The QAnyStringView class provides a unified view on Latin-1, UTF-8, or UTF-16 strings with a read-only subset of the QString API. More...
Header: | #include <QAnyStringView> |
CMake: | find_package(Qt6 REQUIRED COMPONENTS Core) target_link_libraries(mytarget PRIVATE Qt6::Core) |
qmake: | QT += core |
Since: | Qt 6.0 |
Note: All functions in this class are reentrant.
QAnyStringView(const QString &str) | |
QAnyStringView(const QByteArray &str) | |
QAnyStringView(const Char *str) | |
QAnyStringView(const Char (&)[N] string = N) | |
QAnyStringView(const Char *first, const Char *last) | |
QAnyStringView(const Char *str, qsizetype len) | |
QAnyStringView(std::nullptr_t) | |
QAnyStringView() | |
QChar | back() const |
const void * | data() const |
bool | empty() const |
QChar | front() const |
bool | isEmpty() const |
bool | isNull() const |
qsizetype | length() const |
qsizetype | size() const |
qsizetype | size_bytes() const |
QString | toString() const |
int | compare(QAnyStringView lhs, QAnyStringView rhs, Qt::CaseSensitivity cs = Qt::CaseSensitive) |
bool | operator!=(QAnyStringView lhs, QAnyStringView rhs) |
bool | operator<(QAnyStringView lhs, QAnyStringView rhs) |
bool | operator<=(QAnyStringView lhs, QAnyStringView rhs) |
bool | operator==(QAnyStringView lhs, QAnyStringView rhs) |
bool | operator>(QAnyStringView lhs, QAnyStringView rhs) |
bool | operator>=(QAnyStringView lhs, QAnyStringView rhs) |
A QAnyStringView references a contiguous portion of a string it does not own. It acts as an interface type to all kinds of strings, without the need to construct a QString first.
Unlike QStringView and QUtf8StringView, QAnyStringView can hold strings of any of the following encodings: UTF-8, UTF-16, and Latin-1. The latter is supported because Latin-1, unlike UTF-8, can be efficiently compared to UTF-16 data: a length mismatch already means the strings cannot be equal. This is not true for UTF-8/UTF-16 comparisons, because UTF-8 is a variable-length encoding.
The string may be represented as an array (or an array-compatible data-structure such as QString, std::basic_string, etc.) of char
, char8_t
, QChar, ushort
, char16_t
or (on platforms, such as Windows, where it is a 16-bit type) wchar_t
.
QAnyStringView is designed as an interface type; its main use-case is as a function parameter type. When QAnyStringViews are used as automatic variables or data members, care must be taken to ensure that the referenced string data (for example, owned by a QString) outlives the QAnyStringView on all code paths, lest the string view ends up referencing deleted data.
When used as an interface type, QAnyStringView allows a single function to accept a wide variety of string data sources. One function accepting QAnyStringView thus replaces five function overloads (taking QString, (const QChar*, qsizetype)
, QUtf8StringView, QLatin1StringView (but see above), and QChar), while at the same time enabling even more string data sources to be passed to the function, such as u8"Hello World"
, a char8_t
string literal.
Like elsewhere in Qt, QAnyStringView assumes char
data is encoded in UTF-8, unless it is presented as a QLatin1StringView.
Since Qt 6.4, however, UTF-8 string literals that are pure US-ASCII are automatically stored as Latin-1. This is a compile-time check with no runtime overhead. The feature requires compiling in C++20, or with a recent GCC.
QAnyStringViews should be passed by value, not by reference-to-const:
void myfun1(QAnyStringView sv); // preferred void myfun2(const QAnyStringView &sv); // compiles and works, but slower
QAnyStringView can also be used as the return value of a function, but this is not recommended. QUtf8StringView or QStringView are better suited as function return values. If you call a function returning QAnyStringView, take extra care to not keep the QAnyStringView around longer than the function promises to keep the referenced string data alive. If in doubt, obtain a strong reference to the data by calling toString() to convert the QAnyStringView into a QString.
QAnyStringView is a Literal Type.
QAnyStringView accepts strings over a variety of character types:
char
(both signed and unsigned)char8_t
(C++20 only)char16_t
wchar_t
(where it's a 16-bit type, e.g. Windows)ushort
QChar
The 8-bit character types are interpreted as UTF-8 data (except when presented as a QLatin1StringView) while the 16-bit character types are interpreted as UTF-16 data in host byte order (the same as QString).
All sizes and positions in QAnyStringView functions are in the encoding's code units (that is, UTF-16 surrogate pairs count as two for the purposes of these functions, the same as in QString, and UTF-8 multibyte sequences count as two, three or four, depending on their length).
See also QUtf8StringView and QStringView.
Alias for std::ptrdiff_t
. Provided for compatibility with the STL.
Alias for qsizetype. Provided for compatibility with the STL.
Constructs a string view on str.
str.data()
must remain valid for the lifetime of this string view object.
The string view will be null if and only if str.isNull()
.
Constructs a string view on str. The data in str is interpreted as UTF-8.
str.data()
must remain valid for the lifetime of this string view object.
The string view will be null if and only if str.isNull()
.
Constructs a string view on str. The length is determined by scanning for the first Char(0)
.
str must remain valid for the lifetime of this string view object.
Passing nullptr
as str is safe and results in a null string view.
This constructor only participates in overload resolution if str is not an array and if Char
is a compatible character type.
See also isNull() and Compatible Character Types.
Constructs a string view on the character string literal string. The view covers the array until the first Char(0)
is encountered, or N
, whichever comes first. If you need the full array, use
fromArray() instead.
string must remain valid for the lifetime of this string view object.
This constructor only participates in overload resolution if string is an actual array and Char
is a compatible character type.
See also Compatible Character Types.
Constructs a string view on first with length (last - first).
The range [first,last)
must remain valid for the lifetime of this string view object.
Passing nullptr
as first is safe if last is nullptr
, too, and results in a null string view.
The behavior is undefined if last precedes first, or first is nullptr
and last is not.
This constructor only participates in overload resolution if Char
is a compatible character type.
See also isNull() and Compatible Character Types.
Constructs a string view on str with length len.
The range [str,len)
must remain valid for the lifetime of this string view object.
Passing nullptr
as str is safe if len is 0, too, and results in a null string view.
The behavior is undefined if len is negative or, when positive, if str is nullptr
.
This constructor only participates in overload resolution if Char
is a compatible character type.
See also isNull() and Compatible Character Types.
Constructs a null string view.
See also isNull().
Constructs a null string view.
See also isNull().
Returns the last character in the string view.
This function is provided for STL compatibility.
Warning: Calling this function on an empty string view constitutes undefined behavior.
See also front() and Sizes and Sub-Strings.
[static]
int QAnyStringView::compare(QAnyStringView lhs, QAnyStringView
rhs, Qt::CaseSensitivity cs = Qt::CaseSensitive)Returns an integer that compares to zero as lhs compares to rhs.
If cs is Qt::CaseSensitive (the default), the comparison is case sensitive; otherwise the comparison is case-insensitive.
See also operator==(), operator<(), and operator>().
Returns a const pointer to the first character in the string view.
Note: The character array represented by the return value is not null-terminated.
See also size_bytes().
Returns whether this string view is empty - that is, whether size() == 0
.
This function is provided for STL compatibility.
See also isEmpty(), isNull(), and size().
Returns the first character in the string view.
This function is provided for STL compatibility.
Warning: Calling this function on an empty string view constitutes undefined behavior.
See also back() and Sizes and Sub-Strings.
Returns whether this string view is empty - that is, whether size() == 0
.
This function is provided for compatibility with other Qt containers.
See also empty(), isNull(), and size().
Returns whether this string view is null - that is, whether data() == nullptr
.
This functions is provided for compatibility with other Qt containers.
See also empty(), isEmpty(), and size().
Same as size().
This function is provided for compatibility with other Qt containers.
See also size().
Returns the size of this string view, in the encoding's code points.
See also empty(), isEmpty(), isNull(), size_bytes(), and Sizes and Sub-Strings.
Returns the size of this string view, but in bytes, not code-points.
You can use this function together with data() for hashing or serialization.
This function is provided for STL compatibility.
Returns a deep copy of this string view's data as a QString.
The return value will be a null QString if and only if this string view is null.
Operators that compare lhs to rhs.
See also compare().