string_view.h 27 KB

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  1. //
  2. // Copyright 2017 The Abseil Authors.
  3. //
  4. // Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
  5. // you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
  6. // You may obtain a copy of the License at
  7. //
  8. // https://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
  9. //
  10. // Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
  11. // distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
  12. // WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
  13. // See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
  14. // limitations under the License.
  15. //
  16. // -----------------------------------------------------------------------------
  17. // File: string_view.h
  18. // -----------------------------------------------------------------------------
  19. //
  20. // This file contains the definition of the `absl::string_view` class. A
  21. // `string_view` points to a contiguous span of characters, often part or all of
  22. // another `std::string`, double-quoted string literal, character array, or even
  23. // another `string_view`.
  24. //
  25. // This `absl::string_view` abstraction is designed to be a drop-in
  26. // replacement for the C++17 `std::string_view` abstraction.
  27. #ifndef ABSL_STRINGS_STRING_VIEW_H_
  28. #define ABSL_STRINGS_STRING_VIEW_H_
  29. #include <algorithm>
  30. #include <cassert>
  31. #include <cstddef>
  32. #include <cstring>
  33. #include <iosfwd>
  34. #include <iterator>
  35. #include <limits>
  36. #include <string>
  37. #include "absl/base/attributes.h"
  38. #include "absl/base/config.h"
  39. #include "absl/base/internal/throw_delegate.h"
  40. #include "absl/base/macros.h"
  41. #include "absl/base/optimization.h"
  42. #include "absl/base/port.h"
  43. #ifdef ABSL_USES_STD_STRING_VIEW
  44. #include <string_view> // IWYU pragma: export
  45. namespace absl {
  46. ABSL_NAMESPACE_BEGIN
  47. using string_view = std::string_view;
  48. ABSL_NAMESPACE_END
  49. } // namespace absl
  50. #else // ABSL_USES_STD_STRING_VIEW
  51. #if ABSL_HAVE_BUILTIN(__builtin_memcmp) || \
  52. (defined(__GNUC__) && !defined(__clang__))
  53. #define ABSL_INTERNAL_STRING_VIEW_MEMCMP __builtin_memcmp
  54. #else // ABSL_HAVE_BUILTIN(__builtin_memcmp)
  55. #define ABSL_INTERNAL_STRING_VIEW_MEMCMP memcmp
  56. #endif // ABSL_HAVE_BUILTIN(__builtin_memcmp)
  57. #if defined(__cplusplus) && __cplusplus >= 201402L
  58. #define ABSL_INTERNAL_STRING_VIEW_CXX14_CONSTEXPR constexpr
  59. #else
  60. #define ABSL_INTERNAL_STRING_VIEW_CXX14_CONSTEXPR
  61. #endif
  62. namespace absl {
  63. ABSL_NAMESPACE_BEGIN
  64. // absl::string_view
  65. //
  66. // A `string_view` provides a lightweight view into the string data provided by
  67. // a `std::string`, double-quoted string literal, character array, or even
  68. // another `string_view`. A `string_view` does *not* own the string to which it
  69. // points, and that data cannot be modified through the view.
  70. //
  71. // You can use `string_view` as a function or method parameter anywhere a
  72. // parameter can receive a double-quoted string literal, `const char*`,
  73. // `std::string`, or another `absl::string_view` argument with no need to copy
  74. // the string data. Systematic use of `string_view` within function arguments
  75. // reduces data copies and `strlen()` calls.
  76. //
  77. // Because of its small size, prefer passing `string_view` by value:
  78. //
  79. // void MyFunction(absl::string_view arg);
  80. //
  81. // If circumstances require, you may also pass one by const reference:
  82. //
  83. // void MyFunction(const absl::string_view& arg); // not preferred
  84. //
  85. // Passing by value generates slightly smaller code for many architectures.
  86. //
  87. // In either case, the source data of the `string_view` must outlive the
  88. // `string_view` itself.
  89. //
  90. // A `string_view` is also suitable for local variables if you know that the
  91. // lifetime of the underlying object is longer than the lifetime of your
  92. // `string_view` variable. However, beware of binding a `string_view` to a
  93. // temporary value:
  94. //
  95. // // BAD use of string_view: lifetime problem
  96. // absl::string_view sv = obj.ReturnAString();
  97. //
  98. // // GOOD use of string_view: str outlives sv
  99. // std::string str = obj.ReturnAString();
  100. // absl::string_view sv = str;
  101. //
  102. // Due to lifetime issues, a `string_view` is sometimes a poor choice for a
  103. // return value and usually a poor choice for a data member. If you do use a
  104. // `string_view` this way, it is your responsibility to ensure that the object
  105. // pointed to by the `string_view` outlives the `string_view`.
  106. //
  107. // A `string_view` may represent a whole string or just part of a string. For
  108. // example, when splitting a string, `std::vector<absl::string_view>` is a
  109. // natural data type for the output.
  110. //
  111. // For another example, a Cord is a non-contiguous, potentially very
  112. // long string-like object. The Cord class has an interface that iteratively
  113. // provides string_view objects that point to the successive pieces of a Cord
  114. // object.
  115. //
  116. // When constructed from a source which is NUL-terminated, the `string_view`
  117. // itself will not include the NUL-terminator unless a specific size (including
  118. // the NUL) is passed to the constructor. As a result, common idioms that work
  119. // on NUL-terminated strings do not work on `string_view` objects. If you write
  120. // code that scans a `string_view`, you must check its length rather than test
  121. // for nul, for example. Note, however, that nuls may still be embedded within
  122. // a `string_view` explicitly.
  123. //
  124. // You may create a null `string_view` in two ways:
  125. //
  126. // absl::string_view sv;
  127. // absl::string_view sv(nullptr, 0);
  128. //
  129. // For the above, `sv.data() == nullptr`, `sv.length() == 0`, and
  130. // `sv.empty() == true`. Also, if you create a `string_view` with a non-null
  131. // pointer then `sv.data() != nullptr`. Thus, you can use `string_view()` to
  132. // signal an undefined value that is different from other `string_view` values
  133. // in a similar fashion to how `const char* p1 = nullptr;` is different from
  134. // `const char* p2 = "";`. However, in practice, it is not recommended to rely
  135. // on this behavior.
  136. //
  137. // Be careful not to confuse a null `string_view` with an empty one. A null
  138. // `string_view` is an empty `string_view`, but some empty `string_view`s are
  139. // not null. Prefer checking for emptiness over checking for null.
  140. //
  141. // There are many ways to create an empty string_view:
  142. //
  143. // const char* nullcp = nullptr;
  144. // // string_view.size() will return 0 in all cases.
  145. // absl::string_view();
  146. // absl::string_view(nullcp, 0);
  147. // absl::string_view("");
  148. // absl::string_view("", 0);
  149. // absl::string_view("abcdef", 0);
  150. // absl::string_view("abcdef" + 6, 0);
  151. //
  152. // All empty `string_view` objects whether null or not, are equal:
  153. //
  154. // absl::string_view() == absl::string_view("", 0)
  155. // absl::string_view(nullptr, 0) == absl::string_view("abcdef"+6, 0)
  156. class string_view {
  157. public:
  158. using traits_type = std::char_traits<char>;
  159. using value_type = char;
  160. using pointer = char*;
  161. using const_pointer = const char*;
  162. using reference = char&;
  163. using const_reference = const char&;
  164. using const_iterator = const char*;
  165. using iterator = const_iterator;
  166. using const_reverse_iterator = std::reverse_iterator<const_iterator>;
  167. using reverse_iterator = const_reverse_iterator;
  168. using size_type = size_t;
  169. using difference_type = std::ptrdiff_t;
  170. static constexpr size_type npos = static_cast<size_type>(-1);
  171. // Null `string_view` constructor
  172. constexpr string_view() noexcept : ptr_(nullptr), length_(0) {}
  173. // Implicit constructors
  174. template <typename Allocator>
  175. string_view( // NOLINT(runtime/explicit)
  176. const std::basic_string<char, std::char_traits<char>, Allocator>& str
  177. ABSL_ATTRIBUTE_LIFETIME_BOUND) noexcept
  178. // This is implemented in terms of `string_view(p, n)` so `str.size()`
  179. // doesn't need to be reevaluated after `ptr_` is set.
  180. // The length check is also skipped since it is unnecessary and causes
  181. // code bloat.
  182. : string_view(str.data(), str.size(), SkipCheckLengthTag{}) {}
  183. // Implicit constructor of a `string_view` from NUL-terminated `str`. When
  184. // accepting possibly null strings, use `absl::NullSafeStringView(str)`
  185. // instead (see below).
  186. // The length check is skipped since it is unnecessary and causes code bloat.
  187. constexpr string_view(const char* str) // NOLINT(runtime/explicit)
  188. : ptr_(str), length_(str ? StrlenInternal(str) : 0) {}
  189. // Implicit constructor of a `string_view` from a `const char*` and length.
  190. constexpr string_view(const char* data, size_type len)
  191. : ptr_(data), length_(CheckLengthInternal(len)) {}
  192. // NOTE: Harmlessly omitted to work around gdb bug.
  193. // constexpr string_view(const string_view&) noexcept = default;
  194. // string_view& operator=(const string_view&) noexcept = default;
  195. // Iterators
  196. // string_view::begin()
  197. //
  198. // Returns an iterator pointing to the first character at the beginning of the
  199. // `string_view`, or `end()` if the `string_view` is empty.
  200. constexpr const_iterator begin() const noexcept { return ptr_; }
  201. // string_view::end()
  202. //
  203. // Returns an iterator pointing just beyond the last character at the end of
  204. // the `string_view`. This iterator acts as a placeholder; attempting to
  205. // access it results in undefined behavior.
  206. constexpr const_iterator end() const noexcept { return ptr_ + length_; }
  207. // string_view::cbegin()
  208. //
  209. // Returns a const iterator pointing to the first character at the beginning
  210. // of the `string_view`, or `end()` if the `string_view` is empty.
  211. constexpr const_iterator cbegin() const noexcept { return begin(); }
  212. // string_view::cend()
  213. //
  214. // Returns a const iterator pointing just beyond the last character at the end
  215. // of the `string_view`. This pointer acts as a placeholder; attempting to
  216. // access its element results in undefined behavior.
  217. constexpr const_iterator cend() const noexcept { return end(); }
  218. // string_view::rbegin()
  219. //
  220. // Returns a reverse iterator pointing to the last character at the end of the
  221. // `string_view`, or `rend()` if the `string_view` is empty.
  222. const_reverse_iterator rbegin() const noexcept {
  223. return const_reverse_iterator(end());
  224. }
  225. // string_view::rend()
  226. //
  227. // Returns a reverse iterator pointing just before the first character at the
  228. // beginning of the `string_view`. This pointer acts as a placeholder;
  229. // attempting to access its element results in undefined behavior.
  230. const_reverse_iterator rend() const noexcept {
  231. return const_reverse_iterator(begin());
  232. }
  233. // string_view::crbegin()
  234. //
  235. // Returns a const reverse iterator pointing to the last character at the end
  236. // of the `string_view`, or `crend()` if the `string_view` is empty.
  237. const_reverse_iterator crbegin() const noexcept { return rbegin(); }
  238. // string_view::crend()
  239. //
  240. // Returns a const reverse iterator pointing just before the first character
  241. // at the beginning of the `string_view`. This pointer acts as a placeholder;
  242. // attempting to access its element results in undefined behavior.
  243. const_reverse_iterator crend() const noexcept { return rend(); }
  244. // Capacity Utilities
  245. // string_view::size()
  246. //
  247. // Returns the number of characters in the `string_view`.
  248. constexpr size_type size() const noexcept { return length_; }
  249. // string_view::length()
  250. //
  251. // Returns the number of characters in the `string_view`. Alias for `size()`.
  252. constexpr size_type length() const noexcept { return size(); }
  253. // string_view::max_size()
  254. //
  255. // Returns the maximum number of characters the `string_view` can hold.
  256. constexpr size_type max_size() const noexcept { return kMaxSize; }
  257. // string_view::empty()
  258. //
  259. // Checks if the `string_view` is empty (refers to no characters).
  260. constexpr bool empty() const noexcept { return length_ == 0; }
  261. // string_view::operator[]
  262. //
  263. // Returns the ith element of the `string_view` using the array operator.
  264. // Note that this operator does not perform any bounds checking.
  265. constexpr const_reference operator[](size_type i) const {
  266. return ABSL_HARDENING_ASSERT(i < size()), ptr_[i];
  267. }
  268. // string_view::at()
  269. //
  270. // Returns the ith element of the `string_view`. Bounds checking is performed,
  271. // and an exception of type `std::out_of_range` will be thrown on invalid
  272. // access.
  273. constexpr const_reference at(size_type i) const {
  274. return ABSL_PREDICT_TRUE(i < size())
  275. ? ptr_[i]
  276. : ((void)base_internal::ThrowStdOutOfRange(
  277. "absl::string_view::at"),
  278. ptr_[i]);
  279. }
  280. // string_view::front()
  281. //
  282. // Returns the first element of a `string_view`.
  283. constexpr const_reference front() const {
  284. return ABSL_HARDENING_ASSERT(!empty()), ptr_[0];
  285. }
  286. // string_view::back()
  287. //
  288. // Returns the last element of a `string_view`.
  289. constexpr const_reference back() const {
  290. return ABSL_HARDENING_ASSERT(!empty()), ptr_[size() - 1];
  291. }
  292. // string_view::data()
  293. //
  294. // Returns a pointer to the underlying character array (which is of course
  295. // stored elsewhere). Note that `string_view::data()` may contain embedded nul
  296. // characters, but the returned buffer may or may not be NUL-terminated;
  297. // therefore, do not pass `data()` to a routine that expects a NUL-terminated
  298. // string.
  299. constexpr const_pointer data() const noexcept { return ptr_; }
  300. // Modifiers
  301. // string_view::remove_prefix()
  302. //
  303. // Removes the first `n` characters from the `string_view`. Note that the
  304. // underlying string is not changed, only the view.
  305. ABSL_INTERNAL_STRING_VIEW_CXX14_CONSTEXPR void remove_prefix(size_type n) {
  306. ABSL_HARDENING_ASSERT(n <= length_);
  307. ptr_ += n;
  308. length_ -= n;
  309. }
  310. // string_view::remove_suffix()
  311. //
  312. // Removes the last `n` characters from the `string_view`. Note that the
  313. // underlying string is not changed, only the view.
  314. ABSL_INTERNAL_STRING_VIEW_CXX14_CONSTEXPR void remove_suffix(size_type n) {
  315. ABSL_HARDENING_ASSERT(n <= length_);
  316. length_ -= n;
  317. }
  318. // string_view::swap()
  319. //
  320. // Swaps this `string_view` with another `string_view`.
  321. ABSL_INTERNAL_STRING_VIEW_CXX14_CONSTEXPR void swap(string_view& s) noexcept {
  322. auto t = *this;
  323. *this = s;
  324. s = t;
  325. }
  326. // Explicit conversion operators
  327. // Converts to `std::basic_string`.
  328. template <typename A>
  329. explicit operator std::basic_string<char, traits_type, A>() const {
  330. if (!data()) return {};
  331. return std::basic_string<char, traits_type, A>(data(), size());
  332. }
  333. // string_view::copy()
  334. //
  335. // Copies the contents of the `string_view` at offset `pos` and length `n`
  336. // into `buf`.
  337. size_type copy(char* buf, size_type n, size_type pos = 0) const {
  338. if (ABSL_PREDICT_FALSE(pos > length_)) {
  339. base_internal::ThrowStdOutOfRange("absl::string_view::copy");
  340. }
  341. size_type rlen = (std::min)(length_ - pos, n);
  342. if (rlen > 0) {
  343. const char* start = ptr_ + pos;
  344. traits_type::copy(buf, start, rlen);
  345. }
  346. return rlen;
  347. }
  348. // string_view::substr()
  349. //
  350. // Returns a "substring" of the `string_view` (at offset `pos` and length
  351. // `n`) as another string_view. This function throws `std::out_of_bounds` if
  352. // `pos > size`.
  353. // Use absl::ClippedSubstr if you need a truncating substr operation.
  354. constexpr string_view substr(size_type pos = 0, size_type n = npos) const {
  355. return ABSL_PREDICT_FALSE(pos > length_)
  356. ? (base_internal::ThrowStdOutOfRange(
  357. "absl::string_view::substr"),
  358. string_view())
  359. : string_view(ptr_ + pos, Min(n, length_ - pos));
  360. }
  361. // string_view::compare()
  362. //
  363. // Performs a lexicographical comparison between this `string_view` and
  364. // another `string_view` `x`, returning a negative value if `*this` is less
  365. // than `x`, 0 if `*this` is equal to `x`, and a positive value if `*this`
  366. // is greater than `x`.
  367. constexpr int compare(string_view x) const noexcept {
  368. return CompareImpl(length_, x.length_,
  369. Min(length_, x.length_) == 0
  370. ? 0
  371. : ABSL_INTERNAL_STRING_VIEW_MEMCMP(
  372. ptr_, x.ptr_, Min(length_, x.length_)));
  373. }
  374. // Overload of `string_view::compare()` for comparing a substring of the
  375. // 'string_view` and another `absl::string_view`.
  376. constexpr int compare(size_type pos1, size_type count1, string_view v) const {
  377. return substr(pos1, count1).compare(v);
  378. }
  379. // Overload of `string_view::compare()` for comparing a substring of the
  380. // `string_view` and a substring of another `absl::string_view`.
  381. constexpr int compare(size_type pos1, size_type count1, string_view v,
  382. size_type pos2, size_type count2) const {
  383. return substr(pos1, count1).compare(v.substr(pos2, count2));
  384. }
  385. // Overload of `string_view::compare()` for comparing a `string_view` and a
  386. // a different C-style string `s`.
  387. constexpr int compare(const char* s) const { return compare(string_view(s)); }
  388. // Overload of `string_view::compare()` for comparing a substring of the
  389. // `string_view` and a different string C-style string `s`.
  390. constexpr int compare(size_type pos1, size_type count1, const char* s) const {
  391. return substr(pos1, count1).compare(string_view(s));
  392. }
  393. // Overload of `string_view::compare()` for comparing a substring of the
  394. // `string_view` and a substring of a different C-style string `s`.
  395. constexpr int compare(size_type pos1, size_type count1, const char* s,
  396. size_type count2) const {
  397. return substr(pos1, count1).compare(string_view(s, count2));
  398. }
  399. // Find Utilities
  400. // string_view::find()
  401. //
  402. // Finds the first occurrence of the substring `s` within the `string_view`,
  403. // returning the position of the first character's match, or `npos` if no
  404. // match was found.
  405. size_type find(string_view s, size_type pos = 0) const noexcept;
  406. // Overload of `string_view::find()` for finding the given character `c`
  407. // within the `string_view`.
  408. size_type find(char c, size_type pos = 0) const noexcept;
  409. // Overload of `string_view::find()` for finding a substring of a different
  410. // C-style string `s` within the `string_view`.
  411. size_type find(const char* s, size_type pos, size_type count) const {
  412. return find(string_view(s, count), pos);
  413. }
  414. // Overload of `string_view::find()` for finding a different C-style string
  415. // `s` within the `string_view`.
  416. size_type find(const char* s, size_type pos = 0) const {
  417. return find(string_view(s), pos);
  418. }
  419. // string_view::rfind()
  420. //
  421. // Finds the last occurrence of a substring `s` within the `string_view`,
  422. // returning the position of the first character's match, or `npos` if no
  423. // match was found.
  424. size_type rfind(string_view s, size_type pos = npos) const noexcept;
  425. // Overload of `string_view::rfind()` for finding the last given character `c`
  426. // within the `string_view`.
  427. size_type rfind(char c, size_type pos = npos) const noexcept;
  428. // Overload of `string_view::rfind()` for finding a substring of a different
  429. // C-style string `s` within the `string_view`.
  430. size_type rfind(const char* s, size_type pos, size_type count) const {
  431. return rfind(string_view(s, count), pos);
  432. }
  433. // Overload of `string_view::rfind()` for finding a different C-style string
  434. // `s` within the `string_view`.
  435. size_type rfind(const char* s, size_type pos = npos) const {
  436. return rfind(string_view(s), pos);
  437. }
  438. // string_view::find_first_of()
  439. //
  440. // Finds the first occurrence of any of the characters in `s` within the
  441. // `string_view`, returning the start position of the match, or `npos` if no
  442. // match was found.
  443. size_type find_first_of(string_view s, size_type pos = 0) const noexcept;
  444. // Overload of `string_view::find_first_of()` for finding a character `c`
  445. // within the `string_view`.
  446. size_type find_first_of(char c, size_type pos = 0) const noexcept {
  447. return find(c, pos);
  448. }
  449. // Overload of `string_view::find_first_of()` for finding a substring of a
  450. // different C-style string `s` within the `string_view`.
  451. size_type find_first_of(const char* s, size_type pos,
  452. size_type count) const {
  453. return find_first_of(string_view(s, count), pos);
  454. }
  455. // Overload of `string_view::find_first_of()` for finding a different C-style
  456. // string `s` within the `string_view`.
  457. size_type find_first_of(const char* s, size_type pos = 0) const {
  458. return find_first_of(string_view(s), pos);
  459. }
  460. // string_view::find_last_of()
  461. //
  462. // Finds the last occurrence of any of the characters in `s` within the
  463. // `string_view`, returning the start position of the match, or `npos` if no
  464. // match was found.
  465. size_type find_last_of(string_view s, size_type pos = npos) const noexcept;
  466. // Overload of `string_view::find_last_of()` for finding a character `c`
  467. // within the `string_view`.
  468. size_type find_last_of(char c, size_type pos = npos) const noexcept {
  469. return rfind(c, pos);
  470. }
  471. // Overload of `string_view::find_last_of()` for finding a substring of a
  472. // different C-style string `s` within the `string_view`.
  473. size_type find_last_of(const char* s, size_type pos, size_type count) const {
  474. return find_last_of(string_view(s, count), pos);
  475. }
  476. // Overload of `string_view::find_last_of()` for finding a different C-style
  477. // string `s` within the `string_view`.
  478. size_type find_last_of(const char* s, size_type pos = npos) const {
  479. return find_last_of(string_view(s), pos);
  480. }
  481. // string_view::find_first_not_of()
  482. //
  483. // Finds the first occurrence of any of the characters not in `s` within the
  484. // `string_view`, returning the start position of the first non-match, or
  485. // `npos` if no non-match was found.
  486. size_type find_first_not_of(string_view s, size_type pos = 0) const noexcept;
  487. // Overload of `string_view::find_first_not_of()` for finding a character
  488. // that is not `c` within the `string_view`.
  489. size_type find_first_not_of(char c, size_type pos = 0) const noexcept;
  490. // Overload of `string_view::find_first_not_of()` for finding a substring of a
  491. // different C-style string `s` within the `string_view`.
  492. size_type find_first_not_of(const char* s, size_type pos,
  493. size_type count) const {
  494. return find_first_not_of(string_view(s, count), pos);
  495. }
  496. // Overload of `string_view::find_first_not_of()` for finding a different
  497. // C-style string `s` within the `string_view`.
  498. size_type find_first_not_of(const char* s, size_type pos = 0) const {
  499. return find_first_not_of(string_view(s), pos);
  500. }
  501. // string_view::find_last_not_of()
  502. //
  503. // Finds the last occurrence of any of the characters not in `s` within the
  504. // `string_view`, returning the start position of the last non-match, or
  505. // `npos` if no non-match was found.
  506. size_type find_last_not_of(string_view s,
  507. size_type pos = npos) const noexcept;
  508. // Overload of `string_view::find_last_not_of()` for finding a character
  509. // that is not `c` within the `string_view`.
  510. size_type find_last_not_of(char c, size_type pos = npos) const noexcept;
  511. // Overload of `string_view::find_last_not_of()` for finding a substring of a
  512. // different C-style string `s` within the `string_view`.
  513. size_type find_last_not_of(const char* s, size_type pos,
  514. size_type count) const {
  515. return find_last_not_of(string_view(s, count), pos);
  516. }
  517. // Overload of `string_view::find_last_not_of()` for finding a different
  518. // C-style string `s` within the `string_view`.
  519. size_type find_last_not_of(const char* s, size_type pos = npos) const {
  520. return find_last_not_of(string_view(s), pos);
  521. }
  522. private:
  523. // The constructor from std::string delegates to this constructor.
  524. // See the comment on that constructor for the rationale.
  525. struct SkipCheckLengthTag {};
  526. string_view(const char* data, size_type len, SkipCheckLengthTag) noexcept
  527. : ptr_(data), length_(len) {}
  528. static constexpr size_type kMaxSize =
  529. (std::numeric_limits<difference_type>::max)();
  530. static constexpr size_type CheckLengthInternal(size_type len) {
  531. return ABSL_HARDENING_ASSERT(len <= kMaxSize), len;
  532. }
  533. static constexpr size_type StrlenInternal(const char* str) {
  534. #if defined(_MSC_VER) && _MSC_VER >= 1910 && !defined(__clang__)
  535. // MSVC 2017+ can evaluate this at compile-time.
  536. const char* begin = str;
  537. while (*str != '\0') ++str;
  538. return str - begin;
  539. #elif ABSL_HAVE_BUILTIN(__builtin_strlen) || \
  540. (defined(__GNUC__) && !defined(__clang__))
  541. // GCC has __builtin_strlen according to
  542. // https://gcc.gnu.org/onlinedocs/gcc-4.7.0/gcc/Other-Builtins.html, but
  543. // ABSL_HAVE_BUILTIN doesn't detect that, so we use the extra checks above.
  544. // __builtin_strlen is constexpr.
  545. return __builtin_strlen(str);
  546. #else
  547. return str ? strlen(str) : 0;
  548. #endif
  549. }
  550. static constexpr size_t Min(size_type length_a, size_type length_b) {
  551. return length_a < length_b ? length_a : length_b;
  552. }
  553. static constexpr int CompareImpl(size_type length_a, size_type length_b,
  554. int compare_result) {
  555. return compare_result == 0 ? static_cast<int>(length_a > length_b) -
  556. static_cast<int>(length_a < length_b)
  557. : (compare_result < 0 ? -1 : 1);
  558. }
  559. const char* ptr_;
  560. size_type length_;
  561. };
  562. // This large function is defined inline so that in a fairly common case where
  563. // one of the arguments is a literal, the compiler can elide a lot of the
  564. // following comparisons.
  565. constexpr bool operator==(string_view x, string_view y) noexcept {
  566. return x.size() == y.size() &&
  567. (x.empty() ||
  568. ABSL_INTERNAL_STRING_VIEW_MEMCMP(x.data(), y.data(), x.size()) == 0);
  569. }
  570. constexpr bool operator!=(string_view x, string_view y) noexcept {
  571. return !(x == y);
  572. }
  573. constexpr bool operator<(string_view x, string_view y) noexcept {
  574. return x.compare(y) < 0;
  575. }
  576. constexpr bool operator>(string_view x, string_view y) noexcept {
  577. return y < x;
  578. }
  579. constexpr bool operator<=(string_view x, string_view y) noexcept {
  580. return !(y < x);
  581. }
  582. constexpr bool operator>=(string_view x, string_view y) noexcept {
  583. return !(x < y);
  584. }
  585. // IO Insertion Operator
  586. std::ostream& operator<<(std::ostream& o, string_view piece);
  587. ABSL_NAMESPACE_END
  588. } // namespace absl
  589. #undef ABSL_INTERNAL_STRING_VIEW_CXX14_CONSTEXPR
  590. #undef ABSL_INTERNAL_STRING_VIEW_MEMCMP
  591. #endif // ABSL_USES_STD_STRING_VIEW
  592. namespace absl {
  593. ABSL_NAMESPACE_BEGIN
  594. // ClippedSubstr()
  595. //
  596. // Like `s.substr(pos, n)`, but clips `pos` to an upper bound of `s.size()`.
  597. // Provided because std::string_view::substr throws if `pos > size()`
  598. inline string_view ClippedSubstr(string_view s, size_t pos,
  599. size_t n = string_view::npos) {
  600. pos = (std::min)(pos, static_cast<size_t>(s.size()));
  601. return s.substr(pos, n);
  602. }
  603. // NullSafeStringView()
  604. //
  605. // Creates an `absl::string_view` from a pointer `p` even if it's null-valued.
  606. // This function should be used where an `absl::string_view` can be created from
  607. // a possibly-null pointer.
  608. constexpr string_view NullSafeStringView(const char* p) {
  609. return p ? string_view(p) : string_view();
  610. }
  611. ABSL_NAMESPACE_END
  612. } // namespace absl
  613. #endif // ABSL_STRINGS_STRING_VIEW_H_