char</span>* twochars = <span class= -"literal">"\xe6\x97\xa5\xd1\x88"</span>; -<span class="keyword">char</span>* w = twochars; -<span class="keyword">int</span> cp = peek_next(w, twochars + <span class="literal">6</span>); -assert (cp == <span class="literal">0x65e5</span>); -assert (w == twochars); -</pre> -    <p> -      In case of an invalid UTF-8 seqence, a <code>utf8::invalid_utf8</code> exception is -      thrown. -    </p> -    <h4> -      utf8::prior -    </h4> -    <p class="version"> -    Available in version 1.02 and later. -    </p> -    <p> -      Given a reference to an iterator pointing to an octet in a UTF-8 sequence, it -      decreases the iterator until it hits the beginning of the previous UTF-8 encoded -      code point and returns the 32 bits representation of the code point. -    </p> -<pre> -<span class="keyword">template</span> <<span class= -"keyword">typename</span> octet_iterator>  -uint32_t prior(octet_iterator& it, octet_iterator start); -    -</pre> -    <p> -	  <code>octet_iterator</code>: a bidirectional iterator.<br> -      <code>it</code>: a reference pointing to an octet within a UTF-8 encoded string. -      After the function returns, it is decremented to point to the beginning of the -      previous code point.<br> -       <code>start</code>: an iterator to the beginning of the sequence where the search -      for the beginning of a code point is performed. It is a -      safety measure to prevent passing the beginning of the string in the search for a -      UTF-8 lead octet.<br> -       <span class="return_value">Return value</span>: the 32 bit representation of the -      previous code point. -    </p> -    <p> -      Example of use: -    </p> -<pre> -<span class="keyword">char</span>* twochars = <span class= -"literal">"\xe6\x97\xa5\xd1\x88"</span>; -<span class="keyword">unsigned char</span>* w = twochars + <span class= -"literal">3</span>; -<span class="keyword">int</span> cp = prior (w, twochars); -assert (cp == <span class="literal">0x65e5</span>); -assert (w == twochars); -</pre> -    <p>  -      This function has two purposes: one is two iterate backwards through a UTF-8 -      encoded string. Note that it is usually a better idea to iterate forward instead, -      since <code>utf8::next</code> is faster. The second purpose is to find a beginning -      of a UTF-8 sequence if we have a random position within a string. Note that in that -      case <code>utf8::prior</code> may not detect an invalid UTF-8 sequence in some scenarios: -      for instance if there are superfluous trail octets, it will just skip them. -    </p>  -    <p> -      <code>it</code> will typically point to the beginning of -      a code point, and <code>start</code> will point to the -      beginning of the string to ensure we don't go backwards too far. <code>it</code> is -      decreased until it points to a lead UTF-8 octet, and then the UTF-8 sequence -      beginning with that octet is decoded to a 32 bit representation and returned. -    </p> -    <p> -      In case <code>start</code> is reached before a UTF-8 lead octet is hit, or if an -      invalid UTF-8 sequence is started by the lead octet, an <code>invalid_utf8</code> -      exception is thrown. -    </p> -    <p>In case <code>start</code> equals <code>it</code>, a <code>not_enough_room</code> -      exception is thrown. -    <h4> -      utf8::previous -    </h4> -    <p class="version"> -    Deprecated in version 1.02 and later. -    </p> -    <p> -      Given a reference to an iterator pointing to an octet in a UTF-8 seqence, it -      decreases the iterator until it hits the beginning of the previous UTF-8 encoded -      code point and returns the 32 bits representation of the code point. -    </p> -<pre> -<span class="keyword">template</span> <<span class= -"keyword">typename</span> octet_iterator>  -uint32_t previous(octet_iterator& it, octet_iterator pass_start); -    -</pre> -    <p> -	  <code>octet_iterator</code>: a random access iterator.<br> -      <code>it</code>: a reference pointing to an octet within a UTF-8 encoded string. -      After the function returns, it is decremented to point to the beginning of the -      previous code point.<br> -       <code>pass_start</code>: an iterator to the point in the sequence where the search -      for the beginning of a code point is aborted if no result was reached. It is a -      safety measure to prevent passing the beginning of the string in the search for a -      UTF-8 lead octet.<br> -       <span class="return_value">Return value</span>: the 32 bit representation of the -      previous code point. -    </p> -    <p> -      Example of use: -    </p> -<pre> -<span class="keyword">char</span>* twochars = <span class= -"literal">"\xe6\x97\xa5\xd1\x88"</span>; -<span class="keyword">unsigned char</span>* w = twochars + <span class= -"literal">3</span>; -<span class="keyword">int</span> cp = previous (w, twochars - <span class= -"literal">1</span>); -assert (cp == <span class="literal">0x65e5</span>); -assert (w == twochars); -</pre> -    <p> -      <code>utf8::previous</code> is deprecated, and <code>utf8::prior</code> should -      be used instead, although the existing code can continue using this function. -      The problem is the parameter <code>pass_start</code> that points to the position -      just before the beginning of the sequence. Standard containers don't have the  -      concept of "pass start" and the function can not be used with their iterators. -    </p> -    <p> -      <code>it</code> will typically point to the beginning of -      a code point, and <code>pass_start</code> will point to the octet just before the -      beginning of the string to ensure we don't go backwards too far. <code>it</code> is -      decreased until it points to a lead UTF-8 octet, and then the UTF-8 sequence -      beginning with that octet is decoded to a 32 bit representation and returned. -    </p> -    <p> -      In case <code>pass_start</code> is reached before a UTF-8 lead octet is hit, or if an -      invalid UTF-8 sequence is started by the lead octet, an <code>invalid_utf8</code> -      exception is thrown -    </p> -    <h4> -      utf8::advance -    </h4> -    <p class="version"> -    Available in version 1.0 and later. -    </p> -    <p> -      Advances an iterator by the specified number of code points within an UTF-8 -      sequence. -    </p> -<pre> -<span class="keyword">template</span> <<span class= -"keyword">typename</span> octet_iterator, typename distance_type>  -<span class= -"keyword">void</span> advance (octet_iterator& it, distance_type n, octet_iterator end); -    -</pre> -    <p> -      <code>octet_iterator</code>: an input iterator.<br> -      <code>distance_type</code>: an integral type convertible to <code>octet_iterator</code>'s difference type.<br> -      <code>it</code>: a reference to an iterator pointing to the beginning of an UTF-8 -      encoded code point. After the function returns, it is incremented to point to the -      nth following code point.<br> -       <code>n</code>: a positive integer that shows how many code points we want to -      advance.<br> -       <code>end</code>: end of the UTF-8 sequence to be processed. If <code>it</code> -      gets equal to <code>end</code> during the extraction of a code point, an -      <code>utf8::not_enough_room</code> exception is thrown.<br> -    </p> -    <p> -      Example of use: -    </p> -<pre> -<span class="keyword">char</span>* twochars = <span class= -"literal">"\xe6\x97\xa5\xd1\x88"</span>; -<span class="keyword">unsigned char</span>* w = twochars; -advance (w, <span class="literal">2</span>, twochars + <span class="literal">6</span>); -assert (w == twochars + <span class="literal">5</span>); -</pre> -    <p> -      This function works only "forward". In case of a negative <code>n</code>, there is -      no effect. -    </p> -    <p> -      In case of an invalid code point, a <code>utf8::invalid_code_point</code> exception -      is thrown. -    </p> -    <h4> -      utf8::distance -    </h4> -    <p class="version"> -    Available in version 1.0 and later. -    </p> -    <p> -      Given the iterators to two UTF-8 encoded code points in a seqence, returns the -      number of code points between them. -    </p> -<pre> -<span class="keyword">template</span> <<span class= -"keyword">typename</span> octet_iterator>  -<span class= -"keyword">typename</span> std::iterator_traits<octet_iterator>::difference_type distance (octet_iterator first, octet_iterator last); -    -</pre> -    <p> -      <code>octet_iterator</code>: an input iterator.<br> -      <code>first</code>: an iterator to a beginning of a UTF-8 encoded code point.<br> -      <code>last</code>: an iterator to a "post-end" of the last UTF-8 encoded code -      point in the sequence we are trying to determine the length. It can be the -      beginning of a new code point, or not.<br> -       <span class="return_value">Return value</span> the distance between the iterators, -      in code points. -    </p> -    <p> -      Example of use: -    </p> -<pre> -<span class="keyword">char</span>* twochars = <span class= -"literal">"\xe6\x97\xa5\xd1\x88"</span>; -size_t dist = utf8::distance(twochars, twochars + <span class="literal">5</span>); -assert (dist == <span class="literal">2</span>); -</pre> -    <p> -      This function is used to find the length (in code points) of a UTF-8 encoded -      string. The reason it is called <em>distance</em>, rather than, say, -      <em>length</em> is mainly because developers are used that <em>length</em> is an -      O(1) function. Computing the length of an UTF-8 string is a linear operation, and -      it looked better to model it after <code>std::distance</code> algorithm. -    </p> -    <p> -      In case of an invalid UTF-8 seqence, a <code>utf8::invalid_utf8</code> exception is -      thrown. If <code>last</code> does not point to the past-of-end of a UTF-8 seqence, -      a <code>utf8::not_enough_room</code> exception is thrown. -    </p> -    <h4> -      utf8::utf16to8 -    </h4> -    <p class="version"> -    Available in version 1.0 and later. -    </p> -    <p> -      Converts a UTF-16 encoded string to UTF-8. -    </p> -<pre> -<span class="keyword">template</span> <<span class= -"keyword">typename</span> u16bit_iterator, <span class= -"keyword">typename</span> octet_iterator> -octet_iterator utf16to8 (u16bit_iterator start, u16bit_iterator end, octet_iterator result); -    -</pre> -    <p> -      <code>u16bit_iterator</code>: an input iterator.<br> -      <code>octet_iterator</code>: an output iterator.<br> -      <code>start</code>: an iterator pointing to the beginning of the UTF-16 encoded -      string to convert.<br> -       <code>end</code>: an iterator pointing to pass-the-end of the UTF-16 encoded -      string to convert.<br> -       <code>result</code>: an output iterator to the place in the UTF-8 string where to -      append the result of conversion.<br> -       <span class="return_value">Return value</span>: An iterator pointing to the place -      after the appended UTF-8 string. -    </p> -    <p> -      Example of use: -    </p> -<pre> -<span class="keyword">unsigned short</span> utf16string[] = {<span class= -"literal">0x41</span>, <span class="literal">0x0448</span>, <span class= -"literal">0x65e5</span>, <span class="literal">0xd834</span>, <span class= -"literal">0xdd1e</span>}; -vector<<span class="keyword">unsigned char</span>> utf8result; -utf16to8(utf16string, utf16string + <span class= -"literal">5</span>, back_inserter(utf8result)); -assert (utf8result.size() == <span class="literal">10</span>);     -</pre> -    <p> -      In case of invalid UTF-16 sequence, a <code>utf8::invalid_utf16</code> exception is -      thrown. -    </p> -    <h4> -      utf8::utf8to16 -    </h4> -    <p class="version"> -    Available in version 1.0 and later. -    </p> -    <p> -      Converts an UTF-8 encoded string to UTF-16 -    </p> -<pre> -<span class="keyword">template</span> <<span class= -"keyword">typename</span> u16bit_iterator, typename octet_iterator> -u16bit_iterator utf8to16 (octet_iterator start, octet_iterator end, u16bit_iterator result); -    -</pre> -    <p> -      <code>octet_iterator</code>: an input iterator.<br> -      <code>u16bit_iterator</code>: an output iterator.<br> -      <code>start</code>: an iterator pointing to the beginning of the UTF-8 encoded -      string to convert. < br /> <code>end</code>: an iterator pointing to -      pass-the-end of the UTF-8 encoded string to convert.<br> -       <code>result</code>: an output iterator to the place in the UTF-16 string where to -      append the result of conversion.<br> -       <span class="return_value">Return value</span>: An iterator pointing to the place -      after the appended UTF-16 string. -    </p> -    <p> -      Example of use: -    </p> -<pre> -<span class="keyword">char</span> utf8_with_surrogates[] = <span class= -"literal">"\xe6\x97\xa5\xd1\x88\xf0\x9d\x84\x9e"</span>; -vector <<span class="keyword">unsigned short</span>> utf16result; -utf8to16(utf8_with_surrogates, utf8_with_surrogates + <span class= -"literal">9</span>, back_inserter(utf16result)); -assert (utf16result.size() == <span class="literal">4</span>); -assert (utf16result[<span class="literal">2</span>] == <span class= -"literal">0xd834</span>); -assert (utf16result[<span class="literal">3</span>] == <span class= -"literal">0xdd1e</span>); -</pre> -    <p> -      In case of an invalid UTF-8 seqence, a <code>utf8::invalid_utf8</code> exception is -      thrown. If <code>end</code> does not point to the past-of-end of a UTF-8 seqence, a -      <code>utf8::not_enough_room</code> exception is thrown. -    </p> -    <h4> -      utf8::utf32to8 -    </h4> -    <p class="version"> -    Available in version 1.0 and later. -    </p> -    <p> -      Converts a UTF-32 encoded string to UTF-8. -    </p> -<pre> -<span class="keyword">template</span> <<span class= -"keyword">typename</span> octet_iterator, typename u32bit_iterator> -octet_iterator utf32to8 (u32bit_iterator start, u32bit_iterator end, octet_iterator result); -    -</pre> -    <p> -      <code>octet_iterator</code>: an output iterator.<br> -      <code>u32bit_iterator</code>: an input iterator.<br> -      <code>start</code>: an iterator pointing to the beginning of the UTF-32 encoded -      string to convert.<br> -       <code>end</code>: an iterator pointing to pass-the-end of the UTF-32 encoded -      string to convert.<br> -       <code>result</code>: an output iterator to the place in the UTF-8 string where to -      append the result of conversion.<br> -       <span class="return_value">Return value</span>: An iterator pointing to the place -      after the appended UTF-8 string. -    </p> -    <p> -      Example of use: -    </p> -<pre> -<span class="keyword">int</span> utf32string[] = {<span class= -"literal">0x448</span>, <span class="literal">0x65E5</span>, <span class= -"literal">0x10346</span>, <span class="literal">0</span>}; -vector<<span class="keyword">unsigned char</span>> utf8result; -utf32to8(utf32string, utf32string + <span class= -"literal">3</span>, back_inserter(utf8result)); -assert (utf8result.size() == <span class="literal">9</span>); -</pre> -    <p> -      In case of invalid UTF-32 string, a <code>utf8::invalid_code_point</code> exception -      is thrown. -    </p> -    <h4> -      utf8::utf8to32 -    </h4> -    <p class="version"> -    Available in version 1.0 and later. -    </p> -    <p> -      Converts a UTF-8 encoded string to UTF-32. -    </p> -<pre> -<span class="keyword">template</span> <<span class= -"keyword">typename</span> octet_iterator, <span class= -"keyword">typename</span> u32bit_iterator> -u32bit_iterator utf8to32 (octet_iterator start, octet_iterator end, u32bit_iterator result); -    -</pre> -    <p> -      <code>octet_iterator</code>: an input iterator.<br> -      <code>u32bit_iterator</code>: an output iterator.<br> -      <code>start</code>: an iterator pointing to the beginning of the UTF-8 encoded -      string to convert.<br> -       <code>end</code>: an iterator pointing to pass-the-end of the UTF-8 encoded string -      to convert.<br> -       <code>result</code>: an output iterator to the place in the UTF-32 string where to -      append the result of conversion.<br> -       <span class="return_value">Return value</span>: An iterator pointing to the place -      after the appended UTF-32 string. -    </p> -    <p> -      Example of use: -    </p> -<pre> -<span class="keyword">char</span>* twochars = <span class= -"literal">"\xe6\x97\xa5\xd1\x88"</span>; -vector<<span class="keyword">int</span>> utf32result; -utf8to32(twochars, twochars + <span class= -"literal">5</span>, back_inserter(utf32result)); -assert (utf32result.size() == <span class="literal">2</span>); -</pre> -    <p> -      In case of an invalid UTF-8 seqence, a <code>utf8::invalid_utf8</code> exception is -      thrown. If <code>end</code> does not point to the past-of-end of a UTF-8 seqence, a -      <code>utf8::not_enough_room</code> exception is thrown. -    </p> -    <h4> -      utf8::find_invalid -    </h4> -    <p class="version"> -    Available in version 1.0 and later. -    </p> -    <p> -      Detects an invalid sequence within a UTF-8 string. -    </p> -<pre> -<span class="keyword">template</span> <<span class= -"keyword">typename</span> octet_iterator>  -octet_iterator find_invalid(octet_iterator start, octet_iterator end); -</pre> -    <p> -      <code>octet_iterator</code>: an input iterator.<br> -      <code>start</code>: an iterator pointing to the beginning of the UTF-8 string to -      test for validity.<br> -       <code>end</code>: an iterator pointing to pass-the-end of the UTF-8 string to test -      for validity.<br> -       <span class="return_value">Return value</span>: an iterator pointing to the first -      invalid octet in the UTF-8 string. In case none were found, equals -      <code>end</code>. -    </p> -    <p> -      Example of use: -    </p> -<pre> -<span class="keyword">char</span> utf_invalid[] = <span class= -"literal">"\xe6\x97\xa5\xd1\x88\xfa"</span>; -<span class= -"keyword">char</span>* invalid = find_invalid(utf_invalid, utf_invalid + <span class= -"literal">6</span>); -assert (invalid == utf_invalid + <span class="literal">5</span>); -</pre> -    <p> -      This function is typically used to make sure a UTF-8 string is valid before -      processing it with other functions. It is especially important to call it if before -      doing any of the <em>unchecked</em> operations on it. -    </p> -    <h4> -      utf8::is_valid -    </h4> -    <p class="version"> -    Available in version 1.0 and later. -    </p> -    <p> -      Checks whether a sequence of octets is a valid UTF-8 string. -    </p> -<pre> -<span class="keyword">template</span> <<span class= -"keyword">typename</span> octet_iterator>  -<span class="keyword">bool</span> is_valid(octet_iterator start, octet_iterator end); -    -</pre> -    <p> -      <code>octet_iterator</code>: an input iterator.<br> -      <code>start</code>: an iterator pointing to the beginning of the UTF-8 string to -      test for validity.<br> -       <code>end</code>: an iterator pointing to pass-the-end of the UTF-8 string to test -      for validity.<br> -       <span class="return_value">Return value</span>: <code>true</code> if the sequence -      is a valid UTF-8 string; <code>false</code> if not. -    </p> -    Example of use:  -<pre> -<span class="keyword">char</span> utf_invalid[] = <span class= -"literal">"\xe6\x97\xa5\xd1\x88\xfa"</span>; -<span class="keyword">bool</span> bvalid = is_valid(utf_invalid, utf_invalid + <span -class="literal">6</span>); -assert (bvalid == false); -</pre> -    <p> -      <code>is_valid</code> is a shorthand for <code>find_invalid(start, end) == -      end;</code>. You may want to use it to make sure that a byte seqence is a valid -      UTF-8 string without the need to know where it fails if it is not valid. -    </p> -    <h4> -      utf8::replace_invalid -    </h4> -    <p class="version"> -    Available in version 2.0 and later. -    </p> -    <p> -      Replaces all invalid UTF-8 sequences within a string with a replacement marker. -    </p> -<pre> -<span class="keyword">template</span> <<span class= -"keyword">typename</span> octet_iterator, <span class= -"keyword">typename</span> output_iterator> -output_iterator replace_invalid(octet_iterator start, octet_iterator end, output_iterator out, uint32_t replacement); -<span class="keyword">template</span> <<span class= -"keyword">typename</span> octet_iterator, <span class= -"keyword">typename</span> output_iterator> -output_iterator replace_invalid(octet_iterator start, octet_iterator end, output_iterator out); -    -</pre> -    <p> -      <code>octet_iterator</code>: an input iterator.<br> -      <code>output_iterator</code>: an output iterator.<br> -      <code>start</code>: an iterator pointing to the beginning of the UTF-8 string to -      look for invalid UTF-8 sequences.<br> -       <code>end</code>: an iterator pointing to pass-the-end of the UTF-8 string to look -      for invalid UTF-8 sequences.<br> -       <code>out</code>: An output iterator to the range where the result of replacement -      is stored.<br> -       <code>replacement</code>: A Unicode code point for the replacement marker. The -      version without this parameter assumes the value <code>0xfffd</code><br> -       <span class="return_value">Return value</span>: An iterator pointing to the place -      after the UTF-8 string with replaced invalid sequences. -    </p> -    <p> -      Example of use: -    </p> -<pre> -<span class="keyword">char</span> invalid_sequence[] = <span class= -"literal">"a\x80\xe0\xa0\xc0\xaf\xed\xa0\x80z"</span>; -vector<<span class="keyword">char</span>> replace_invalid_result; -replace_invalid (invalid_sequence, invalid_sequence + sizeof(invalid_sequence), back_inserter(replace_invalid_result), <span - class="literal">'?'</span>); -bvalid = is_valid(replace_invalid_result.begin(), replace_invalid_result.end()); -assert (bvalid); -<span class="keyword">char</span>* fixed_invalid_sequence = <span class= -"literal">"a????z"</span>; -assert (std::equal(replace_invalid_result.begin(), replace_invalid_result.end(), fixed_invalid_sequence)); -</pre> -    <p> -      <code>replace_invalid</code> does not perform in-place replacement of invalid -      sequences. Rather, it produces a copy of the original string with the invalid -      sequences replaced with a replacement marker. Therefore, <code>out</code> must not -      be in the <code>[start, end]</code> range. -    </p> -    <p> -      If <code>end</code> does not point to the past-of-end of a UTF-8 sequence, a -      <code>utf8::not_enough_room</code> exception is thrown. -    </p> -    <h4> -      utf8::starts_with_bom -    </h4> -    <p class="version"> -    Available in version 2.3 and later. Relaces deprecated <code>is_bom()</code> function. -    </p> -    <p> -      Checks whether an octet sequence starts with a UTF-8 byte order mark (BOM) -    </p> -<pre> -<span class="keyword">template</span> <<span class= -"keyword">typename</span> octet_iterator>  -<span class="keyword">bool</span> starts_with_bom (octet_iterator it, octet_iterator end); -</pre> -    <p> -      <code>octet_iterator</code>: an input iterator.<br> -      <code>it</code>: beginning of the octet sequence to check<br> -      <code>end</code>: pass-end of the sequence to check<br> -       <span class="return_value">Return value</span>: <code>true</code> if the sequence -      starts with a UTF-8 byte order mark; <code>false</code> if not. -    </p> -    <p> -      Example of use: -    </p> -<pre> -<span class="keyword">unsigned char</span> byte_order_mark[] = {<span class= -"literal">0xef</span>, <span class="literal">0xbb</span>, <span class= -"literal">0xbf</span>}; -<span class="keyword">bool</span> bbom = starts_with_bom(byte_order_mark, byte_order_mark + <span class="keyword">sizeof</span>(byte_order_mark)); -assert (bbom == <span class="literal">true</span>); -</pre> -    <p> -      The typical use of this function is to check the first three bytes of a file. If -      they form the UTF-8 BOM, we want to skip them before processing the actual UTF-8 -      encoded text. -    </p> -    <h4> -      utf8::is_bom -    </h4> -    <p class="version"> -    Available in version 1.0 and later. Deprecated in version 2.3. <code>starts_with_bom()</code> should be used -    instead. -    </p> -    <p> -      Checks whether a sequence of three octets is a UTF-8 byte order mark (BOM) -    </p> -<pre> -<span class="keyword">template</span> <<span class= -"keyword">typename</span> octet_iterator>  -<span class="keyword">bool</span> is_bom (octet_iterator it); <span class="comment"> // Deprecated</span> -</pre> -    <p> -      <code>octet_iterator</code>: an input iterator.<br> -      <code>it</code>: beginning of the 3-octet sequence to check<br> -       <span class="return_value">Return value</span>: <code>true</code> if the sequence -      is UTF-8 byte order mark; <code>false</code> if not. -    </p> -    <p> -      Example of use: -    </p> -<pre> -<span class="keyword">unsigned char</span> byte_order_mark[] = {<span class= -"literal">0xef</span>, <span class="literal">0xbb</span>, <span class= -"literal">0xbf</span>}; -<span class="keyword">bool</span> bbom = is_bom(byte_order_mark); -assert (bbom == <span class="literal">true</span>); -</pre> -    <p> -      The typical use of this function is to check the first three bytes of a file. If -      they form the UTF-8 BOM, we want to skip them before processing the actual UTF-8 -      encoded text. -    </p> -    <p> -      If a sequence is  -      shorter than three bytes, an invalid iterator will be dereferenced. Therefore, this function is deprecated -      in favor of <code>starts_with_bom()</code>that takes the end of sequence as an argument. -    </p> -    <h3 id="typesutf8"> -      Types From utf8 Namespace -    </h3> -    <h4>utf8::exception -    </h4> -    <p class="version"> -    Available in version 2.3 and later. -    </p> -    <p> -    Base class for the exceptions thrown by UTF CPP library functions. -    </p> -<pre> -<span class="keyword">class</span> exception : <span class="keyword">public</span> std::exception {}; -</pre> -    <p> -    Example of use: -    </p> -<pre> -<span class="keyword">try</span> { -  code_that_uses_utf_cpp_library(); -} -<span class="keyword">catch</span>(<span class="keyword">const</span> utf8::exception& utfcpp_ex) { -  cerr << utfcpp_ex.what(); -} -</pre> -     -    <h4>utf8::invalid_code_point -    </h4> -    <p class="version"> -    Available in version 1.0 and later. -    </p> -    <p> -    Thrown by UTF8 CPP functions such as <code>advance</code> and <code>next</code> if an UTF-8 sequence represents and invalid code point. -    </p> - -<pre> -<span class="keyword">class</span> invalid_code_point : <span class="keyword">public</span> exception { -<span class="keyword">public</span>:  -    uint32_t code_point() <span class="keyword">const</span>; -}; - -</pre> -    <p> -    Member function <code>code_point()</code> can be used to determine the invalid code point that -    caused the exception to be thrown. -    </p> -    <h4>utf8::invalid_utf8 -    </h4> -    <p class="version"> -    Available in version 1.0 and later. -    </p> -    <p> -    Thrown by UTF8 CPP functions such as <code>next</code> and <code>prior</code> if an invalid UTF-8 sequence -    is detected during decoding. -    </p> - -<pre> -<span class="keyword">class</span> invalid_utf8 : <span class="keyword">public</span> exception { -<span class="keyword">public</span>:  -    uint8_t utf8_octet() <span class="keyword">const</span>; -}; -</pre> - -    <p> -    Member function <code>utf8_octet()</code> can be used to determine the beginning of the byte  -    sequence that caused the exception to be thrown. -    </p> -</pre> -    <h4>utf8::invalid_utf16 -    </h4> -    <p class="version"> -    Available in version 1.0 and later. -    </p> -    <p> -    Thrown by UTF8 CPP function <code>utf16to8</code> if an invalid UTF-16 sequence -    is detected during decoding. -    </p> - -<pre> -<span class="keyword">class</span> invalid_utf16 : <span class="keyword">public</span> exception { -<span class="keyword">public</span>:  -    uint16_t utf16_word() <span class="keyword">const</span>; -}; -</pre> - -    <p> -    Member function <code>utf16_word()</code> can be used to determine the UTF-16 code unit  -    that caused the exception to be thrown. -    </p> -    <h4>utf8::not_enough_room -    </h4> -    <p class="version"> -    Available in version 1.0 and later. -    </p> -    <p> -    Thrown by UTF8 CPP functions such as <code>next</code> if the end of the decoded UTF-8 sequence -    was reached before the code point was decoded. -    </p> - -<pre> -<span class="keyword">class</span> not_enough_room : <span class="keyword">public</span> exception {}; -</pre> -    <h4> -      utf8::iterator -    </h4> -    <p class="version"> -    Available in version 2.0 and later. -    </p> -    <p> -      Adapts the underlying octet iterator to iterate over the sequence of code points, -      rather than raw octets. -    </p> -<pre> -<span class="keyword">template</span> <<span class="keyword">typename</span> octet_iterator> -<span class="keyword">class</span> iterator; -</pre> -     -    <h5>Member functions</h5> -      <dl> -      <dt><code>iterator();</code> <dd> the deafult constructor; the underlying <code>octet_iterator</code> is -      constructed with its default constructor. -      <dt><code><span class="keyword">explicit</span> iterator (const octet_iterator& octet_it,  -                         const octet_iterator& range_start, -                         const octet_iterator& range_end);</code> <dd> a constructor  -      that initializes the underlying <code>octet_iterator</code> with <code>octet_it</code> -      and sets the range in which the iterator is considered valid. -      <dt><code>octet_iterator base () <span class="keyword">const</span>;</code> <dd> returns the  -      underlying <code>octet_iterator</code>. -      <dt><code>uint32_t operator * () <span class="keyword">const</span>;</code> <dd> decodes the utf-8 sequence -      the underlying <code>octet_iterator</code> is pointing to and returns the code point. -      <dt><code><span class="keyword">bool operator</span> == (const iterator& rhs) -      <span class="keyword">const</span>;</code> <dd> returns <span class="keyword">true</span> -      if the two underlaying iterators are equal. -      <dt><code><span class="keyword">bool operator</span> != (const iterator& rhs) -      <span class="keyword">const</span>;</code> <dd> returns <span class="keyword">true</span> -      if the two underlaying iterators are not equal. -      <dt><code>iterator& <span class="keyword">operator</span> ++ (); </code> <dd> the prefix increment - moves -      the iterator to the next UTF-8 encoded code point. -      <dt><code>iterator <span class="keyword">operator</span> ++ (<span class="keyword">int</span>); </code> <dd> -      the postfix increment - moves the iterator to the next UTF-8 encoded code point and returns the current one. -      <dt><code>iterator& <span class="keyword">operator</span> -- (); </code> <dd> the prefix decrement - moves -      the iterator to the previous UTF-8 encoded code point. -      <dt><code>iterator <span class="keyword">operator</span> -- (<span class="keyword">int</span>); </code> <dd> -      the postfix decrement - moves the iterator to the previous UTF-8 encoded code point and returns the current one. -      </dl> -      <p> -      Example of use: -      </p> -<pre> -<span class="keyword">char</span>* threechars = <span class="literal">"\xf0\x90\x8d\x86\xe6\x97\xa5\xd1\x88"</span>; -utf8::iterator<<span class="keyword">char</span>*> it(threechars, threechars, threechars + <span class="literal">9</span>); -utf8::iterator<<span class="keyword">char</span>*> it2 = it; -assert (it2 == it); -assert (*it == <span class="literal">0x10346</span>); -assert (*(++it) == <span class="literal">0x65e5</span>); -assert ((*it++) == <span class="literal">0x65e5</span>); -assert (*it == <span class="literal">0x0448</span>); -assert (it != it2); -utf8::iterator<<span class="keyword">char</span>*> endit (threechars + <span class="literal">9</span>, threechars, threechars + <span class="literal">9</span>);   -assert (++it == endit); -assert (*(--it) == <span class="literal">0x0448</span>); -assert ((*it--) == <span class="literal">0x0448</span>); -assert (*it == <span class="literal">0x65e5</span>); -assert (--it == utf8::iterator<<span class="keyword">char</span>*>(threechars, threechars, threechars + <span class="literal">9</span>)); -assert (*it == <span class="literal">0x10346</span>); -</pre> -      <p> -      The purpose of <code>utf8::iterator</code> adapter is to enable easy iteration as well as the use of STL -      algorithms with UTF-8 encoded strings. Increment and decrement operators are implemented in terms of  -      <code>utf8::next()</code> and <code>utf8::prior()</code> functions.  -      </p> -      <p> -      Note that <code>utf8::iterator</code> adapter is a checked iterator. It operates on the range specified in -      the constructor; any attempt to go out of that range will result in an exception. Even the comparison operators -      require both iterator object to be constructed against the same range - otherwise an exception is thrown. Typically, -      the range will be determined by sequence container functions <code>begin</code> and <code>end</code>, i.e.: -      </p> -<pre> -std::string s = <span class="literal">"example"</span>; -utf8::iterator i (s.begin(), s.begin(), s.end()); -</pre> -    <h3 id="fununchecked"> -      Functions From utf8::unchecked Namespace -    </h3> -    <h4> -      utf8::unchecked::append -    </h4> -    <p class="version"> -    Available in version 1.0 and later. -    </p> -    <p> -      Encodes a 32 bit code point as a UTF-8 sequence of octets and appends the sequence -      to a UTF-8 string. -    </p> -<pre> -<span class="keyword">template</span> <<span class= -"keyword">typename</span> octet_iterator> -octet_iterator append(uint32_t cp, octet_iterator result); -    -</pre> -    <p> -      <code>cp</code>: A 32 bit integer representing a code point to append to the -      sequence.<br> -       <code>result</code>: An output iterator to the place in the sequence where to -      append the code point.<br> -       <span class="return_value">Return value</span>: An iterator pointing to the place -      after the newly appended sequence. -    </p> -    <p> -      Example of use: -    </p> -<pre> -<span class="keyword">unsigned char</span> u[<span class="literal">5</span>] = {<span -class="literal">0</span>,<span class="literal">0</span>,<span class= -"literal">0</span>,<span class="literal">0</span>,<span class="literal">0</span>}; -<span class="keyword">unsigned char</span>* end = unchecked::append(<span class= -"literal">0x0448</span>, u); -assert (u[<span class="literal">0</span>] == <span class= -"literal">0xd1</span> && u[<span class="literal">1</span>] == <span class= -"literal">0x88</span> && u[<span class="literal">2</span>] == <span class= -"literal">0</span> && u[<span class="literal">3</span>] == <span class= -"literal">0</span> && u[<span class="literal">4</span>] == <span class= -"literal">0</span>); -</pre> -    <p> -      This is a faster but less safe version of <code>utf8::append</code>. It does not -      check for validity of the supplied code point, and may produce an invalid UTF-8 -      sequence. -    </p> -    <h4> -      utf8::unchecked::next -    </h4> -    <p class="version"> -    Available in version 1.0 and later. -    </p> -    <p> -      Given the iterator to the beginning of a UTF-8 sequence, it returns the code point -      and moves the iterator to the next position. -    </p> -<pre> -<span class="keyword">template</span> <<span class= -"keyword">typename</span> octet_iterator> -uint32_t next(octet_iterator& it); -    -</pre> -    <p> -      <code>it</code>: a reference to an iterator pointing to the beginning of an UTF-8 -      encoded code point. After the function returns, it is incremented to point to the -      beginning of the next code point.<br> -       <span class="return_value">Return value</span>: the 32 bit representation of the -      processed UTF-8 code point. -    </p> -    <p> -      Example of use: -    </p> -<pre> -<span class="keyword">char</span>* twochars = <span class= -"literal">"\xe6\x97\xa5\xd1\x88"</span>; -<span class="keyword">char</span>* w = twochars; -<span class="keyword">int</span> cp = unchecked::next(w); -assert (cp == <span class="literal">0x65e5</span>); -assert (w == twochars + <span class="literal">3</span>); -</pre> -    <p> -      This is a faster but less safe version of <code>utf8::next</code>. It does not -      check for validity of the supplied UTF-8 sequence. -    </p> -    <h4> -      utf8::unchecked::peek_next -    </h4> -    <p class="version"> -    Available in version 2.1 and later. -    </p> -    <p> -      Given the iterator to the beginning of a UTF-8 sequence, it returns the code point. -    </p> -<pre> -<span class="keyword">template</span> <<span class= -"keyword">typename</span> octet_iterator> -uint32_t peek_next(octet_iterator it); -    -</pre> -    <p> -      <code>it</code>: an iterator pointing to the beginning of an UTF-8 -      encoded code point.<br> -       <span class="return_value">Return value</span>: the 32 bit representation of the -      processed UTF-8 code point. -    </p> -    <p> -      Example of use: -    </p> -<pre> -<span class="keyword">char</span>* twochars = <span class= -"literal">"\xe6\x97\xa5\xd1\x88"</span>; -<span class="keyword">char</span>* w = twochars; -<span class="keyword">int</span> cp = unchecked::peek_next(w); -assert (cp == <span class="literal">0x65e5</span>); -assert (w == twochars); -</pre> -    <p> -      This is a faster but less safe version of <code>utf8::peek_next</code>. It does not -      check for validity of the supplied UTF-8 sequence. -    </p> -    <h4> -      utf8::unchecked::prior -    </h4> -    <p class="version"> -    Available in version 1.02 and later. -    </p> -    <p> -      Given a reference to an iterator pointing to an octet in a UTF-8 seqence, it -      decreases the iterator until it hits the beginning of the previous UTF-8 encoded -      code point and returns the 32 bits representation of the code point. -    </p> -<pre> -<span class="keyword">template</span> <<span class= -"keyword">typename</span> octet_iterator> -uint32_t prior(octet_iterator& it); -    -</pre> -    <p> -      <code>it</code>: a reference pointing to an octet within a UTF-8 encoded string. -      After the function returns, it is decremented to point to the beginning of the -      previous code point.<br> -       <span class="return_value">Return value</span>: the 32 bit representation of the -      previous code point. -    </p> -    <p> -      Example of use: -    </p> -<pre> -<span class="keyword">char</span>* twochars = <span class= -"literal">"\xe6\x97\xa5\xd1\x88"</span>; -<span class="keyword">char</span>* w = twochars + <span class="literal">3</span>; -<span class="keyword">int</span> cp = unchecked::prior (w); -assert (cp == <span class="literal">0x65e5</span>); -assert (w == twochars); -</pre> -    <p> -      This is a faster but less safe version of <code>utf8::prior</code>. It does not -      check for validity of the supplied UTF-8 sequence and offers no boundary checking. -    </p> -    <h4> -      utf8::unchecked::previous (deprecated, see utf8::unchecked::prior) -    </h4> -    <p class="version"> -    Deprecated in version 1.02 and later. -    </p> -    <p> -      Given a reference to an iterator pointing to an octet in a UTF-8 seqence, it -      decreases the iterator until it hits the beginning of the previous UTF-8 encoded -      code point and returns the 32 bits representation of the code point. -    </p> -<pre> -<span class="keyword">template</span> <<span class= -"keyword">typename</span> octet_iterator> -uint32_t previous(octet_iterator& it); -    -</pre> -    <p> -      <code>it</code>: a reference pointing to an octet within a UTF-8 encoded string. -      After the function returns, it is decremented to point to the beginning of the -      previous code point.<br> -       <span class="return_value">Return value</span>: the 32 bit representation of the -      previous code point. -    </p> -    <p> -      Example of use: -    </p> -<pre> -<span class="keyword">char</span>* twochars = <span class= -"literal">"\xe6\x97\xa5\xd1\x88"</span>; -<span class="keyword">char</span>* w = twochars + <span class="literal">3</span>; -<span class="keyword">int</span> cp = unchecked::previous (w); -assert (cp == <span class="literal">0x65e5</span>); -assert (w == twochars); -</pre> -    <p> -     The reason this function is deprecated is just the consistency with the "checked" -     versions, where <code>prior</code> should be used instead of <code>previous</code>. -     In fact, <code>unchecked::previous</code> behaves exactly the same as <code> -     unchecked::prior</code> -    </p> -    <p> -      This is a faster but less safe version of <code>utf8::previous</code>. It does not -      check for validity of the supplied UTF-8 sequence and offers no boundary checking. -    </p> -    <h4> -      utf8::unchecked::advance -    </h4> -    <p class="version"> -    Available in version 1.0 and later. -    </p> -    <p> -      Advances an iterator by the specified number of code points within an UTF-8 -      sequence. -    </p> -<pre> -<span class="keyword">template</span> <<span class= -"keyword">typename</span> octet_iterator, typename distance_type> -<span class="keyword">void</span> advance (octet_iterator& it, distance_type n); -    -</pre> -    <p> -      <code>it</code>: a reference to an iterator pointing to the beginning of an UTF-8 -      encoded code point. After the function returns, it is incremented to point to the -      nth following code point.<br> -       <code>n</code>: a positive integer that shows how many code points we want to -      advance.<br> -    </p> -    <p> -      Example of use: -    </p> -<pre> -<span class="keyword">char</span>* twochars = <span class= -"literal">"\xe6\x97\xa5\xd1\x88"</span>; -<span class="keyword">char</span>* w = twochars; -unchecked::advance (w, <span class="literal">2</span>); -assert (w == twochars + <span class="literal">5</span>); -</pre> -    <p> -      This function works only "forward". In case of a negative <code>n</code>, there is -      no effect. -    </p> -    <p> -      This is a faster but less safe version of <code>utf8::advance</code>. It does not -      check for validity of the supplied UTF-8 sequence and offers no boundary checking. -    </p> -    <h4> -      utf8::unchecked::distance -    </h4> -    <p class="version"> -    Available in version 1.0 and later. -    </p> -    <p> -      Given the iterators to two UTF-8 encoded code points in a seqence, returns the -      number of code points between them. -    </p> -<pre> -<span class="keyword">template</span> <<span class= -"keyword">typename</span> octet_iterator> -<span class= -"keyword">typename</span> std::iterator_traits<octet_iterator>::difference_type distance (octet_iterator first, octet_iterator last); -</pre> -    <p> -      <code>first</code>: an iterator to a beginning of a UTF-8 encoded code point.<br> -       <code>last</code>: an iterator to a "post-end" of the last UTF-8 encoded code -      point in the sequence we are trying to determine the length. It can be the -      beginning of a new code point, or not.<br> -       <span class="return_value">Return value</span> the distance between the iterators, -      in code points. -    </p> -    <p> -      Example of use: -    </p> -<pre> -<span class="keyword">char</span>* twochars = <span class= -"literal">"\xe6\x97\xa5\xd1\x88"</span>; -size_t dist = utf8::unchecked::distance(twochars, twochars + <span class= -"literal">5</span>); -assert (dist == <span class="literal">2</span>); -</pre> -    <p> -      This is a faster but less safe version of <code>utf8::distance</code>. It does not -      check for validity of the supplied UTF-8 sequence. -    </p> -    <h4> -      utf8::unchecked::utf16to8 -    </h4> -    <p class="version"> -    Available in version 1.0 and later. -    </p> -    <p> -      Converts a UTF-16 encoded string to UTF-8. -    </p> -<pre> -<span class="keyword">template</span> <<span class= -"keyword">typename</span> u16bit_iterator, <span class= -"keyword">typename</span> octet_iterator> -octet_iterator utf16to8 (u16bit_iterator start, u16bit_iterator end, octet_iterator result); -    -</pre> -    <p> -      <code>start</code>: an iterator pointing to the beginning of the UTF-16 encoded -      string to convert.<br> -       <code>end</code>: an iterator pointing to pass-the-end of the UTF-16 encoded -      string to convert.<br> -       <code>result</code>: an output iterator to the place in the UTF-8 string where to -      append the result of conversion.<br> -       <span class="return_value">Return value</span>: An iterator pointing to the place -      after the appended UTF-8 string. -    </p> -    <p> -      Example of use: -    </p> -<pre> -<span class="keyword">unsigned short</span> utf16string[] = {<span class= -"literal">0x41</span>, <span class="literal">0x0448</span>, <span class= -"literal">0x65e5</span>, <span class="literal">0xd834</span>, <span class= -"literal">0xdd1e</span>}; -vector<<span class="keyword">unsigned char</span>> utf8result; -unchecked::utf16to8(utf16string, utf16string + <span class= -"literal">5</span>, back_inserter(utf8result)); -assert (utf8result.size() == <span class="literal">10</span>);     -</pre> -    <p> -      This is a faster but less safe version of <code>utf8::utf16to8</code>. It does not -      check for validity of the supplied UTF-16 sequence. -    </p> -    <h4> -      utf8::unchecked::utf8to16 -    </h4> -    <p class="version"> -    Available in version 1.0 and later. -    </p> -    <p> -      Converts an UTF-8 encoded string to UTF-16 -    </p> -<pre> -<span class="keyword">template</span> <<span class= -"keyword">typename</span> u16bit_iterator, typename octet_iterator> -u16bit_iterator utf8to16 (octet_iterator start, octet_iterator end, u16bit_iterator result); -    -</pre> -    <p> -      <code>start</code>: an iterator pointing to the beginning of the UTF-8 encoded -      string to convert. < br /> <code>end</code>: an iterator pointing to -      pass-the-end of the UTF-8 encoded string to convert.<br> -       <code>result</code>: an output iterator to the place in the UTF-16 string where to -      append the result of conversion.<br> -       <span class="return_value">Return value</span>: An iterator pointing to the place -      after the appended UTF-16 string. -    </p> -    <p> -      Example of use: -    </p> -<pre> -<span class="keyword">char</span> utf8_with_surrogates[] = <span class= -"literal">"\xe6\x97\xa5\xd1\x88\xf0\x9d\x84\x9e"</span>; -vector <<span class="keyword">unsigned short</span>> utf16result; -unchecked::utf8to16(utf8_with_surrogates, utf8_with_surrogates + <span class= -"literal">9</span>, back_inserter(utf16result)); -assert (utf16result.size() == <span class="literal">4</span>); -assert (utf16result[<span class="literal">2</span>] == <span class= -"literal">0xd834</span>); -assert (utf16result[<span class="literal">3</span>] == <span class= -"literal">0xdd1e</span>); -</pre> -    <p> -      This is a faster but less safe version of <code>utf8::utf8to16</code>. It does not -      check for validity of the supplied UTF-8 sequence. -    </p> -    <h4> -      utf8::unchecked::utf32to8 -    </h4> -    <p class="version"> -    Available in version 1.0 and later. -    </p> -    <p> -      Converts a UTF-32 encoded string to UTF-8. -    </p> -<pre> -<span class="keyword">template</span> <<span class= -"keyword">typename</span> octet_iterator, <span class= -"keyword">typename</span> u32bit_iterator> -octet_iterator utf32to8 (u32bit_iterator start, u32bit_iterator end, octet_iterator result); -    -</pre> -    <p> -      <code>start</code>: an iterator pointing to the beginning of the UTF-32 encoded -      string to convert.<br> -       <code>end</code>: an iterator pointing to pass-the-end of the UTF-32 encoded -      string to convert.<br> -       <code>result</code>: an output iterator to the place in the UTF-8 string where to -      append the result of conversion.<br> -       <span class="return_value">Return value</span>: An iterator pointing to the place -      after the appended UTF-8 string. -    </p> -    <p> -      Example of use: -    </p> -<pre> -<span class="keyword">int</span> utf32string[] = {<span class= -"literal">0x448</span>, <span class="literal">0x65e5</span>, <span class= -"literal">0x10346</span>, <span class="literal">0</span>}; -vector<<span class="keyword">unsigned char</span>> utf8result; -utf32to8(utf32string, utf32string + <span class= -"literal">3</span>, back_inserter(utf8result)); -assert (utf8result.size() == <span class="literal">9</span>); -</pre> -    <p> -      This is a faster but less safe version of <code>utf8::utf32to8</code>. It does not -      check for validity of the supplied UTF-32 sequence. -    </p> -    <h4> -      utf8::unchecked::utf8to32 -    </h4> -    <p class="version"> -    Available in version 1.0 and later. -    </p> -    <p> -      Converts a UTF-8 encoded string to UTF-32. -    </p> -<pre> -<span class="keyword">template</span> <<span class= -"keyword">typename</span> octet_iterator, typename u32bit_iterator> -u32bit_iterator utf8to32 (octet_iterator start, octet_iterator end, u32bit_iterator result); -    -</pre> -    <p> -      <code>start</code>: an iterator pointing to the beginning of the UTF-8 encoded -      string to convert.<br> -       <code>end</code>: an iterator pointing to pass-the-end of the UTF-8 encoded string -      to convert.<br> -       <code>result</code>: an output iterator to the place in the UTF-32 string where to -      append the result of conversion.<br> -       <span class="return_value">Return value</span>: An iterator pointing to the place -      after the appended UTF-32 string. -    </p> -    <p> -      Example of use: -    </p> -<pre> -<span class="keyword">char</span>* twochars = <span class= -"literal">"\xe6\x97\xa5\xd1\x88"</span>; -vector<<span class="keyword">int</span>> utf32result; -unchecked::utf8to32(twochars, twochars + <span class= -"literal">5</span>, back_inserter(utf32result)); -assert (utf32result.size() == <span class="literal">2</span>); -</pre> -    <p> -      This is a faster but less safe version of <code>utf8::utf8to32</code>. It does not -      check for validity of the supplied UTF-8 sequence. -    </p> -    <h3 id="typesunchecked"> -      Types From utf8::unchecked Namespace -    </h3> -    <h4> -      utf8::iterator -    </h4> -    <p class="version"> -    Available in version 2.0 and later. -    </p> -    <p> -      Adapts the underlying octet iterator to iterate over the sequence of code points, -      rather than raw octets. -    </p> -<pre> -<span class="keyword">template</span> <<span class="keyword">typename</span> octet_iterator> -<span class="keyword">class</span> iterator; -</pre> -     -    <h5>Member functions</h5> -      <dl> -      <dt><code>iterator();</code> <dd> the deafult constructor; the underlying <code>octet_iterator</code> is -      constructed with its default constructor. -      <dt><code><span class="keyword">explicit</span> iterator (const octet_iterator& octet_it);  -                         </code> <dd> a constructor  -      that initializes the underlying <code>octet_iterator</code> with <code>octet_it</code> -      <dt><code>octet_iterator base () <span class="keyword">const</span>;</code> <dd> returns the  -      underlying <code>octet_iterator</code>. -      <dt><code>uint32_t operator * () <span class="keyword">const</span>;</code> <dd> decodes the utf-8 sequence -      the underlying <code>octet_iterator</code> is pointing to and returns the code point. -      <dt><code><span class="keyword">bool operator</span> == (const iterator& rhs) -      <span class="keyword">const</span>;</code> <dd> returns <span class="keyword">true</span> -      if the two underlaying iterators are equal. -      <dt><code><span class="keyword">bool operator</span> != (const iterator& rhs) -      <span class="keyword">const</span>;</code> <dd> returns <span class="keyword">true</span> -      if the two underlaying iterators are not equal. -      <dt><code>iterator& <span class="keyword">operator</span> ++ (); </code> <dd> the prefix increment - moves -      the iterator to the next UTF-8 encoded code point. -      <dt><code>iterator <span class="keyword">operator</span> ++ (<span class="keyword">int</span>); </code> <dd> -      the postfix increment - moves the iterator to the next UTF-8 encoded code point and returns the current one. -      <dt><code>iterator& <span class="keyword">operator</span> -- (); </code> <dd> the prefix decrement - moves -      the iterator to the previous UTF-8 encoded code point. -      <dt><code>iterator <span class="keyword">operator</span> -- (<span class="keyword">int</span>); </code> <dd> -      the postfix decrement - moves the iterator to the previous UTF-8 encoded code point and returns the current one. -      </dl> -      <p> -      Example of use: -      </p> -<pre> -<span class="keyword">char</span>* threechars = <span class="literal">"\xf0\x90\x8d\x86\xe6\x97\xa5\xd1\x88"</span>; -utf8::unchecked::iterator<<span class="keyword">char</span>*> un_it(threechars); -utf8::unchecked::iterator<<span class="keyword">char</span>*> un_it2 = un_it; -assert (un_it2 == un_it); -assert (*un_it == <span class="literal">0x10346</span>); -assert (*(++un_it) == <span class="literal">0x65e5</span>); -assert ((*un_it++) == <span class="literal">0x65e5</span>); -assert (*un_it == <span class="literal">0x0448</span>); -assert (un_it != un_it2); -utf8::::unchecked::iterator<<span class="keyword">char</span>*> un_endit (threechars + <span class="literal">9</span>);   -assert (++un_it == un_endit); -assert (*(--un_it) == <span class="literal">0x0448</span>); -assert ((*un_it--) == <span class="literal">0x0448</span>); -assert (*un_it == <span class="literal">0x65e5</span>); -assert (--un_it == utf8::unchecked::iterator<<span class="keyword">char</span>*>(threechars)); -assert (*un_it == <span class="literal">0x10346</span>); -</pre> -      <p> -      This is an unchecked version of <code>utf8::iterator</code>. It is faster in many cases, but offers -      no validity or range checks. -      </p> -    <h2 id="points"> -      Points of interest -    </h2> -    <h4> -      Design goals and decisions -    </h4> -    <p> -      The library was designed to be: -    </p> -    <ol> -      <li> -        Generic: for better or worse, there are many C++ string classes out there, and -        the library should work with as many of them as possible. -      </li> -      <li> -        Portable: the library should be portable both accross different platforms and -        compilers. The only non-portable code is a small section that declares unsigned -        integers of different sizes: three typedefs. They can be changed by the users of -        the library if they don't match their platform. The default setting should work -        for Windows (both 32 and 64 bit), and most 32 bit and 64 bit Unix derivatives. -      </li> -      <li> -        Lightweight: follow the "pay only for what you use" guideline. -      </li> -      <li> -        Unintrusive: avoid forcing any particular design or even programming style on the -        user. This is a library, not a framework. -      </li> -    </ol> -    <h4> -      Alternatives -    </h4> -    <p> -      In case you want to look into other means of working with UTF-8 strings from C++, -      here is the list of solutions I am aware of: -    </p> -    <ol> -      <li> -        <a href="http://icu.sourceforge.net/">ICU Library</a>. It is very powerful, -        complete, feature-rich, mature, and widely used. Also big, intrusive, -        non-generic, and doesn't play well with the Standard Library. I definitelly -        recommend looking at ICU even if you don't plan to use it. -      </li> -      <li> -        C++11 language and library features. Still far from complete, and not widely -        supported by compiler vendors.  -      </li> -      <li> -        <a href= -        "http://www.gtkmm.org/gtkmm2/docs/tutorial/html/ch03s04.html">Glib::ustring</a>. -        A class specifically made to work with UTF-8 strings, and also feel like -        <code>std::string</code>. If you prefer to have yet another string class in your -        code, it may be worth a look. Be aware of the licensing issues, though. -      </li> -      <li> -        Platform dependent solutions: Windows and POSIX have functions to convert strings -        from one encoding to another. That is only a subset of what my library offers, -        but if that is all you need it may be good enough. -      </li> -    </ol> -    <h2 id="links"> -      Links -    </h2> -    <ol> -      <li> -        <a href="http://www.unicode.org/">The Unicode Consortium</a>. -      </li> -      <li> -        <a href="http://icu.sourceforge.net/">ICU Library</a>. -      </li> -      <li> -        <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/UTF-8">UTF-8 at Wikipedia</a> -      </li> -      <li> -        <a href="http://www.cl.cam.ac.uk/~mgk25/unicode.html">UTF-8 and Unicode FAQ for -        Unix/Linux</a> -      </li> -    </ol> -  </body> -</html> | 
