]>
git.proxmox.com Git - mirror_edk2.git/blob - StdLib/LibC/Locale/multibyte_Utf8.c
2 Copyright (c) 2016, Daryl McDaniel. All rights reserved.<BR>
3 Copyright (c) 2012, Intel Corporation. All rights reserved.<BR>
4 This program and the accompanying materials
5 are licensed and made available under the terms and conditions of the BSD License
6 which accompanies this distribution. The full text of the license may be found at
7 http://opensource.org/licenses/bsd-license.php
9 THE PROGRAM IS DISTRIBUTED UNDER THE BSD LICENSE ON AN "AS IS" BASIS,
10 WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR REPRESENTATIONS OF ANY KIND, EITHER EXPRESS OR IMPLIED.
17 #include <sys/types.h>
22 static mbstate_t LocalConvState
= {0};
24 /** Map a UTF-8 encoded prefix byte to a sequence length.
25 Zero means illegal prefix, but valid surrogate if < 0xC0.
26 One indicates an ASCII-7 equivalent character.
27 Two, three, and four are the first byte for 2, 3, and 4 byte sequences, respectively.
28 See RFC 3629 for details.
31 Low Nibble decodes the first byte into the number of bytes in the sequence.
32 A value of zero indicates an invalid byte.
33 The High Nibble encodes a bit mask to be used to match against the high nibble of the second byte.
36 SequenceLength = code[c0] & 0x0F;
37 Mask = 0x80 | code[c0];
39 Surrogate bytes are valid if: code[cX] & Mask > 0x80;
43 UINT8 utf8_code_length
[256] = {
44 0x01, 0x01, 0x01, 0x01, 0x01, 0x01, 0x01, 0x01, 0x01, 0x01, 0x01, 0x01, 0x01, 0x01, 0x01, 0x01, /* 00-0F */
45 0x01, 0x01, 0x01, 0x01, 0x01, 0x01, 0x01, 0x01, 0x01, 0x01, 0x01, 0x01, 0x01, 0x01, 0x01, 0x01,
46 0x01, 0x01, 0x01, 0x01, 0x01, 0x01, 0x01, 0x01, 0x01, 0x01, 0x01, 0x01, 0x01, 0x01, 0x01, 0x01,
47 0x01, 0x01, 0x01, 0x01, 0x01, 0x01, 0x01, 0x01, 0x01, 0x01, 0x01, 0x01, 0x01, 0x01, 0x01, 0x01,
48 0x01, 0x01, 0x01, 0x01, 0x01, 0x01, 0x01, 0x01, 0x01, 0x01, 0x01, 0x01, 0x01, 0x01, 0x01, 0x01,
49 0x01, 0x01, 0x01, 0x01, 0x01, 0x01, 0x01, 0x01, 0x01, 0x01, 0x01, 0x01, 0x01, 0x01, 0x01, 0x01,
50 0x01, 0x01, 0x01, 0x01, 0x01, 0x01, 0x01, 0x01, 0x01, 0x01, 0x01, 0x01, 0x01, 0x01, 0x01, 0x01,
51 0x01, 0x01, 0x01, 0x01, 0x01, 0x01, 0x01, 0x01, 0x01, 0x01, 0x01, 0x01, 0x01, 0x01, 0x01, 0x01, /* 70-7F */
52 0x90, 0x90, 0x90, 0x90, 0x90, 0x90, 0x90, 0x90, 0x90, 0x90, 0x90, 0x90, 0x90, 0x90, 0x90, 0x90, /* 80-8F */
53 0xA0, 0xA0, 0xA0, 0xA0, 0xA0, 0xA0, 0xA0, 0xA0, 0xA0, 0xA0, 0xA0, 0xA0, 0xA0, 0xA0, 0xA0, 0xA0, /* 90-9F */
54 0xC0, 0xC0, 0xC0, 0xC0, 0xC0, 0xC0, 0xC0, 0xC0, 0xC0, 0xC0, 0xC0, 0xC0, 0xC0, 0xC0, 0xC0, 0xC0, /* A0-AF */
55 0xC0, 0xC0, 0xC0, 0xC0, 0xC0, 0xC0, 0xC0, 0xC0, 0xC0, 0xC0, 0xC0, 0xC0, 0xC0, 0xC0, 0xC0, 0xC0, /* B0-BF */
56 0x00, 0x00, 0x72, 0x72, 0x72, 0x72, 0x72, 0x72, 0x72, 0x72, 0x72, 0x72, 0x72, 0x72, 0x72, 0x72, /* C0-C1 + C2-CF */
57 0x72, 0x72, 0x72, 0x72, 0x72, 0x72, 0x72, 0x72, 0x72, 0x72, 0x72, 0x72, 0x72, 0x72, 0x72, 0x72, /* D0-DF */
58 0x43, 0x73, 0x73, 0x73, 0x73, 0x73, 0x73, 0x73, 0x73, 0x73, 0x73, 0x73, 0x73, 0x33, 0x73, 0x73, /* E0-EF */
59 0x64, 0x74, 0x74, 0x74, 0x14, 0x00, 0x00, 0x00, 0x00, 0x00, 0x00, 0x00, 0x00, 0x00, 0x00, 0x00 /* F0-F4 + F5-FF */
62 /** Process one byte of a multibyte character.
64 @param[in] ch One byte of a multibyte character.
65 @param[in,out] ps Pointer to a conversion state object.
67 @retval -2 ch is an incomplete but potentially valid character.
68 @retval -1 ch is not valid in this context.
69 @retval 1:4 The length, in bytes, of the character ch just completed.
73 ProcessOneByte(unsigned char ch
, mbstate_t *ps
)
80 // We are in an invalid state
81 ps
->A
= 0; // Initial State
83 ps
->C
[ps
->A
] = ch
; // Save the current byte
84 Mask
= utf8_code_length
[ch
];
86 if(ps
->A
== 0) { // Initial State. First byte of sequence.
90 case 0: // State 0, Code 0
93 ps
->E
= 1; // Consume this byte
95 case 1: // State 0, Code 1
97 ps
->B
= ps
->D
[0] = ch
;
100 default: // State 0, Code 2, 3, 4
101 ps
->A
= 1; // Next state is State-1
102 RetVal
= -2; // Incomplete but potentially valid character
107 // We are in state 1, 2, or 3 and processing a surrogate byte
108 Length
= ps
->E
& 0xF;
109 if((Mask
& ps
->E
) > 0x80) {
110 // This byte is valid
111 switch(ps
->A
) { // Process based upon our current state
112 case 1: // Second byte of the sequence.
113 if(Length
== 2) { // State 1, Code 2
114 Length
= ((ps
->C
[0] & 0x1f) << 6) + (ps
->C
[1] & 0x3f);
115 assert ((Length
> 0x007F) && (Length
<= 0x07FF));
116 ps
->B
= ps
->D
[0] = (UINT16
)Length
;
117 ps
->A
= 0; // Next state is State-0
120 else { // This isn't the last byte, get more. State 1, Code 3 or 4
125 case 2: // Third byte of the sequence
127 Length
= ((ps
->C
[0] & 0x0f) << 12) + ((ps
->C
[1] & 0x3f) << 6) + (ps
->C
[2] & 0x3f);
128 assert ((Length
> 0x07FF) && (Length
<= 0xFFFF));
129 ps
->B
= ps
->D
[0] = (UINT16
)Length
;
130 ps
->A
= 0; // Next state is State-0
138 case 3: // Fourth byte of the sequence
140 Length
= ((ps
->C
[0] & 0x7) << 18) + ((ps
->C
[1] & 0x3f) << 12) +
141 ((ps
->C
[2] & 0x3f) << 6) + (ps
->C
[3] & 0x3f);
143 assert ((Length
> 0xFFFF) && (Length
<= 0x10ffff));
145 /* compute and append the two surrogates: */
147 /* translate from 10000..10FFFF to 0..FFFF */
150 /* high surrogate = top 10 bits added to D800 */
151 ps
->D
[0] = (UINT16
)(0xD800 + (Length
>> 10));
153 /* low surrogate = bottom 10 bits added to DC00 */
154 ps
->D
[1] = (UINT16
)(0xDC00 + (Length
& 0x03FF));
155 ps
->A
= 0; // Next state is State-0
162 ps
->E
= 4; // Can't happen, but consume this byte anyway
167 else { // Invalid surrogate byte
169 ps
->A
= 0; // Next is State-0
171 ps
->E
= 0; // Don't Consume, it may be an initial byte
177 /** Convert one Multibyte sequence.
179 @param[out] Dest Pointer to output location, or NULL
180 @param[in] Src Multibyte Source (UTF8)
181 @param[in] Len Max Number of bytes to convert
182 @param[in] pS Pointer to State struct., or NULL
184 @retval -2 Bytes processed comprise an incomplete, but potentially valid, character.
185 @retval -1 An encoding error was encountered. ps->E indicates the number of bytes consumed.
186 @retval 0 Either Src is NULL or it points to a NUL character.
187 @retval 1:N N bytes were consumed producing a valid wide character.
191 wchar_t *Dest
, // Pointer to output location, or NULL
192 const char *Src
, // Multibyte Source (UTF8)
193 ssize_t Len
, // Max Number of bytes to convert
194 mbstate_t *pS
// Pointer to State struct., or NULL
202 pS
= &LocalConvState
;
208 while(Src
< SrcEnd
) {
209 ch
= (unsigned char)*Src
++;
210 NumConv
= ProcessOneByte(ch
, pS
);
216 else if(Dest
!= NULL
) {
220 if((NumConv
> 0) && (Dest
!= NULL
)) {
229 /* Determine the number of bytes needed to represent a Wide character
232 A single wide character may convert into a one, two, three, or four byte
233 narrow (MBCS or UTF-8) character. The number of MBCS bytes can be determined
236 If WCS char < 0x00000080 One Byte
237 Else if WCS char < 0x0000D800 Two Bytes
240 Since UEFI only supports the Unicode Base Multilingual Plane (BMP),
241 Four-byte characters are not supported.
243 @param[in] InCh Wide character to test.
245 @retval -1 Improperly formed character
246 @retval 0 InCh is 0x0000
247 @retval >0 Number of bytes needed for the MBCS character
251 OneWcToMcLen(const wchar_t InCh
)
255 if(InCh
== 0) { // Is this a NUL, 0x0000 ?
258 else if(InCh
< 0x0080) { // Is this a 1-byte character?
261 else if(InCh
< 0x0800) { // Is this a 2-byte character?
264 else if((InCh
>= 0xD800) && (InCh
< 0xE000)) { // Is this a surrogate?
268 NumBytes
= 3; // Otherwise, it must be a 3-byte character.
270 return (int)NumBytes
; // Return extimate of required bytes.
273 /* Determine the number of bytes needed to represent a Wide character string
274 as a MBCS string of given maximum length. Will optionally return the number
275 of wide characters that would be consumed.
277 A single wide character may convert into a one, two, three, or four byte
278 narrow (MBCS or UTF-8) character. The number of MBCS bytes can be determined
281 If WCS char < 0x00000080 One Byte
282 Else if WCS char < 0x00000800 Two Bytes
283 Else if WCS char < 0x00010000 Three Bytes
286 Since UEFI only supports the Unicode Base Multilingual Plane (BMP),
287 Four-byte characters should not be encountered.
289 @param[in] Src Pointer to a wide character string.
290 @param[in] Limit Maximum number of bytes the converted string may occupy.
291 @param[out] NumChar Pointer to where to store the number of wide characters
294 @return The number of bytes required to convert Src to MBCS,
295 not including the terminating NUL. If NumChar is not NULL, the number
296 of characters represented by the return value will be written to
301 EstimateWtoM(const wchar_t * Src
, size_t Limit
, size_t *NumChar
)
310 EChar
= *Src
++; // Get the initial character and point to next
311 while(((NumBytes
= OneWcToMcLen(EChar
)) > 0) &&
312 ((size_t)(Estimate
+ NumBytes
) < Limit
))
313 { // Until one of the source characters is NUL
314 ++CharCount
; // Count this character.
315 Estimate
+= NumBytes
; // Count the Bytes for this character
316 EChar
= *Src
++; // Get the next source character and point to the next.
318 if(NumChar
!= NULL
) {
319 *NumChar
= CharCount
;
321 return (size_t)Estimate
; // Return esimate of required bytes.
324 /* Determine the number of characters in a MBCS string.
325 MBCS characters are one to four bytes long. By examining the first byte
326 of a MBCS character, one can determine the number of bytes comprising the
334 Since UEFI only supports the Unicode Base Multilingual Plane (BMP),
335 Four-byte characters should not be encountered.
337 @param[in] Src The string to examine
339 @return The number of characters represented by the MBCS string.
343 CountMbcsChars(const char *Src
)
354 else if(EChar
< 0xE0) {
358 else if(EChar
< 0xF0) {
363 // Ill-formed character
370 /** Convert a wide character (UTF16) into a multibyte character (UTF8)
372 Converts a wide character into a corresponding multibyte character that
373 begins in the conversion state described by the object pointed to by ps.
374 If dst is not a null pointer, the converted character is then stored into
375 the array pointed to by dst.
377 It is the caller's responsibility to ensure that Dest is large enough to
378 hold the resulting MBCS sequence.
380 @param s Pointer to the wide-character string to convert
381 @param Dest Pointer to the buffer in which to place the converted sequence, or NULL.
383 @retval -1 An error occurred. The error reason is in errno.
384 @retval >=0 The number of bytes stored into Dest.
387 EncodeUtf8(char *Dest
, wchar_t ch
)
389 char *p
; /* next free byte in build buffer */
390 int NumInBuff
; // number of bytes in Buff
391 char Buff
[4]; // Buffer into which each character is built
397 /* Encode ASCII -- One Byte */
401 else if (ch
< 0x0800) {
402 /* Encode Latin-1 -- Two Byte */
403 *p
++ = (char)(0xc0 | (ch
>> 6));
404 *p
++ = (char)(0x80 | (ch
& 0x3f));
408 /* Encode UCS2 Unicode ordinals -- Three Byte */
409 /* Special case: check for surrogate -- Shouldn't happen in UEFI */
410 if (0xD800 <= ch
&& ch
< 0xE000) {
415 *p
++ = (char)(0xe0 | (ch
>> 12));
416 *p
++ = (char)(0x80 | ((ch
>> 6) & 0x3f));
417 *p
++ = (char)(0x80 | (ch
& 0x3f));
421 /* At this point, Buff holds the converted character which is NumInBuff bytes long.
422 NumInBuff is the value 1, 2, 3, or 4
424 if(Dest
!= NULL
) { // Save character if Dest is not NULL
425 memcpy(Dest
, Buff
, NumInBuff
);
427 return NumInBuff
; // Tell the caller
430 // ######################## Narrow to Wide Conversions #######################
432 /** If ps is not a null pointer, the mbsinit function determines whether the
433 pointed-to mbstate_t object describes an initial conversion state.
435 @param[in] ps Pointer to the conversion state object to test.
437 @return The mbsinit function returns nonzero if ps is a null pointer
438 or if the pointed-to object describes an initial conversion
439 state; otherwise, it returns zero.
444 mbsinit(const mbstate_t *ps
)
446 if((ps
== NULL
) || (ps
->A
== 0)) {
452 /** The mbrlen function is equivalent to the call:<BR>
454 mbrtowc(NULL, s, n, ps != NULL ? ps : &internal)
456 where internal is the mbstate_t object for the mbrlen function, except that
457 the expression designated by ps is evaluated only once.
459 @param[in] s Pointer to a multibyte character sequence.
460 @param[in] n Maximum number of bytes to examine.
461 @param[in] pS Pointer to the conversion state object.
463 @retval 0 The next n or fewer characters complete a NUL.
464 @retval 1..n The number of bytes that complete the multibyte character.
465 @retval -2 The next n bytes contribute to an incomplete (but potentially valid) multibyte character.
466 @retval -1 An encoding error occurred.
477 return mbrtowc(NULL
, s
, n
, pS
);
480 /** Determine the number of bytes comprising a multibyte character.
482 If S is not a null pointer, the mblen function determines the number of bytes
483 contained in the multibyte character pointed to by S. Except that the
484 conversion state of the mbtowc function is not affected, it is equivalent to
485 mbtowc((wchar_t *)0, S, N);
487 @param[in] S NULL to query whether multibyte characters have
488 state-dependent encodings. Otherwise, points to a
490 @param[in] N The maximum number of bytes in a multibyte character.
492 @return If S is a null pointer, the mblen function returns a nonzero or
493 zero value, if multibyte character encodings, respectively, do
494 or do not have state-dependent encodings. If S is not a null
495 pointer, the mblen function either returns 0 (if S points to the
496 null character), or returns the number of bytes that are contained
497 in the multibyte character (if the next N or fewer bytes form a
498 valid multibyte character), or returns -1 (if they do not form a
499 valid multibyte character).
501 Declared in: stdlib.h
509 return (int)mbrlen(s
, n
, NULL
);
513 If S is a null pointer, the mbrtowc function is equivalent to the call:<BR>
515 mbrtowc(NULL, "", 1, ps)
518 In this case, the values of the parameters pwc and n are ignored.
520 If S is not a null pointer, the mbrtowc function inspects at most n bytes beginning with
521 the byte pointed to by S to determine the number of bytes needed to complete the next
522 multibyte character (including any shift sequences). If the function determines that the
523 next multibyte character is complete and valid, it determines the value of the
524 corresponding wide character and then, if pwc is not a null pointer, stores that value in
525 the object pointed to by pwc. If the corresponding wide character is the null wide
526 character, the resulting state described is the initial conversion state.
528 @param[out] pwc Pointer to where the resulting wide character is to be stored.
529 @param[in] s Pointer to a multibyte character "string".
530 @param[in] n The maximum number of bytes to inspect.
531 @param[in] ps Pointer to a conversion state object.
533 @retval 0 if the next n or fewer bytes complete the multibyte
534 character that corresponds to the null wide
535 character (which is the value stored).
536 @retval between_1_and_n_inclusive if the next n or fewer bytes complete
537 a valid multibyte character (which is the value
538 stored); the value returned is the number of bytes
539 that complete the multibyte character.
540 @retval (size_t)(-2) if the next n bytes contribute to an incomplete
541 (but potentially valid) multibyte character, and
542 all n bytes have been processed (no value is stored).
543 @retval (size_t)(-1) if an encoding error occurs, in which case the next
544 n or fewer bytes do not contribute to a complete and
545 valid multibyte character (no value is stored); the
546 value of the macro EILSEQ is stored in errno, and
547 the conversion state is unspecified.
561 RetVal
= DecodeOneStateful(pwc
, s
, (ssize_t
)n
, ps
);
562 return (size_t)RetVal
;
565 /** Convert a multibyte character into a wide character.
567 If S is not a null pointer, the mbtowc function inspects at most N bytes
568 beginning with the byte pointed to by S to determine the number of bytes
569 needed to complete the next multibyte character (including any shift
570 sequences). If the function determines that the next multibyte character
571 is complete and valid, it determines the value of the corresponding wide
572 character and then, if Pwc is not a null pointer, stores that value in
573 the object pointed to by Pwc. If the corresponding wide character is the
574 null wide character, the function is left in the initial conversion state.
576 @param[out] Pwc Pointer to a wide-character object to receive the converted character.
577 @param[in] S Pointer to a multibyte character to convert.
578 @param[in] N Maximum number of bytes in a multibyte character.
580 @return If S is a null pointer, the mbtowc function returns a nonzero or
581 zero value, if multibyte character encodings, respectively, do
582 or do not have state-dependent encodings. If S is not a null
583 pointer, the mbtowc function either returns 0 (if S points to
584 the null character), or returns the number of bytes that are
585 contained in the converted multibyte character (if the next N or
586 fewer bytes form a valid multibyte character), or returns -1
587 (if they do not form a valid multibyte character).
589 In no case will the value returned be greater than N or the value
590 of the MB_CUR_MAX macro.
592 Declared in: stdlib.h
601 return (int)mbrtowc(pwc
, s
, n
, NULL
);
605 The mbsrtowcs function converts a sequence of multibyte characters that begins in the
606 conversion state described by the object pointed to by ps, from the array indirectly
607 pointed to by src into a sequence of corresponding wide characters. If dst is not a null
608 pointer, the converted characters are stored into the array pointed to by dst. Conversion
609 continues up to and including a terminating null character, which is also stored.
610 Conversion stops earlier in two cases: when a sequence of bytes is encountered that does
611 not form a valid multibyte character, or (if dst is not a null pointer) when len wide
612 characters have been stored into the array pointed to by dst. Each conversion takes
613 place as if by a call to the mbrtowc function.
615 If dst is not a null pointer, the pointer object pointed to by src is assigned either a null
616 pointer (if conversion stopped due to reaching a terminating null character) or the address
617 just past the last multibyte character converted (if any). If conversion stopped due to
618 reaching a terminating null character and if dst is not a null pointer, the resulting state
619 described is the initial conversion state.
621 @param[out] dst Pointer to where the resulting wide character sequence is stored.
622 @param[in] src Pointer to a pointer to the multibyte character sequence to convert.
623 @param[in] len Maximum number of wide characters to be stored into dst.
624 @param[in] ps Pointer to a conversion state object.
626 @return If the input conversion encounters a sequence of bytes that do
627 not form a valid multibyte character, an encoding error occurs:
628 the mbsrtowcs function stores the value of the macro EILSEQ in
629 errno and returns (size_t)(-1); the conversion state is
630 unspecified. Otherwise, it returns the number of multibyte
631 characters successfully converted, not including the terminating
632 null character (if any).
648 if((src
== NULL
) || (*src
== NULL
)) {
653 for(x
= 1 ; (len
!= 0) && (x
> 0); --len
) {
654 x
= DecodeOneStateful(dst
, MySrc
, MB_LEN_MAX
, ps
);
656 case -2: // Incomplete character
657 case -1: // Encoding error
660 case 0: // Encountered NUL character: done.
666 default: // Successfully decoded a character, continue with next
682 /** Convert a multibyte character string into a wide-character string.
684 The mbstowcs function converts a sequence of multibyte characters that
685 begins in the initial shift state from the array pointed to by Src into
686 a sequence of corresponding wide characters and stores not more than limit
687 wide characters into the array pointed to by Dest. No multibyte
688 characters that follow a null character (which is converted into a null
689 wide character) will be examined or converted. Each multibyte character
690 is converted as if by a call to the mbtowc function, except that the
691 conversion state of the mbtowc function is not affected.
693 No more than Limit elements will be modified in the array pointed to by Dest.
694 If copying takes place between objects that overlap,
695 the behavior is undefined.
697 @param[out] Dest Pointer to the array to receive the converted string.
698 @param[in] Src Pointer to the string to be converted.
699 @param[in] Limit Maximum number of elements to be written to Dest.
701 @return If an invalid multibyte character is encountered, the mbstowcs
702 function returns (size_t)(-1). Otherwise, the mbstowcs function
703 returns the number of array elements modified, not including a
704 terminating null wide character, if any.
706 Declared in: stdlib.h
716 /* Dest may be NULL */
717 /* Src may be NULL */
719 return mbsrtowcs(Dest
, &Src
, Limit
, NULL
);
722 /** The btowc function determines whether C constitutes a valid single-byte
723 character in the initial shift state.
725 @param[in] C A narrow character to test or convert to wide.
727 @return The btowc function returns WEOF if c has the value EOF or if
728 (unsigned char)C does not constitute a valid single-byte
729 character in the initial shift state. Otherwise, it returns the
730 wide character representation of that character.
739 wint_t RetVal
= WEOF
;
743 x
= DecodeOneStateful(&Dest
, (const char *)&c
, 1, NULL
);
748 RetVal
= (wint_t)Dest
;
753 // ######################## Wide to Narrow Conversions #######################
756 If S is a null pointer, the wcrtomb function is equivalent to the call:<BR>
758 wcrtomb(buf, L'\0', ps)
760 where buf is an internal buffer.
762 If S is not a null pointer, the wcrtomb function determines the number of bytes needed
763 to represent the multibyte character that corresponds to the wide character given by wc
764 (including any shift sequences), and stores the multibyte character representation in the
765 array whose first element is pointed to by S. At most MB_CUR_MAX bytes are stored. If
766 wc is a null wide character, a null byte is stored, preceded by any shift sequence needed
767 to restore the initial shift state; the resulting state described is the initial conversion state.
769 @param[out] Dest Pointer to the location in which to store the resulting
770 multibyte character. Otherwise, NULL to reset the
772 @param[in] wchar The wide character to convert.
773 @param[in,out] pS Pointer to a conversion state object, or NULL.
775 @return The wcrtomb function returns the number of bytes stored in the
776 array object (including any shift sequences). When wc is not a
777 valid wide character, an encoding error occurs: the function
778 stores the value of the macro EILSEQ in errno and
779 returns (size_t)(-1); the conversion state is unspecified.
792 /* Dest may be NULL */
797 if (wchar
== L
'\0') {
802 RetVal
= EncodeUtf8(Dest
, wchar
);
806 pS
= &LocalConvState
;
808 pS
->A
= 0; // Set ps to the initial conversion state
813 /** Convert a wide character into a multibyte character.
815 The wctomb function determines the number of bytes needed to represent the
816 multibyte character corresponding to the wide character given by WC
817 (including any shift sequences), and stores the multibyte character
818 representation in the array whose first element is pointed to by S (if S is
819 not a null pointer). At most MB_CUR_MAX characters are stored. If WC is a
820 null wide character, a null byte is stored, preceded by any shift sequence
821 needed to restore the initial shift state, and the function is left in the
822 initial conversion state.
824 @param[out] S Pointer to the object to receive the converted multibyte character.
825 @param[in] WC Wide character to be converted.
827 @return If S is a null pointer, the wctomb function returns a nonzero or
828 zero value, if multibyte character encodings, respectively, do or
829 do not have state-dependent encodings. If S is not a null pointer,
830 the wctomb function returns -1 if the value of WC does not
831 correspond to a valid multibyte character, or returns the number
832 of bytes that are contained in the multibyte character
833 corresponding to the value of WC.
835 In no case will the value returned be greater than the value of
836 the MB_CUR_MAX macro.
838 Declared in: stdlib.h
847 If s is NULL just return whether MB Characters have state
848 dependent encodings -- they don't.
853 return (int)wcrtomb(s
, wchar
, NULL
);
856 /** The wcsrtombs function converts a sequence of wide characters from the array
857 indirectly pointed to by Src into a sequence of corresponding multibyte
858 characters that begins in the conversion state described by the object
861 If Dest is not a null pointer, the converted characters are stored into the
862 array pointed to by Dest. Conversion continues up to and including a
863 terminating null wide character, which is also stored. Conversion stops
864 earlier in two cases: when a wide character is reached that does not
865 correspond to a valid multibyte character, or (if Dest is not a null
866 pointer) when the next multibyte character would exceed the limit of Limit
867 total bytes to be stored into the array pointed to by Dest. Each conversion
868 takes place as if by a call to the wcrtomb function.)
870 If Dest is not a null pointer, the pointer object pointed to by Src is
871 assigned either a null pointer (if conversion stopped due to reaching
872 a terminating null wide character) or the address just past the last wide
873 character converted (if any). If conversion stopped due to reaching a
874 terminating null wide character, the resulting state described is the
875 initial conversion state.
879 @param[in] Limit Max number of bytes to store in Dest.
882 @return If conversion stops because a wide character is reached that
883 does not correspond to a valid multibyte character, an
884 encoding error occurs: the wcsrtombs function stores the
885 value of the macro EILSEQ in errno and returns (size_t)(-1);
886 the conversion state is unspecified. Otherwise, it returns
887 the number of bytes in the resulting multibyte character
888 sequence, not including the terminating null character (if any).
906 MaxBytes
= (ssize_t
)Limit
;
908 /* Dest may be NULL */
909 /* Src may be NULL */
910 /* ps appears to be unused */
912 if (Src
== NULL
|| *Src
== NULL
)
916 NumStored
= EstimateWtoM(*Src
, ASCII_STRING_MAX
, NULL
);
919 if((MaxBytes
< 0) || (MaxBytes
> ASCII_STRING_MAX
)) {
920 MaxBytes
= ASCII_STRING_MAX
;
922 while ((MaxBytes
> 0) && (OneWcToMcLen(InCh
= *(*Src
)++) <= MaxBytes
)) {
925 *Dest
= 0; // NUL terminate Dest string, but don't count the NUL
928 count
= (int)wcrtomb(Dest
, InCh
, NULL
);
935 NumStored
= (size_t)(-1);
944 /** Convert a wide-character string into a multibyte character string.
946 The wcstombs function converts a sequence of wide characters from the
947 array pointed to by Src into a sequence of corresponding multibyte
948 characters that begins in the initial shift state, and stores these
949 multibyte characters into the array pointed to by Dest, stopping if a
950 multibyte character would exceed the limit of Limit total bytes or if a
951 null character is stored. Each wide character is converted as if by
952 a call to the wctomb function, except that the conversion state of
953 the wctomb function is not affected.
955 No more than Limit bytes will be modified in the array pointed to by Dest.
956 If copying takes place between objects that overlap,
957 the behavior is undefined.
959 @param[out] Dest Pointer to the array to receive the converted string.
960 @param[in] Src Pointer to the string to be converted.
961 @param[in] Limit Maximum number of elements to be written to Dest.
963 @return If a wide character is encountered that does not correspond to a
964 valid multibyte character, the wcstombs function returns
965 (size_t)(-1). Otherwise, the wcstombs function returns the number
966 of bytes in the resulting multibyte character sequence,
967 not including the terminating null character (if any).
969 Declared in: stdlib.h
978 /* Dest may be NULL */
979 return wcsrtombs(Dest
, &Src
, Limit
, NULL
);
982 /** The wctob function determines whether C corresponds to a member of the extended
983 character set whose multibyte character representation is a single byte when in the initial
986 wctob needs to be consistent with wcrtomb.
987 If wcrtomb says that a character is representable in 1 byte,
988 then wctob needs to also represent the character as 1 byte.
990 @return The wctob function returns EOF if C does not correspond to a multibyte
991 character with length one in the initial shift state. Otherwise, it
992 returns the single-byte representation of that character as an
993 unsigned char converted to an int.
1006 else if (OneWcToMcLen((const wchar_t)c
) == 1) {
1007 RetVal
= (int)(c
& 0xFF);