1 | // (C) Copyright Jeremy Siek 2004 |
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2 | // Distributed under the Boost Software License, Version 1.0. (See |
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3 | // accompanying file LICENSE_1_0.txt or copy at |
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4 | // http://www.boost.org/LICENSE_1_0.txt) |
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5 | |
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6 | /* |
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7 | * stringtok.hpp -- Breaks a string into tokens. This is an example for lib3. |
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8 | * |
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9 | * Template function looks like this: |
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10 | * |
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11 | * template <typename Container> |
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12 | * void stringtok (Container &l, |
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13 | * string const &s, |
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14 | * char const * const ws = " \t\n"); |
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15 | * |
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16 | * A nondestructive version of strtok() that handles its own memory and can |
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17 | * be broken up by any character(s). Does all the work at once rather than |
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18 | * in an invocation loop like strtok() requires. |
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19 | * |
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20 | * Container is any type that supports push_back(a_string), although using |
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21 | * list<string> and deque<string> are indicated due to their O(1) push_back. |
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22 | * (I prefer deque<> because op[]/at() is available as well.) The first |
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23 | * parameter references an existing Container. |
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24 | * |
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25 | * s is the string to be tokenized. From the parameter declaration, it can |
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26 | * be seen that s is not affected. Since references-to-const may refer to |
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27 | * temporaries, you could use stringtok(some_container, readline("")) when |
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28 | * using the GNU readline library. |
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29 | * |
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30 | * The final parameter is an array of characters that serve as whitespace. |
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31 | * Whitespace characters default to one or more of tab, space, and newline, |
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32 | * in any combination. |
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33 | * |
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34 | * 'l' need not be empty on entry. On return, 'l' will have the token |
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35 | * strings appended. |
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36 | * |
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37 | * |
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38 | * [Example: |
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39 | * list<string> ls; |
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40 | * stringtok (ls, " this \t is\t\n a test "); |
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41 | * for (list<string>::const_iterator i = ls.begin(); |
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42 | * i != ls.end(); ++i) |
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43 | * { |
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44 | * cerr << ':' << (*i) << ":\n"; |
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45 | * } |
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46 | * |
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47 | * would print |
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48 | * :this: |
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49 | * :is: |
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50 | * :a: |
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51 | * :test: |
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52 | * -end example] |
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53 | * |
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54 | * pedwards@jaj.com May 1999 |
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55 | */ |
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56 | |
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57 | |
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58 | #include <string> |
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59 | #include <cstring> // for strchr |
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60 | |
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61 | |
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62 | /***************************************************************** |
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63 | * This is the only part of the implementation that I don't like. |
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64 | * It can probably be improved upon by the reader... |
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65 | */ |
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66 | |
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67 | inline bool |
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68 | isws (char c, char const * const wstr) |
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69 | { |
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70 | using namespace std; |
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71 | return (strchr(wstr,c) != NULL); |
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72 | } |
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73 | |
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74 | |
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75 | namespace boost { |
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76 | |
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77 | /***************************************************************** |
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78 | * Simplistic and quite Standard, but a bit slow. This should be |
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79 | * templatized on basic_string instead, or on a more generic StringT |
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80 | * that just happens to support ::size_type, .substr(), and so on. |
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81 | * I had hoped that "whitespace" would be a trait, but it isn't, so |
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82 | * the user must supply it. Enh, this lets them break up strings on |
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83 | * different things easier than traits would anyhow. |
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84 | */ |
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85 | template <typename Container> |
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86 | void |
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87 | stringtok (Container &l, std::string const &s, char const * const ws = " \t\n") |
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88 | { |
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89 | typedef std::string::size_type size_type; |
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90 | const size_type S = s.size(); |
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91 | size_type i = 0; |
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92 | |
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93 | while (i < S) { |
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94 | // eat leading whitespace |
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95 | while ((i < S) && (isws(s[i],ws))) ++i; |
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96 | if (i == S) return; // nothing left but WS |
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97 | |
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98 | // find end of word |
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99 | size_type j = i+1; |
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100 | while ((j < S) && (!isws(s[j],ws))) ++j; |
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101 | |
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102 | // add word |
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103 | l.push_back(s.substr(i,j-i)); |
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104 | |
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105 | // set up for next loop |
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106 | i = j+1; |
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107 | } |
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108 | } |
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109 | |
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110 | |
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111 | } // namespace boost |
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