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wstrcpy(3) [sunos man page]

WSTR_TO_ASCII(3)                                               http://www.synce.org/                                              WSTR_TO_ASCII(3)

NAME
wstr_to_ascii - wide string handling functions SYNOPSIS
#include <synce.h> char *wstr_to_ascii(LPCWSTR unicode); char *wstr_to_utf8(LPCWSTR unicode); char *wstr_to_current(LPCWSTR unicode); LPWSTR wstr_from_ascii(const char * ascii); LPWSTR wstr_from_utf8(const char * utf8); LPWSTR wstr_from_current(const char * utf8); void wstr_free_string(void * string); size_t wstrlen(LPCWSTR unicode); LPWSTR wstrcpy(LPWSTR dest, LPCWSTR src); bool wstr_append(LPWSTR dest, LPCWSTR src, size_t max_dest_length); bool wstr_equal(LPWSTR a, LPWSTR b); LPWSTR wstrdup(LPCWSTR string); DESCRIPTION
The wstr_to_xxx() functions convert a wide char string to the appropriate local string. The wstr_from_xxx() functions do the reverse. Use wstr_free_string() to free memory allocated for wide strings. wstrcpy() requires that dest is large enough to contain src. No bounds checking is performed. wstr_append() requires that dest is at least max_dest_length long. No bounds checking is performed. The remaining functions perform standard string operations on wide char strings. RETURN VALUE
wstr_to_xxx() and wstr_from_xxx() return pointers to the allocated strings, or NULL on failure, which will occur if a source character can- not be represented in the destination encoding. wstrdup() return a pointer to the allocated string, or NULL on failure. wstrlen() returns the string length. wstrcpy() returns the pointer to src. wstr_append() returns false on failure eg. if the sum of the lengths is greater than max_dest_length, true on success. wstr_equal() returns true if a and b are equal, false otherwise. SEE ALSO
synce(7) The SynCE Project 2007-08-26 WSTR_TO_ASCII(3)

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WSTR_TO_ASCII(3)					       http://www.synce.org/						  WSTR_TO_ASCII(3)

NAME
wstr_to_ascii - wide string handling functions SYNOPSIS
#include <synce.h> char *wstr_to_ascii(LPCWSTR unicode); char *wstr_to_utf8(LPCWSTR unicode); char *wstr_to_current(LPCWSTR unicode); LPWSTR wstr_from_ascii(const char * ascii); LPWSTR wstr_from_utf8(const char * utf8); LPWSTR wstr_from_current(const char * utf8); void wstr_free_string(void * string); size_t wstrlen(LPCWSTR unicode); LPWSTR wstrcpy(LPWSTR dest, LPCWSTR src); bool wstr_append(LPWSTR dest, LPCWSTR src, size_t max_dest_length); bool wstr_equal(LPWSTR a, LPWSTR b); LPWSTR wstrdup(LPCWSTR string); DESCRIPTION
The wstr_to_xxx() functions convert a wide char string to the appropriate local string. The wstr_from_xxx() functions do the reverse. Use wstr_free_string() to free memory allocated for wide strings. wstrcpy() requires that dest is large enough to contain src. No bounds checking is performed. wstr_append() requires that dest is at least max_dest_length long. No bounds checking is performed. The remaining functions perform standard string operations on wide char strings. RETURN VALUE
wstr_to_xxx() and wstr_from_xxx() return pointers to the allocated strings, or NULL on failure, which will occur if a source character can- not be represented in the destination encoding. wstrdup() return a pointer to the allocated string, or NULL on failure. wstrlen() returns the string length. wstrcpy() returns the pointer to src. wstr_append() returns false on failure eg. if the sum of the lengths is greater than max_dest_length, true on success. wstr_equal() returns true if a and b are equal, false otherwise. SEE ALSO
synce(7) The SynCE Project 2007-08-26 WSTR_TO_ASCII(3)
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