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authorUlrich Drepper <drepper@redhat.com>1999-01-15 16:24:11 +0000
committerUlrich Drepper <drepper@redhat.com>1999-01-15 16:24:11 +0000
commit37a87f834a459f6136ff44c7887b013d1ae0f6be (patch)
treeb9a8be38cd639638c196f42b278371a9b952aff4 /manual/charset.texi
parentd0ab77802ac748c07d7302aa728ad063ce98309f (diff)
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Update.
Improve mbsinit example.
Diffstat (limited to 'manual/charset.texi')
-rw-r--r--manual/charset.texi17
1 files changed, 15 insertions, 2 deletions
diff --git a/manual/charset.texi b/manual/charset.texi
index 1242cc0..268cce1 100644
--- a/manual/charset.texi
+++ b/manual/charset.texi
@@ -71,7 +71,7 @@ As shown in some other part of this manual,
there exists a completely new family of functions which can handle texts
of this kind in memory. The most commonly used character set for such
internal wide character representations are Unicode and @w{ISO 10646}.
-The former is a subset of the later and used when wide characters are
+The former is a subset of the latter and used when wide characters are
chosen to by 2 bytes (@math{= 16} bits) wide. The standard names of the
@cindex UCS2
@cindex UCS4
@@ -501,6 +501,8 @@ is declared in @file{wchar.h}.
Code using this function often looks similar to this:
+@c Fix the example to explicitly say how to generate the escape sequence
+@c to restore the initial state.
@smallexample
@{
mbstate_t state;
@@ -510,12 +512,23 @@ Code using this function often looks similar to this:
if (! mbsinit (&state))
@{
/* @r{Emit code to return to initial state.} */
- fputs ("@r{whatever needed}", fp);
+ const char empty[] = "";
+ const char **srcp = &empty;
+ wcsrtombs (outbuf, &srcp, outbuflen, &state);
@}
...
@}
@end smallexample
+The code to emit the escape sequence to get back to the initial state is
+interesting. The @code{wcsrtombs} function can be used to determine the
+necessary output code (@pxref{Converting Strings}). Please note that on
+GNU systems it is not necessary to perform this extra action for the
+conversion from multibyte text ot wide character text since the wide
+character encoding is not stateful. But there is nothing mentioned in
+any standard which prohibits making @code{wchar_t} using a stateful
+encoding.
+
@node Converting a Character
@subsection Converting Single Characters