MBRTOC16(3C) Standard C Library Functions MBRTOC16(3C)
NAME
mbrtoc16,
mbrtoc32,
mbrtowc,
mbrtowc_l - convert characters to wide
characters
SYNOPSIS
#include <wchar.h> size_t mbrtowc(
wchar_t *restrict pwc,
const char *restrict str,
size_t len,
mstate_t *restrict ps);
#include <wchar.h> #include <xlocale.h> size_t mbrtowc(
wchar_t *restrict pwc,
const char *restrict str,
size_t len,
mstate_t *restrict ps,
locale_t loc);
#include <uchar.h> size_t mbrtoc16(
char16_t *restrict p16c,
const char *restrict str,
size_t len,
mbstate_t *restrict ps);
size_t mbrtoc32(
char32_t *restrict p32c,
const char *restrict str,
size_t len,
mbstate_t *restrict ps);
DESCRIPTION
The
mbrtoc16(),
mbrtoc32(),
mbrtowc(), and
mbrtowc_l() functions convert
character sequences, which may contain multi-byte characters, into
different character formats. The functions work in the following formats:
mbrtoc16()
A UTF-16 code sequence, where every code point is represented by
one or two
char16_t. The UTF-16 encoding will encode certain
Unicode code points as a pair of two 16-bit code sequences,
commonly referred to as a surrogate pair.
mbrtoc32()
A UTF-32 code sequence, where every code point is represented by
a single
char32_t.
mbrtowc(),
mbrtowc_l()
Wide characters, being a 32-bit value where every code point is
represented by a single
wchar_t. While the
wchar_t and
char32_t are different types, in this implementation, they are similar
encodings.
The functions consume up to
len characters from the string
str and
accumulate them in
ps until a valid character is found, which is influenced
by the LC_CTYPE category of the current locale. For example, in the
C locale, only ASCII characters are recognized, while in a
UTF-8 based locale
like
en_US.UTF-8, UTF-8 multi-byte character sequences that represent
Unicode code points are recognized. The
mbrtowc_l() function uses the
locale passed in
loc rather than the locale of the current thread.
When a valid character sequence has been found, it is converted to either a
16-bit character sequence for
mbrtoc16() or a 32-bit character sequence for
mbrtoc32() and will be stored in
p16c and
p32c respectively.
The
ps argument represents a multi-byte conversion state which can be used
across multiple calls to a given function (but not mixed between
functions). These allow for characters to be consumed from subsequent
buffers, e.g. different values of
str. The functions may be called from
multiple threads as long as they use unique values for
ps. If
ps is NULL,
then a function-specific buffer will be used for the conversion state;
however, this is stored between all threads and its use is not recommended.
When using these functions, more than one character may be output for a
given set of consumed input characters. An example of this is when a given
code point is represented as a set of surrogate pairs in UTF-16, which
require two 16-bit characters to represent a code point. When this occurs,
the functions return the special return value
-3.
The functions all have a special behavior when NULL is passed for
str.
They instead will treat it as though
pwc,
p16c, or
p32c were NULL,
str had
been passed as the empty string, "" and the length,
len, would appear as
the value 1. In other words, the functions would be called as:
mbrtowc(NULL, "", 1, ps)
mbrtowc_l(NULL, "", 1, ps)
mbrtoc16(NULL, "", 1, ps)
mbrtoc32(NULL, "", 1, ps)
Locale Details
Not all locales in the system are Unicode based locales. For example, ISO
8859 family locales have code points with values that do not match their
counterparts in Unicode. When using these functions with non-Unicode based
locales, the code points returned will be those determined by the locale.
They will not be converted to the corresponding Unicode code point. For
example, if using the Euro sign in ISO 8859-15, these functions might
return the code point 0xa4 and not the Unicode value 0x20ac.
Regardless of the locale, the characters returned will be encoded as though
the code point were the corresponding value in Unicode. This means that if
a locale returns a value that would be a surrogate pair in the UTF-16
encoding, it will still be encoded as a UTF-16 character.
This behavior of the
mbrtoc16() and
mbrtoc32() functions should not be
relied upon, is not portable, and subject to change for non-Unicode
locales.
RETURN VALUES
The
mbrtoc16(),
mbrtoc32(),
mbrtowc(), and
mbrtowc_l() functions return the
following values:
0 len or fewer bytes of
str were consumed and the null wide
character was written into the wide character buffer (
pwc,
p16c,
p32c).
between 1 and len The specified number of bytes were consumed and a single
character was written into the wide character buffer (
pwc,
p16c,
p32c).
(size_t)-1 An encoding error has occurred. The next
len bytes of
str do
not contribute to a valid character.
errno has been set to
EILSEQ. No data was written into the wide character buffer
(
pwc,
p16c,
p32c).
(size_t)-2 len bytes of
str were consumed, but a complete multi-byte
character sequence has not been found and no data was written
into the wide character buffer (
pwc,
p16c,
p32c).
(size_t)-3 A character has been written into the wide character buffer
(
pwc,
p16c,
p32c). This character was from a previous call
(such as another part of a UTF-16 surrogate pair) and no input
was consumed. This is limited to the
mbrtoc16() and
mbrtoc32()
functions.
EXAMPLES
Example 1 Using the
mbrtoc32() function to convert a multibyte string.
#include <locale.h>
#include <stdlib.h>
#include <string.h>
#include <err.h>
#include <stdio.h>
#include <uchar.h>
int
main(void)
{
mbstate_t mbs;
char32_t out;
size_t ret;
const char *uchar_str = "\xe5\x85\x89";
(void) memset(&mbs, 0, sizeof (mbs));
(void) setlocale(LC_CTYPE, "en_US.UTF-8");
ret = mbrtoc32(&out, uchar_str, strlen(uchar_str), &mbs);
if (ret != strlen(uchar_str)) {
errx(EXIT_FAILURE, "failed to convert string, got %zd",
ret);
}
(void) printf("Converted %zu bytes into UTF-32 character "
"0x%x0, ret, out);
return (0);
}
When compiled and run, this produces:
$ ./a.out
Converted 3 bytes into UTF-32 character 0x5149
Example 2 Handling surrogate pairs from the
mbrtoc16() function.
#include <locale.h>
#include <stdlib.h>
#include <string.h>
#include <err.h>
#include <stdio.h>
#include <uchar.h>
int
main(void)
{
mbstate_t mbs;
char16_t first, second;
size_t ret;
const char *uchar_str = "\xf0\x9f\x92\xa9";
(void) memset(&mbs, 0, sizeof (mbs));
(void) setlocale(LC_CTYPE, "en_US.UTF-8");
ret = mbrtoc16(&first, uchar_str, strlen(uchar_str), &mbs);
if (ret != strlen(uchar_str)) {
errx(EXIT_FAILURE, "failed to convert string, got %zd",
ret);
}
ret = mbrtoc16(&second, "", 0, &mbs);
if (ret != (size_t)-3) {
errx(EXIT_FAILURE, "didn't get second surrogate pair, "
"got %zd", ret);
}
(void) printf("UTF-16 surrogates: 0x%x 0x%x0, first, second);
return (0);
}
When compiled and run, this produces:
$ ./a.out
UTF-16 surrogates: 0xd83d 0xdca9
ERRORS
The
mbrtoc16(),
mbrtoc32(),
mbrtowc(), and
mbrtowc_l() functions will fail
if:
EINVAL The conversion state in
ps is invalid.
EILSEQ An invalid character sequence has been detected.
MT-LEVEL The
mbrtoc16(),
mbrtoc32(),
mbrtowc(), and
mbrtowc_l() functions are
MT-Safe as long as different
mbstate_t structures are passed in
ps. If
ps is NULL or different threads use the same value for
ps, then the functions
are
Unsafe.
INTERFACE STABILITY
CommittedSEE ALSO
c16rtomb(3C),
c32rtomb(3C),
newlocale(3C),
setlocale(3C),
uselocale(3C),
wcrtomb(3C),
uchar.h(3HEAD),
environ(7)OmniOS September 20, 2021 OmniOS