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Top Forums Programming Bitwise operation for state machine Post 302880873 by anand.shah on Tuesday 24th of December 2013 06:08:17 AM
Old 12-24-2013
Dear Don Cragun,
Thank you very much for your reply.
I am using C macro to accomplish this. I can not pass states to remove from
Code:
state

as I am not aware of previous state. What I want is their should always have no more than one of the three low order bits set.
Example :- If I am in
Code:
state1

currently then my state variable would be
Code:
 xxxx x001

. Now If I want to set state to
Code:
state3

then my state variable should become
Code:
 xxxx x100.

Thank you.
 

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MBSINIT(3)						     Linux Programmer's Manual							MBSINIT(3)

NAME
mbsinit - test for initial shift state SYNOPSIS
#include <wchar.h> int mbsinit(const mbstate_t *ps); DESCRIPTION
Character conversion between the multibyte representation and the wide character representation uses conversion state, of type mbstate_t. Conversion of a string uses a finite-state machine; when it is interrupted after the complete conversion of a number of characters, it may need to save a state for processing the remaining characters. Such a conversion state is needed for the sake of encodings such as ISO-2022 and UTF-7. The initial state is the state at the beginning of conversion of a string. There are two kinds of state: the one used by multibyte to wide character conversion functions, such as mbsrtowcs(3), and the one used by wide character to multibyte conversion functions, such as wcsr- tombs(3), but they both fit in a mbstate_t, and they both have the same representation for an initial state. For 8-bit encodings, all states are equivalent to the initial state. For multibyte encodings like UTF-8, EUC-*, BIG5 or SJIS, the wide character to multibyte conversion functions never produce non-initial states, but the multibyte to wide-character conversion functions like mbrtowc(3) do produce non-initial states when interrupted in the middle of a character. One possible way to create an mbstate_t in initial state is to set it to zero: mbstate_t state; memset(&state,0,sizeof(mbstate_t)); On Linux, the following works as well, but might generate compiler warnings: mbstate_t state = { 0 }; The function mbsinit() tests whether *ps corresponds to an initial state. RETURN VALUE
mbsinit() returns nonzero if *ps is an initial state, or if ps is NULL. Otherwise, it returns 0. ATTRIBUTES
For an explanation of the terms used in this section, see attributes(7). +----------+---------------+---------+ |Interface | Attribute | Value | +----------+---------------+---------+ |mbsinit() | Thread safety | MT-Safe | +----------+---------------+---------+ CONFORMING TO
POSIX.1-2001, POSIX.1-2008, C99. NOTES
The behavior of mbsinit() depends on the LC_CTYPE category of the current locale. SEE ALSO
mbrlen(3), mbrtowc(3), mbsrtowcs(3), wcrtomb(3), wcsrtombs(3) COLOPHON
This page is part of release 4.15 of the Linux man-pages project. A description of the project, information about reporting bugs, and the latest version of this page, can be found at https://www.kernel.org/doc/man-pages/. GNU
2016-10-08 MBSINIT(3)
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