view dmd2/lstring.c @ 1317:4099548c80e0

Allocate objects on the stack if they (a) don't have a destructor, and (b) don't override the delete operator (on top of the regular conditions for stack allocation that also apply to arrays, structs, etc.). The "no destructor" clause is not strictly necessary, but calling them at the right time would be tricky to say the least; it would involve, among other things, "manually" inserting a try-finally block around anything that might throw exceptions not caught in the current function. Note: objects with custom new operators are automatically ignored because they don't use the regular allocation runtime call, so there's no need to pay special attention to them.
author Frits van Bommel <fvbommel wxs.nl>
date Sat, 09 May 2009 00:50:15 +0200
parents 356e65836fb5
children
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// lstring.c

// Copyright (c) 1999-2002 by Digital Mars
// All Rights Reserved
// written by Walter Bright
// www.digitalmars.com
// License for redistribution is by either the Artistic License
// in artistic.txt, or the GNU General Public License in gnu.txt.
// See the included readme.txt for details.

#include <stdlib.h>

#include "dchar.h"
#include "mem.h"
#include "lstring.h"

#ifdef _MSC_VER // prevent compiler internal crash
Lstring Lstring::zero;
#else
Lstring Lstring::zero = LSTRING_EMPTY();
#endif

Lstring *Lstring::ctor(const dchar *p, unsigned length)
{
    Lstring *s;

    s = alloc(length);
    memcpy(s->string, p, length * sizeof(dchar));
    return s;
}

Lstring *Lstring::alloc(unsigned length)
{
    Lstring *s;

    s = (Lstring *)mem.malloc(size(length));
    s->length = length;
    s->string[length] = 0;
    return s;
}

Lstring *Lstring::append(const Lstring *s)
{
    Lstring *t;

    if (!s->length)
	return this;
    t = alloc(length + s->length);
    memcpy(t->string, string, length * sizeof(dchar));
    memcpy(t->string + length, s->string, s->length * sizeof(dchar));
    return t;
}

Lstring *Lstring::substring(int start, int end)
{
    Lstring *t;

    if (start == end)
	return &zero;
    t = alloc(end - start);
    memcpy(t->string, string + start, (end - start) * sizeof(dchar));
    return t;
}