/* Copyright (C) 2002-2004 RealVNC Ltd. All Rights Reserved. * * This is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify * it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by * the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or * (at your option) any later version. * * This software is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, * but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of * MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the * GNU General Public License for more details. * * You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License * along with this software; if not, write to the Free Software * Foundation, Inc., 59 Temple Place - Suite 330, Boston, MA 02111-1307, * USA. */ // -=- TCharArray.h // This library contains the wide-character equivalent of CharArray, named // WCharArray. In addition to providing wide-character equivalents of // the char* string manipulation functions (strDup, strFree, etc), special // versions of those functions are provided which attempt to convert from // one format to the other. // e.g. char* t = "hello world"; WCHAR* w = wstrDup(t); // Results in w containing the wide-character text "hello world". // For convenience, the WStr and CStr classes are also provided. These // accept an existing (const) WCHAR* or char* null-terminated string and // create a read-only copy of that in the desired format. The new copy // will actually be the original copy if the format has not changed, otherwise // it will be a new buffer owned by the WStr/CStr. // In addition to providing wide character functions, this header defines // TCHAR* handling classes & functions. TCHAR is defined at compile time to // either char or WCHAR. Programs can treat this as a third data type and // call TStr() whenever a TCHAR* is required but a char* or WCHAR* is supplied, // and TStr will do the right thing. #ifndef __RFB_WIN32_TCHARARRAY_H__ #define __RFB_WIN32_TCHARARRAY_H__ #define WIN32_LEAN_AND_MEAN #include #include namespace rfb { // -=- String duplication and cleanup functions. // These routines also handle conversion between WCHAR* and char* char* strDup(const WCHAR* s); WCHAR* wstrDup(const WCHAR* s); WCHAR* wstrDup(const char* s); void wstrFree(WCHAR* s); bool wstrSplit(const WCHAR* src, const WCHAR limiter, WCHAR** out1, WCHAR** out2, bool fromEnd=false); bool wstrContains(const WCHAR* src, WCHAR c); // -=- Temporary format conversion classes // CStr accepts WCHAR* or char* and behaves like a char* // WStr accepts WCHAR* or char* and behaves like a WCHAR* struct WStr { WStr(const char* s) : buf(wstrDup(s)), free_(true) {} WStr(const WCHAR* s) : buf(s), free_(false) {} ~WStr() {if (free_) wstrFree((WCHAR*)buf);} operator const WCHAR*() {return buf;} const WCHAR* buf; bool free_; }; struct CStr { CStr(const char* s) : buf(s), free_(false) {} CStr(const WCHAR* s) : buf(strDup(s)), free_(true) {} ~CStr() {if (free_) strFree((char*)buf);} operator const char*() {return buf;} const char* buf; bool free_; }; // -=- Class to handle cleanup of arrays of native Win32 characters class WCharArray { public: WCharArray() : buf(0) {} WCharArray(char* str) : buf(wstrDup(str)) {strFree(str);} // note: assumes ownership WCharArray(WCHAR* str) : buf(str) {} // note: assumes ownership WCharArray(int len) { buf = new WCHAR[len]; } ~WCharArray() { delete [] buf; } // Get the buffer pointer & clear it (i.e. caller takes ownership) WCHAR* takeBuf() {WCHAR* tmp = buf; buf = 0; return tmp;} void replaceBuf(WCHAR* str) {delete [] buf; buf = str;} WCHAR* buf; }; #ifdef _UNICODE #define tstrDup wstrDup #define tstrFree wstrFree #define tstrSplit wstrSplit #define tstrContains wstrContains typedef WCharArray TCharArray; typedef WStr TStr; #else #define tstrDup strDup #define tstrFree strFree #define tstrSplit strSplit #define tstrContains strContains typedef CharArray TCharArray; typedef CStr TStr; #endif }; #endif