371 lines
13 KiB
ReStructuredText
371 lines
13 KiB
ReStructuredText
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.. index:: Field Formatting
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Field Formatting
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----------------
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The field format is similar to the format string for printf(3). Its
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use varies based on the role of the field, but generally is used to
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format the field's contents.
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If the format string is not provided for a value field, it defaults to
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"%s".
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Note a field definition can contain zero or more printf-style
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'directives', which are sequences that start with a '%' and end with
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one of following characters: "diouxXDOUeEfFgGaAcCsSp". Each directive
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is matched by one of more arguments to the xo_emit function.
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The format string has the form::
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'%' format-modifier * format-character
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The format-modifier can be:
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- a '#' character, indicating the output value should be prefixed
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with '0x', typically to indicate a base 16 (hex) value.
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- a minus sign ('-'), indicating the output value should be padded on
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the right instead of the left.
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- a leading zero ('0') indicating the output value should be padded on the
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left with zeroes instead of spaces (' ').
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- one or more digits ('0' - '9') indicating the minimum width of the
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argument. If the width in columns of the output value is less than
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the minimum width, the value will be padded to reach the minimum.
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- a period followed by one or more digits indicating the maximum
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number of bytes which will be examined for a string argument, or the maximum
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width for a non-string argument. When handling ASCII strings this
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functions as the field width but for multi-byte characters, a single
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character may be composed of multiple bytes.
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xo_emit will never dereference memory beyond the given number of bytes.
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- a second period followed by one or more digits indicating the maximum
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width for a string argument. This modifier cannot be given for non-string
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arguments.
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- one or more 'h' characters, indicating shorter input data.
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- one or more 'l' characters, indicating longer input data.
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- a 'z' character, indicating a 'size_t' argument.
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- a 't' character, indicating a 'ptrdiff_t' argument.
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- a ' ' character, indicating a space should be emitted before
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positive numbers.
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- a '+' character, indicating sign should emitted before any number.
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Note that 'q', 'D', 'O', and 'U' are considered deprecated and will be
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removed eventually.
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The format character is described in the following table:
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===== ================= ======================
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Ltr Argument Type Format
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===== ================= ======================
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d int base 10 (decimal)
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i int base 10 (decimal)
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o int base 8 (octal)
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u unsigned base 10 (decimal)
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x unsigned base 16 (hex)
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X unsigned long base 16 (hex)
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D long base 10 (decimal)
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O unsigned long base 8 (octal)
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U unsigned long base 10 (decimal)
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e double [-]d.ddde+-dd
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E double [-]d.dddE+-dd
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f double [-]ddd.ddd
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F double [-]ddd.ddd
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g double as 'e' or 'f'
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G double as 'E' or 'F'
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a double [-]0xh.hhhp[+-]d
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A double [-]0Xh.hhhp[+-]d
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c unsigned char a character
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C wint_t a character
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s char \* a UTF-8 string
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S wchar_t \* a unicode/WCS string
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p void \* '%#lx'
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===== ================= ======================
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The 'h' and 'l' modifiers affect the size and treatment of the
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argument:
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===== ============= ====================
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Mod d, i o, u, x, X
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===== ============= ====================
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hh signed char unsigned char
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h short unsigned short
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l long unsigned long
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ll long long unsigned long long
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j intmax_t uintmax_t
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t ptrdiff_t ptrdiff_t
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z size_t size_t
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q quad_t u_quad_t
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===== ============= ====================
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.. index:: UTF-8
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.. index:: Locale
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.. _utf-8:
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UTF-8 and Locale Strings
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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For strings, the 'h' and 'l' modifiers affect the interpretation of
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the bytes pointed to argument. The default '%s' string is a 'char \*'
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pointer to a string encoded as UTF-8. Since UTF-8 is compatible with
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ASCII data, a normal 7-bit ASCII string can be used. '%ls' expects a
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'wchar_t \*' pointer to a wide-character string, encoded as a 32-bit
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Unicode values. '%hs' expects a 'char \*' pointer to a multi-byte
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string encoded with the current locale, as given by the LC_CTYPE,
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LANG, or LC_ALL environment varibles. The first of this list of
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variables is used and if none of the variables are set, the locale
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defaults to "UTF-8".
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libxo will convert these arguments as needed to either UTF-8 (for XML,
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JSON, and HTML styles) or locale-based strings for display in text
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style::
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xo_emit("All strings are utf-8 content {:tag/%ls}",
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L"except for wide strings");
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======== ================== ===============================
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Format Argument Type Argument Contents
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======== ================== ===============================
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%s const char \* UTF-8 string
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%S const char \* UTF-8 string (alias for '%ls')
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%ls const wchar_t \* Wide character UNICODE string
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%hs const char * locale-based string
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======== ================== ===============================
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.. admonition:: "Long", not "locale"
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The "*l*" in "%ls" is for "*long*", following the convention of "%ld".
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It is not "*locale*", a common mis-mnemonic. "%S" is equivalent to
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"%ls".
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For example, the following function is passed a locale-base name, a
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hat size, and a time value. The hat size is formatted in a UTF-8
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(ASCII) string, and the time value is formatted into a wchar_t
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string::
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void print_order (const char *name, int size,
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struct tm *timep) {
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char buf[32];
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const char *size_val = "unknown";
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if (size > 0)
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snprintf(buf, sizeof(buf), "%d", size);
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size_val = buf;
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}
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wchar_t when[32];
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wcsftime(when, sizeof(when), L"%d%b%y", timep);
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xo_emit("The hat for {:name/%hs} is {:size/%s}.\n",
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name, size_val);
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xo_emit("It was ordered on {:order-time/%ls}.\n",
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when);
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}
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It is important to note that xo_emit will perform the conversion
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required to make appropriate output. Text style output uses the
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current locale (as described above), while XML, JSON, and HTML use
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UTF-8.
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UTF-8 and locale-encoded strings can use multiple bytes to encode one
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column of data. The traditional "precision'" (aka "max-width") value
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for "%s" printf formatting becomes overloaded since it specifies both
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the number of bytes that can be safely referenced and the maximum
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number of columns to emit. xo_emit uses the precision as the former,
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and adds a third value for specifying the maximum number of columns.
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In this example, the name field is printed with a minimum of 3 columns
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and a maximum of 6. Up to ten bytes of data at the location given by
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'name' are in used in filling those columns::
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xo_emit("{:name/%3.10.6s}", name);
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Characters Outside of Field Definitions
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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Characters in the format string that are not part of a field
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definition are copied to the output for the TEXT style, and are
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ignored for the JSON and XML styles. For HTML, these characters are
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placed in a <div> with class "text"::
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EXAMPLE:
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xo_emit("The hat is {:size/%s}.\n", size_val);
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TEXT:
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The hat is extra small.
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XML:
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<size>extra small</size>
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JSON:
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"size": "extra small"
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HTML:
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<div class="text">The hat is </div>
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<div class="data" data-tag="size">extra small</div>
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<div class="text">.</div>
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.. index:: errno
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"%m" Is Supported
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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libxo supports the '%m' directive, which formats the error message
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associated with the current value of "errno". It is the equivalent
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of "%s" with the argument strerror(errno)::
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xo_emit("{:filename} cannot be opened: {:error/%m}", filename);
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xo_emit("{:filename} cannot be opened: {:error/%s}",
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filename, strerror(errno));
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"%n" Is Not Supported
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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libxo does not support the '%n' directive. It's a bad idea and we
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just don't do it.
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The Encoding Format (eformat)
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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The "eformat" string is the format string used when encoding the field
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for JSON and XML. If not provided, it defaults to the primary format
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with any minimum width removed. If the primary is not given, both
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default to "%s".
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Content Strings
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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For padding and labels, the content string is considered the content,
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unless a format is given.
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.. index:: printf-like
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Argument Validation
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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Many compilers and tool chains support validation of printf-like
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arguments. When the format string fails to match the argument list,
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a warning is generated. This is a valuable feature and while the
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formatting strings for libxo differ considerably from printf, many of
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these checks can still provide build-time protection against bugs.
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libxo provide variants of functions that provide this ability, if the
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"--enable-printflike" option is passed to the "configure" script.
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These functions use the "_p" suffix, like "xo_emit_p()",
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xo_emit_hp()", etc.
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The following are features of libxo formatting strings that are
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incompatible with printf-like testing:
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- implicit formats, where "{:tag}" has an implicit "%s";
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- the "max" parameter for strings, where "{:tag/%4.10.6s}" means up to
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ten bytes of data can be inspected to fill a minimum of 4 columns and
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a maximum of 6;
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- percent signs in strings, where "{:filled}%" makes a single,
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trailing percent sign;
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- the "l" and "h" modifiers for strings, where "{:tag/%hs}" means
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locale-based string and "{:tag/%ls}" means a wide character string;
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- distinct encoding formats, where "{:tag/#%s/%s}" means the display
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styles (text and HTML) will use "#%s" where other styles use "%s";
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If none of these features are in use by your code, then using the "_p"
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variants might be wise:
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================== ========================
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Function printf-like Equivalent
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================== ========================
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xo_emit_hv xo_emit_hvp
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xo_emit_h xo_emit_hp
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xo_emit xo_emit_p
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xo_emit_warn_hcv xo_emit_warn_hcvp
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xo_emit_warn_hc xo_emit_warn_hcp
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xo_emit_warn_c xo_emit_warn_cp
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xo_emit_warn xo_emit_warn_p
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xo_emit_warnx xo_emit_warnx_p
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xo_emit_err xo_emit_err_p
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xo_emit_errx xo_emit_errx_p
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xo_emit_errc xo_emit_errc_p
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================== ========================
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.. index:: performance
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.. index:: XOEF_RETAIN
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.. _retain:
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Retaining Parsed Format Information
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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libxo can retain the parsed internal information related to the given
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format string, allowing subsequent xo_emit calls, the retained
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information is used, avoiding repetitive parsing of the format string::
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SYNTAX:
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int xo_emit_f(xo_emit_flags_t flags, const char fmt, ...);
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EXAMPLE:
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xo_emit_f(XOEF_RETAIN, "{:some/%02d}{:thing/%-6s}{:fancy}\n",
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some, thing, fancy);
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To retain parsed format information, use the XOEF_RETAIN flag to the
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xo_emit_f() function. A complete set of xo_emit_f functions exist to
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match all the xo_emit function signatures (with handles, varadic
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argument, and printf-like flags):
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================== ========================
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Function Flags Equivalent
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================== ========================
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xo_emit_hv xo_emit_hvf
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xo_emit_h xo_emit_hf
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xo_emit xo_emit_f
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xo_emit_hvp xo_emit_hvfp
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xo_emit_hp xo_emit_hfp
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xo_emit_p xo_emit_fp
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================== ========================
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The format string must be immutable across multiple calls to xo_emit_f(),
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since the library retains the string. Typically this is done by using
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static constant strings, such as string literals. If the string is not
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immutable, the XOEF_RETAIN flag must not be used.
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The functions xo_retain_clear() and xo_retain_clear_all() release
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internal information on either a single format string or all format
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strings, respectively. Neither is required, but the library will
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retain this information until it is cleared or the process exits::
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const char *fmt = "{:name} {:count/%d}\n";
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for (i = 0; i < 1000; i++) {
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xo_open_instance("item");
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xo_emit_f(XOEF_RETAIN, fmt, name[i], count[i]);
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}
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xo_retain_clear(fmt);
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The retained information is kept as thread-specific data.
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Example
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~~~~~~~
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In this example, the value for the number of items in stock is emitted::
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xo_emit("{P: }{Lwc:In stock}{:in-stock/%u}\n",
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instock);
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This call will generate the following output::
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TEXT:
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In stock: 144
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XML:
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<in-stock>144</in-stock>
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JSON:
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"in-stock": 144,
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HTML:
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<div class="line">
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<div class="padding"> </div>
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<div class="label">In stock</div>
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<div class="decoration">:</div>
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<div class="padding"> </div>
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<div class="data" data-tag="in-stock">144</div>
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</div>
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Clearly HTML wins the verbosity award, and this output does
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not include XOF_XPATH or XOF_INFO data, which would expand the
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penultimate line to::
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<div class="data" data-tag="in-stock"
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data-xpath="/top/data/item/in-stock"
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data-type="number"
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data-help="Number of items in stock">144</div>
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