1 '\" te 2 .\" Copyright 2014 Garrett D'Amore <garrett@damore.org> 3 .\" Copyright (c) 1992, X/Open Company Limited. All Rights Reserved. Portions Copyright (c) 2003, Sun Microsystems, Inc. All Rights Reserved. 4 .\" Sun Microsystems, Inc. gratefully acknowledges The Open Group for permission to reproduce portions of its copyrighted documentation. Original documentation from The Open Group can be obtained online at 5 .\" http://www.opengroup.org/bookstore/. 6 .\" The Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers and The Open Group, have given us permission to reprint portions of their documentation. In the following statement, the phrase "this text" refers to portions of the system documentation. Portions of this text are reprinted and reproduced in electronic form in the Sun OS Reference Manual, from IEEE Std 1003.1, 2004 Edition, Standard for Information Technology -- Portable Operating System Interface (POSIX), The Open Group Base Specifications Issue 6, Copyright (C) 2001-2004 by the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers, Inc and The Open Group. In the event of any discrepancy between these versions and the original IEEE and The Open Group Standard, the original IEEE and The Open Group Standard is the referee document. The original Standard can be obtained online at http://www.opengroup.org/unix/online.html. 7 .\" This notice shall appear on any product containing this material. 8 .\" The contents of this file are subject to the terms of the Common Development and Distribution License (the "License"). You may not use this file except in compliance with the License. 9 .\" You can obtain a copy of the license at usr/src/OPENSOLARIS.LICENSE or http://www.opensolaris.org/os/licensing. See the License for the specific language governing permissions and limitations under the License. 10 .\" When distributing Covered Code, include this CDDL HEADER in each file and include the License file at usr/src/OPENSOLARIS.LICENSE. If applicable, add the following below this CDDL HEADER, with the fields enclosed by brackets "[]" replaced with your own identifying information: Portions Copyright [yyyy] [name of copyright owner] 11 .TH WCSRTOMBS 3C "Jul 13, 2014" 12 .SH NAME 13 wcsnrtombs, wcsnrtombs_l, wcsrtombs, wcsrtombs_l \- convert a wide-character string to a character string 14 (restartable) 15 .SH SYNOPSIS 16 .LP 17 .nf 18 #include <wchar.h> 19 20 \fBsize_t\fR \fBwcsrtombs\fR(\fBchar *restrict\fR \fIdst\fR, \fBconst wchar_t **restrict\fR \fIsrc\fR, 21 \fBsize_t\fR \fIlen\fR, \fBmbstate_t *restrict\fR \fIps\fR); 22 .fi 23 .LP 24 .nf 25 \fBsize_t\fR \fBwcsnrtombs\fR(\fBchar *restrict\fR \fIdst\fR, \fBconst wchar_t **restrict\fR \fIsrc\fR, 26 \fBsize_t\fR \fInwc\fR, \fBsize_t\fR \fIlen\fR, \fBmbstate_t *restrict\fR \fIps\fR); 27 .fi 28 .LP 29 .nf 30 #include <wchar.h> 31 #include <xlocale.h> 32 33 \fBsize_t\fR \fBwcsrtombs_l\fR(\fBchar *restrict\fR \fIdst\fR, \fBconst wchar_t **restrict\fR \fIsrc\fR, 34 \fBsize_t\fR \fIlen\fR, \fBmbstate_t *restrict\fR \fIps\fR, \fBlocale_t\fR \fIloc\fR); 35 .fi 36 .LP 37 .nf 38 \fBsize_t\fR \fBwcsnrtombs_l\fR(\fBchar *restrict\fR \fIdst\fR, \fBconst wchar_t **restrict\fR \fIsrc\fR, 39 \fBsize_t\fR \fInwc\fR, \fBsize_t\fR \fIlen\fR, \fBmbstate_t *restrict\fR \fIps\fR, \fBlocale_t\fR \fIloc\fR); 40 .fi 41 .SH DESCRIPTION 42 .LP 43 The \fBwcsrtombs()\fR function converts a sequence of wide-characters from the 44 array indirectly pointed to by \fIsrc\fR into a sequence of corresponding 45 characters, beginning in the conversion state described by the object pointed 46 to by \fIps\fR. If \fIdst\fR is not a null pointer, the converted characters 47 are then stored into the array pointed to by \fIdst\fR. Conversion continues up 48 to and including a terminating null wide-character, which is also stored. 49 Conversion stops earlier in the following cases: 50 .RS +4 51 .TP 52 .ie t \(bu 53 .el o 54 When a code is reached that does not correspond to a valid character. 55 .RE 56 .RS +4 57 .TP 58 .ie t \(bu 59 .el o 60 When the next character would exceed the limit of \fIlen\fR total bytes to be 61 stored in the array pointed to by \fIdst\fR (and \fIdst\fR is not a null 62 pointer). 63 .RE 64 .RS +4 65 .TP 66 .ie t \(bu 67 .el o 68 In the case of \fBwcsnrtombs()\fR and \fBwcsnrtombs_l()\fR, when \fInwc\fR 69 wide characters have been completely converted. 70 .RE 71 .LP 72 Each conversion takes place as if by a call to the \fBwcrtomb()\fR function. 73 .LP 74 If \fIdst\fR is not a null pointer, the pointer object pointed to by \fIsrc\fR 75 is assigned either a null pointer (if conversion stopped due to reaching a 76 terminating null wide-character) or the address just past the last 77 wide-character converted (if any). If conversion stopped due to reaching a 78 terminating null wide-character, the resulting state described is the initial 79 conversion state. 80 .LP 81 If \fIps\fR is a null pointer, these functions uses their own 82 internal \fBmbstate_t\fR object, which is initialized at program startup to the 83 initial conversion state. Otherwise, the \fBmbstate_t\fR object pointed to by 84 \fIps\fR is used to completely describe the current conversion state of the 85 associated character sequence. The system will behave as if no function defined 86 in the Reference Manual calls any of these functions. 87 .LP 88 The behavior of \fBwcsrtombs()\fR and \fBwcsnrtombs()\fR are affected by the 89 \fBLC_CTYPE\fR category of the current locale. See \fBenviron\fR(5). 90 .LP 91 The \fBwcsrtombs_l()\fR and \fBwcsnrtombs_l()\fR functions behave identically 92 to \fBwcsrtombs()\fR and \fBwcsnrtombs()\fR respectively, except 93 that instead of operating in the current locale, they operate in the locale 94 specified by \fIloc\fR. 95 .SH RETURN VALUES 96 .LP 97 If conversion stops because a code is reached that does not correspond to a 98 valid character, an encoding error occurs. In this case, these 99 functions store the value of the macro \fBEILSEQ\fR in \fBerrno\fR and return 100 \fB(size_t)\(mi1\fR; the conversion state is undefined. Otherwise, they return 101 the number of bytes in the resulting character sequence, not including the 102 terminating null (if any). 103 .SH ERRORS 104 .LP 105 These functions may fail if: 106 .sp 107 .ne 2 108 .na 109 \fB\fBEINVAL\fR\fR 110 .ad 111 .RS 10n 112 The \fIps\fR argument points to an object that contains an invalid conversion 113 state. 114 .RE 115 116 .sp 117 .ne 2 118 .na 119 \fB\fBEILSEQ\fR\fR 120 .ad 121 .RS 10n 122 A wide-character code does not correspond to a valid character. 123 .RE 124 .SH ATTRIBUTES 125 .LP 126 See \fBattributes\fR(5) for descriptions of the following attributes: 127 .TS 128 box; 129 c | c 130 l | l . 131 ATTRIBUTE TYPE ATTRIBUTE VALUE 132 _ 133 Interface Stability See below. 134 _ 135 MT-Level See below. 136 .TE 137 138 .LP 139 The \fBwcsrtombs()\fR and \fBwcsnrtombs()\fR functions are Standard. The 140 \fBwcsrtombs_l()\fR and \fBwcsnrtombs_l()\fR functions are Uncommitted. 141 .LP 142 If \fIps\fR is a null pointer, these functions should be considered Unsafe 143 for use in multithreaded applications. Otherwise, they are MT-Safe. 144 .SH SEE ALSO 145 .LP 146 \fBmbsinit\fR(3C), \fBnewlocale\fR(3C), \fBsetlocale\fR(3C), \fBuselocale\fR(3C), 147 \fBwcrtomb\fR(3C), \fBattributes\fR(5), 148 \fBenviron\fR(5), \fBstandards\fR(5)