QCString Class Reference
The QCString class provides an abstraction of the classic C zero-terminated char array (char*).
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#include <qcstring.h>
Inherits QByteArray.
List of all member functions.
Public Members
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QCString ( const char * str, uint maxlen )Â
QCString&Â
operator= ( const QCString & s )Â
QCString&Â
operator= ( const char * str )Â
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boolÂ
resize ( uint newlen )Â
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boolÂ
fill ( char c, int len = -1 )Â
QCStringÂ
copy () const
QCString&Â
sprintf ( const char * format, ... )Â
intÂ
find ( char c, int index=0, bool cs=TRUE ) const
intÂ
find ( const char * str, int index=0, bool cs=TRUE ) const
intÂ
find ( const QRegExp &, int index=0 ) const
intÂ
findRev ( char c, int index=-1, bool cs=TRUE ) const
intÂ
findRev ( const char * str, int index=-1, bool cs=TRUE ) const
intÂ
findRev ( const QRegExp &, int index=-1 ) const
intÂ
contains ( char c, bool cs=TRUE ) const
intÂ
contains ( const char * str, bool cs=TRUE ) const
intÂ
contains ( const QRegExp & ) const
QCStringÂ
left ( uint len ) const
QCStringÂ
right ( uint len ) const
QCStringÂ
mid ( uint index, uint len=0xffffffff ) const
QCStringÂ
leftJustify ( uint width, char fill=' ', bool trunc=FALSE ) const
QCStringÂ
rightJustify ( uint width, char fill=' ', bool trunc=FALSE ) const
QCStringÂ
lower () const
QCStringÂ
upper () const
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QCString&Â
insert ( uint index, const char * )Â
QCString&Â
insert ( uint index, char )Â
QCString&Â
append ( const char * )Â
QCString&Â
prepend ( const char * )Â
QCString&Â
remove ( uint index, uint len )Â
QCString&Â
replace ( uint index, uint len, const char * )Â
QCString&Â
replace ( const QRegExp &, const char * )Â
shortÂ
toShort ( bool * ok=0 ) const
ushortÂ
toUShort ( bool * ok=0 ) const
intÂ
toInt ( bool * ok=0 ) const
uintÂ
toUInt ( bool * ok=0 ) const
longÂ
toLong ( bool * ok=0 ) const
ulongÂ
toULong ( bool * ok=0 ) const
floatÂ
toFloat ( bool * ok=0 ) const
doubleÂ
toDouble ( bool * ok=0 ) const
QCString&Â
setStr ( const char * s )Â
QCString&Â
setNum ( short )Â
QCString&Â
setNum ( ushort )Â
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QCString&Â
setNum ( uint )Â
QCString&Â
setNum ( long )Â
QCString&Â
setNum ( ulong )Â
QCString&Â
setNum ( float, char f='g', int prec=6 )Â
QCString&Â
setNum ( double, char f='g', int prec=6 )Â
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Related Functions
(Note that these are not member functions.)
- bool operator!= (const QCString & s1, const char * s2)
- int qstricmp (const char * str1, const char * str2)
- bool operator< (const QCString & s1, const char * s2)
- bool operator== (const QCString & s1, const char * s2)
- int qstrncmp (const char * str1, const char * str2, uint len)
- QCString operator+ (const QCString & s1, const QCString & s2)
- bool operator>= (const char * s1, const QCString & s2)
- QCString operator+ (const QCString & s, char c)
- int strnicmp (const char * str1, const char * str2, uint len)
- char * qstrncpy (char * dst, const char * src, uint len)
- void * memmove (void * dst, const void * src, uint len)
- bool operator> (const QCString & s1, const char * s2)
- QDataStream & operator<< (QDataStream & s, const QCString & str)
- bool operator<= (const char * s1, const QCString & s2)
- QCString operator+ (const char * s1, const QCString & s2)
- bool operator> (const char * s1, const QCString & s2)
- bool operator<= (const QCString & s1, const char * s2)
- QDataStream & operator>> (QDataStream & s, QCString & str)
- bool operator== (const char * s1, const QCString & s2)
- bool operator>= (const QCString & s1, const char * s2)
- QCString operator+ (char c, const QCString & s)
- bool operator< (const char * s1, const QCString & s2)
- int qstrcmp (const char * str1, const char * str2)
- bool operator!= (const QCString & s1, const QCString & s2)
- QCString operator+ (const QCString & s1, const char * s2)
- char * qstrdup (const char * str)
- bool operator== (const QCString & s1, const QCString & s2)
- bool operator!= (const char * s1, const QCString & s2)
Detailed Description
The QCString class provides an abstraction of the classic C zero-terminated char array (
char*).
QCString inherits QByteArray, which is defined as QArray<char>.
Since QCString is a QArray, it uses explicit
sharing with a reference count.
You might use QCString for text that is never exposed to the user,
but for text the user sees, you should use QString (which provides
implicit sharing, Unicode and other internationalization support).
Note that QCString is one of the weaker classes in Qt; its design is
flawed (it tries to behave like a more convenient const char *) and
as a result, algorithms that use QCString heavily all too often
perform badly. For example, append() is O(length()) since it scans
for a null terminator, which makes many algorithms that use QCString
scale even worse.
Note that for the QCString methods that take a const char *
parameter the results are undefined if the QCString is not
zero-terminated. It is legal for the const char * parameter
to be 0.
A QCString that has not been assigned to anything is null, i.e. both
the length and data pointer is 0. A QCString that references the empty
string ("", a single '\0' char) is empty. Both null and empty
QCStrings are legal parameters to the methods. Assigning const char
* 0 to QCString gives a null QCString.
See also Shared classes
Member Function Documentation
QCString::QCString ()
Constructs a null string.
See also isNull().
QCString::QCString ( const QCString & s )
Constructs a shallow copy s.
See also assign().
QCString::QCString ( const char * str )
Constructs a string that is a deep copy of str.
If str is 0 a null string is created.
See also isNull().
QCString::QCString ( const char * str, uint maxsize )
Constructs a string that is a deep copy of str, that is no more
than maxsize bytes long including the '\0'-terminator.
Example:
QCString str( "helloworld", 6 ); // Assigns "hello" to str.
If str contains a 0 byte within the first maxsize bytes, the
resulting QCString will be terminated by the 0. If str is 0 a
null string is created.
See also isNull().
QCString::QCString ( int size )
Constructs a string with room for size characters, including the
'\0'-terminator. Makes a null string if size == 0.
If size > 0, then the first and last characters in the string are
initialized to '\0'. All other characters are uninitialized.
See also resize() and isNull().
QCString::operator const char * () const
Returns the string data.
QCString& QCString::append ( const char * str )
Appends str to the string and returns a reference to the string.
Equivalent to operator+=().
int QCString::contains ( char c, bool cs=TRUE ) const
Returns the number of times the character c occurs in the string.
The match is case sensitive if cs is TRUE, or case insensitive if cs
if FALSE.
int QCString::contains ( const QRegExp & rx ) const
Counts the number of overlapping occurrences of rx in the string.
Example:
QString s = "banana and panama";
QRegExp r = QRegExp("a[nm]a", TRUE, FALSE);
s.contains( r ); // 4 matches
See also find() and findRev().
int QCString::contains ( const char * str, bool cs=TRUE ) const
Returns the number of times str occurs in the string.
The match is case sensitive if cs is TRUE, or case insensitive if cs if FALSE.
This function counts overlapping substrings, for example, "banana"
contains two occurrences of "ana".
See also findRev().
QCString QCString::copy () const
Returns a deep copy of this string.
See also detach().
bool QCString::fill ( char c, int len = -1 )
Fills the string with len bytes of value c, followed by a
'\0'-terminator.
If len is negative, then the current string length is used.
Returns FALSE is len is nonnegative and there is no memory to
resize the string, otherwise TRUE is returned.
int QCString::find ( char c, int index=0, bool cs=TRUE ) const
Finds the first occurrence of the character c, starting at
position index.
The search is case sensitive if cs is TRUE, or case insensitive if cs is FALSE.
Returns the position of c, or -1 if c could not be found.
int QCString::find ( const QRegExp & rx, int index=0 ) const
Finds the first occurrence of the regular expression rx, starting at
position index.
Returns the position of the next match, or -1 if rx was not found.
int QCString::find ( const char * str, int index=0, bool cs=TRUE ) const
Finds the first occurrence of the string str, starting at position
index.
The search is case sensitive if cs is TRUE, or case insensitive if cs is FALSE.
Returns the position of str, or -1 if str could not be found.
int QCString::findRev ( char c, int index=-1, bool cs=TRUE ) const
Finds the first occurrence of the character c, starting at
position index and searching backwards.
The search is case sensitive if cs is TRUE, or case insensitive if cs is FALSE.
Returns the position of c, or -1 if c could not be found.
int QCString::findRev ( const QRegExp & rx, int index=-1 ) const
Finds the first occurrence of the regular expression rx, starting at
position index and searching backwards.
The search will start from the end of the string if index is negative.
Returns the position of the next match (backwards), or -1 if rx was not
found.
int QCString::findRev ( const char * str, int index=-1, bool cs=TRUE ) const
Finds the first occurrence of the string str, starting at
position index and searching backwards.
The search is case sensitive if cs is TRUE, or case insensitive if cs is FALSE.
Returns the position of str, or -1 if str could not be found.
QCString & QCString::insert ( uint index, char c )
Insert c into the string at (before) position index and returns
a reference to the string.
If index is beyond the end of the string, the string is extended with
spaces (ASCII 32) to length index and c is then appended.
Example:
QCString s = "Yes";
s.insert( 3, '!'); // s == "Yes!"
See also remove() and replace().
QCString & QCString::insert ( uint index, const char * s )
Insert s into the string before position index.
If index is beyond the end of the string, the string is extended with
spaces (ASCII 32) to length index and s is then appended.
QCString s = "I like fish";
s.insert( 2, "don't "); // s == "I don't like fish"
s = "x";
s.insert( 3, "yz" ); // s == "x yz"
bool QCString::isEmpty () const
Returns TRUE if the string is empty, i.e. if length() == 0.
An empty string is not always a null string.
See example in isNull().
See also isNull(), length() and size().
bool QCString::isNull () const
Returns TRUE if the string is null, i.e. if data() == 0.
A null string is also an empty string.
Example:
QCString a; // a.data() == 0, a.size() == 0, a.length() == 0
QCString b == ""; // b.data() == "", b.size() == 1, b.length() == 0
a.isNull(); // TRUE, because a.data() == 0
a.isEmpty(); // TRUE, because a.length() == 0
b.isNull(); // FALSE, because b.data() == ""
b.isEmpty(); // TRUE, because b.length() == 0
See also isEmpty(), length() and size().
QCString QCString::left ( uint len ) const
Returns a substring that contains the len leftmost characters
of the string.
The whole string is returned if len exceeds the length of the string.
Example:
QCString s = "Pineapple";
QCString t = s.left( 4 ); // t == "Pine"
See also right() and mid().
QCString QCString::leftJustify ( uint width, char fill=' ', bool truncate=FALSE ) const
Returns a string of length width (plus '\0') that contains this
string and padded by the fill character.
If the length of the string exceeds width and truncate is FALSE,
then the returned string is a copy of the string.
If the length of the string exceeds width and truncate is TRUE,
then the returned string is a left(width).
Example:
QCString s("apple");
QCString t = s.leftJustify(8, '.'); // t == "apple..."
See also rightJustify().
uint QCString::length () const
Returns the length of the string, excluding the '\0'-terminator.
Equivalent to calling strlen(data()).
Null strings and empty strings have zero length.
See also size(), isNull() and isEmpty().
QCString QCString::lower () const
Returns a new string that is the string converted to lower case.
Presently it only handles 7-bit ASCII, or whatever tolower()
handles (if $LC_CTYPE is set, most UNIX systems do the Right Thing).
Example:
QCString s("TeX");
QCString t = s.lower(); // t == "tex"
See also upper().
QCString QCString::mid ( uint index, uint len=0xffffffff ) const
Returns a substring that contains the len characters of this
string, starting at position index.
Returns a null string if the string is empty or index is out
of range. Returns the whole string from index if index+len exceeds
the length of the string.
Example:
QCString s = "Two pineapples";
QCString t = s.mid( 4, 4 ); // t == "pine"
See also left() and right().
QCString & QCString::operator+= ( char c )
Appends c to the string and returns a reference to the string.
QCString& QCString::operator+= ( const char * str )
Appends str to the string and returns a reference to the string.
QCString & QCString::operator= ( const QCString & s )
Assigns a shallow copy of s to this string and returns a reference to
this string.
QCString & QCString::operator= ( const char * str )
Assigns a deep copy of str to this string and returns a reference to
this string.
If str is 0 a null string is created.
See also isNull().
QCString & QCString::prepend ( const char * s )
Prepend s to the string. Equivalent to insert(0,s).
See also insert().
QCString & QCString::remove ( uint index, uint len )
Removes len characters starting at position index from the
string and returns a reference to the string.
If index is too big, nothing happens. If index is valid, but
len is too large, the rest of the string is removed.
QCString s = "Montreal";
s.remove( 1, 4 );
// s == "Meal"
See also insert() and replace().
QCString & QCString::replace ( const QRegExp & rx, const char * str )
Replaces every occurrence of rx in the string with str.
Returns a reference to the string.
Example:
QString s = "banana";
s.replace( QRegExp("a.*a"), "" ); // becomes "b"
QString s = "banana";
s.replace( QRegExp("^[bn]a"), " " ); // becomes " nana"
QString s = "banana";
s.replace( QRegExp("^[bn]a"), "" ); // NOTE! becomes ""
QCString & QCString::replace ( uint index, uint len, const char * s )
Replaces len characters starting at position index from the
string with s, and returns a reference to the string.
If index is too big, nothing is deleted and s is inserted at the
end of the string. If index is valid, but len is too large, str replaces the rest of the string.
QCString s = "Say yes!";
s.replace( 4, 3, "NO" ); // s == "Say NO!"
See also insert() and remove().
bool QCString::resize ( uint len )
Extends or shrinks the string to len bytes, including the
'\0'-terminator.
A \0-terminator is set at position len - 1
unless
len == 0
.
Example:
QCString s = "resize this string";
s.resize( 7 ); // s == "resize"
See also truncate().
QCString QCString::right ( uint len ) const
Returns a substring that contains the len rightmost characters
of the string.
The whole string is returned if len exceeds the length of the string.
Example:
QCString s = "Pineapple";
QCString t = s.right( 5 ); // t == "apple"
See also left() and mid().
QCString QCString::rightJustify ( uint width, char fill=' ', bool truncate=FALSE ) const
Returns a string of length width (plus '\0') that contains pad
characters followed by the string.
If the length of the string exceeds width and truncate is FALSE,
then the returned string is a copy of the string.
If the length of the string exceeds width and truncate is TRUE,
then the returned string is a left(width).
Example:
QCString s("pie");
QCString t = s.rightJustify(8, '.'); // t == ".....pie"
See also leftJustify().
bool QCString::setExpand ( uint index, char c )
Sets the character at position index to c and expands the
string if necessary, filling with spaces.
Returns FALSE if this index was out of range and the string could
not be expanded, otherwise TRUE.
QCString & QCString::setNum ( double n, char f='g', int prec=6 )
Sets the string to the printed value of n.
Arguments:
- f is the format specifier: 'f', 'F', 'e', 'E', 'g', 'G' (same
as sprintf()).
- prec is the precision.
Returns a reference to the string.
QCString & QCString::setNum ( float n, char f='g', int prec=6 )
Sets the string to the printed value of n.
Arguments:
- f is the format specifier: 'f', 'F', 'e', 'E', 'g', 'G' (same
as sprintf()).
- prec is the precision.
Returns a reference to the string.
QCString & QCString::setNum ( int n )
Sets the string to the printed value of n and returns a reference
to the string.
QCString & QCString::setNum ( long n )
Sets the string to the printed value of n and returns a
reference to the string.
QCString & QCString::setNum ( short n )
Sets the string to the printed value of n and returns a reference
to the string.
QCString & QCString::setNum ( uint n )
Sets the string to the printed unsigned value of n and returns a
reference to the string.
QCString & QCString::setNum ( ulong n )
Sets the string to the printed unsigned value of n and
returns a reference to the string.
QCString & QCString::setNum ( ushort n )
Sets the string to the printed unsigned value of n and returns a
reference to the string.
QCString & QCString::setStr ( const char * str )
Makes a deep copy of str.
Returns a reference to the string.
QCString QCString::simplifyWhiteSpace () const
Returns a new string that has white space removed from the start and the end,
plus any sequence of internal white space replaced with a single space
(ASCII 32).
White space means any ASCII code 9, 10, 11, 12, 13 or 32.
QCString s = " lots\t of\nwhite space ";
QCString t = s.simplifyWhiteSpace(); // t == "lots of white space"
See also stripWhiteSpace().
QCString & QCString::sprintf ( const char * format, ... )
Implemented as a call to the native vsprintf() (see your C-library
manual).
If your string is shorter than 256 characters, this sprintf() calls
resize(256) to decrease the chance of memory corruption. The string is
resized back to its natural length before sprintf() returns.
Example:
QCString s;
s.sprintf( "%d - %s", 1, "first" ); // result < 256 chars
QCString big( 25000 ); // very long string
big.sprintf( "%d - %s", 2, longString ); // result < 25000 chars
Warning: All vsprintf() implementations will write past the end of
the target string (*this) if the format specification and arguments
happen to be longer than the target string, and some will also fail
if the target string is longer than some arbitrary implementation
limit.
Giving user-supplied arguments to sprintf() is begging for trouble.
Sooner or later someone will paste a 3000-character line into
your application.
QCString QCString::stripWhiteSpace () const
Returns a new string that has white space removed from the start and the end.
White space means any ASCII code 9, 10, 11, 12, 13 or 32.
Example:
QCString s = " space ";
QCString t = s.stripWhiteSpace(); // t == "space"
See also simplifyWhiteSpace().
double QCString::toDouble ( bool * ok=0 ) const
Returns the string converted to a double
value.
If ok is nonnull, *ok is set to TRUE if there are no conceivable
errors, and FALSE if the string is not a number at all, or if it has
trailing garbage.
float QCString::toFloat ( bool * ok=0 ) const
Returns the string converted to a float
value.
If ok is nonnull, *ok is set to TRUE if there are no
conceivable errors, and FALSE if the string is not a number at all,
or if it has trailing garbage.
int QCString::toInt ( bool * ok=0 ) const
Returns the string converted to a int
value.
If ok is nonnull, *ok is set to TRUE if there are no
conceivable errors, and FALSE if the string is not a number at all,
or if it has trailing garbage.
long QCString::toLong ( bool * ok=0 ) const
Returns the string converted to a long
value.
If ok is nonnull, *ok is set to TRUE if there are no
conceivable errors, and FALSE if the string is not a number at all, or if
it has trailing garbage.
short QCString::toShort ( bool * ok=0 ) const
Returns the string converted to a short
value.
If ok is nonnull, *ok is set to TRUE if there are no
conceivable errors, and FALSE if the string is not a number at all, or if
it has trailing garbage.
uint QCString::toUInt ( bool * ok=0 ) const
Returns the string converted to an unsigned int
value.
If ok is nonnull, *ok is set to TRUE if there are no
conceivable errors, and FALSE if the string is not a number at all,
or if it has trailing garbage.
ulong QCString::toULong ( bool * ok=0 ) const
Returns the string converted to an unsigned long
value.
If ok is nonnull, *ok is set to TRUE if there are no
conceivable errors, and FALSE if the string is not a number at all,
or if it has trailing garbage.
ushort QCString::toUShort ( bool * ok=0 ) const
Returns the string converted to an unsigned short
value.
If ok is nonnull, *ok is set to TRUE if there are no
conceivable errors, and FALSE if the string is not a number at all, or if
it has trailing garbage.
bool QCString::truncate ( uint pos )
Truncates the string at position pos.
Equivalent to calling resize(pos+1).
Example:
QCString s = "truncate this string";
s.truncate( 5 ); // s == "trunc"
See also resize().
QCString QCString::upper () const
Returns a new string that is the string converted to upper case.
Presently it only handles 7-bit ASCII, or whatever toupper()
handles (if $LC_CTYPE is set, most UNIX systems do the Right Thing).
Example:
QCString s("TeX");
QCString t = s.upper(); // t == "TEX"
See also lower().
Related Functions
bool operator!= (const QCString & s1, const char * s2)
Returns TRUE if the two strings are different, or FALSE if they are equal.
Equivalent to qstrcmp(s1,s2) != 0
int qstricmp (const char * str1, const char * str2)
A safe stricmp() function.
Compares str1 and str2 ignoring the case.
Returns a negative value if str1 is less than str2, 0 if str1
is equal to str2 or a positive value if str1 is greater than str2.
Special case I: Returns 0 if str1 and str2 are both null.
Special case II: Returns a random nonzero value if str1 is null
or str2 is null (but not both).
See also qstrcmp(), qstrncmp() and qstrnicmp().
bool operator< (const QCString & s1, const char * s2)
Returns TRUE if s1 is alphabetically less than s2, otherwise FALSE.
Equivalent to qstrcmp(s1,s2) < 0
bool operator== (const QCString & s1, const char * s2)
Returns TRUE if the two strings are equal, or FALSE if they are different.
Equivalent to qstrcmp(s1,s2) == 0
int qstrncmp (const char * str1, const char * str2, uint len)
A safe strncmp() function.
Compares str1 and str2 up to len bytes.
Returns a negative value if str1 is less than str2, 0 if str1
is equal to str2 or a positive value if str1 is greater than str2.
Special case I: Returns 0 if str1 and str2 are both null.
Special case II: Returns a random nonzero value if str1 is null
or str2 is null (but not both).
See also qstrcmp(), qstricmp() and qstrnicmp().
QCString operator+ (const QCString & s1, const QCString & s2)
Returns the concatenated string of s1 and s2.
bool operator>= (const char * s1, const QCString & s2)
Returns TRUE if s1 is alphabetically greater than or equal to s2,
otherwise FALSE.
Equivalent to qstrcmp(s1,s2) >= 0
QCString operator+ (const QCString & s, char c)
Returns the concatenated string of s and c.
int strnicmp (const char * str1, const char * str2, uint len)
A safe strnicmp() function.
Compares str1 and str2 up to len bytes ignoring the case.
Returns a negative value if str1 is less than str2, 0 if str1
is equal to str2 or a positive value if str1 is greater than str2.
Special case I: Returns 0 if str1 and str2 are both null.
Special case II: Returns a random nonzero value if str1 is null
or str2 is null (but not both).
See also qstrcmp(), qstrncmp() and qstricmp().
char * qstrncpy (char * dst, const char * src, uint len)
A safe strncpy() function.
Copies all characters up to len bytes from str into dst and returns
a pointer to dst. Guarantees that dst is \0-terminated.
If src is null, it immediately returns 0.
See also qstrcpy().
void * memmove (void * dst, const void * src, uint len)
This function is normally part of the C library. Qt implements
memmove() for platforms that do not have it.
memmove() copies len bytes from src into dst. The data is
copied correctly even if src and dst overlap.
bool operator> (const QCString & s1, const char * s2)
Returns TRUE if s1 is alphabetically greater than s2, otherwise FALSE.
Equivalent to qstrcmp(s1,s2) > 0
Writes a string to the stream.
See also Format of the QDataStream operators
bool operator<= (const char * s1, const QCString & s2)
Returns TRUE if s1 is alphabetically less than or equal to s2,
otherwise FALSE.
Equivalent to qstrcmp(s1,s2) <= 0
QCString operator+ (const char * s1, const QCString & s2)
Returns the concatenated string of s1 and s2.
bool operator> (const char * s1, const QCString & s2)
Returns TRUE if s1 is alphabetically greater than s2, otherwise FALSE.
Equivalent to qstrcmp(s1,s2) > 0
bool operator<= (const QCString & s1, const char * s2)
Returns TRUE if s1 is alphabetically less than or equal to s2,
otherwise FALSE.
Equivalent to qstrcmp(s1,s2) <= 0
Reads a string from the stream.
See also Format of the QDataStream operators
bool operator== (const char * s1, const QCString & s2)
Returns TRUE if the two strings are equal, or FALSE if they are different.
Equivalent to qstrcmp(s1,s2) == 0
bool operator>= (const QCString & s1, const char * s2)
Returns TRUE if s1 is alphabetically greater than or equal to s2,
otherwise FALSE.
Equivalent to qstrcmp(s1,s2) >= 0
QCString operator+ (char c, const QCString & s)
Returns the concatenated string of c and s.
bool operator< (const char * s1, const QCString & s2)
Returns TRUE if s1 is alphabetically less than s2, otherwise FALSE.
Equivalent to qstrcmp(s1,s2) < 0
int qstrcmp (const char * str1, const char * str2)
A safe strcmp() function.
Compares str1 and str2. Returns a negative value if str1
is less than str2, 0 if str1 is equal to str2 or a positive
value if str1 is greater than str2.
Special case I: Returns 0 if str1 and str2 are both null.
Special case II: Returns a random nonzero value if str1 is null
or str2 is null (but not both).
See also qstrncmp(), qstricmp() and qstrnicmp().
bool operator!= (const QCString & s1, const QCString & s2)
Returns TRUE if the two strings are different, or FALSE if they are equal.
Equivalent to qstrcmp(s1,s2) != 0
QCString operator+ (const QCString & s1, const char * s2)
Returns the concatenated string of s1 and s2.
char * qstrdup (const char * str)
Returns a duplicate string.
Allocates space for a copy of str (using new),
copies it, and returns
a pointer to the copy.
If src is null, it immediately returns 0.
bool operator== (const QCString & s1, const QCString & s2)
Returns TRUE if the two strings are equal, or FALSE if they are different.
Equivalent to qstrcmp(s1,s2) == 0
bool operator!= (const char * s1, const QCString & s2)
Returns TRUE if the two strings are different, or FALSE if they are equal.
Equivalent to qstrcmp(s1,s2) != 0
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