MBRLEN(3) OpenBSD Programmer's Manual MBRLEN(3)NAMEmbrlen - get number of bytes in a multibyte character (restartable)
SYNOPSIS
#include <wchar.h>
size_t
mbrlen(const char * restrict s, size_t n, mbstate_t * restrict ps);
DESCRIPTION
The mbrlen() function usually determines the number of bytes in a
multibyte character pointed to by s and returns it. This function shall
only examine max n bytes of the array beginning from s.
mbrlen() is equivalent to the following call (except ps is evaluated only
once):
mbrtowc(NULL, s, n, (ps != NULL) ? ps : &internal);
Here, internal is an internal state object.
In state-dependent encodings, s may point to the special sequence bytes
to change the shift-state. Although such sequence bytes corresponds to
no individual wide-character code, these affect the conversion state
object pointed to by ps, and the mbrlen() treats the special sequence
bytes as if these are a part of the subsequent multibyte character.
Unlike mblen(3), mbrlen() may accept the byte sequence when it is not a
complete character but possibly contains part of a valid character. In
this case, this function will accept all such bytes and save them into
the conversion state object pointed to by ps. They will be used on
subsequent calls of this function to restart the conversion suspended.
The behaviour of the mbrlen() is affected by LC_CTYPE category of the
current locale.
There are the special cases:
s == NULL mbrlen() sets the conversion state object pointed to by ps to
an initial state and always returns 0. Unlike mblen(3), the
value returned does not indicate whether the current encoding
of the locale is state-dependent.
In this case, mbrlen() ignores n.
n == 0 In this case, the first n bytes of the array pointed to by s
never form a complete character. Thus, mbrlen() always
returns (size_t)-2.
ps == NULL mbrlen() uses its own internal state object to keep the
conversion state, instead of ps mentioned in this manual
page.
Calling any other functions in libc never change the internal
state of mbrlen(), except for calling setlocale(3) with a
changing LC_CTYPE category of the current locale. Such
setlocale(3) calls cause the internal state of this function
to be indeterminate. This internal state is initialized at
startup time of the program.
RETURN VALUES
The mbrlen() returns:
0 s points to a null byte (`\0').
positive The value returned is a number of bytes for the valid
multibyte character pointed to by s. There are no cases
where this value is greater than n or the value of the
MB_CUR_MAX macro.
(size_t)-2 s points to the byte sequence which possibly contains part of
a valid multibyte character, but which is incomplete. When n
is at least MB_CUR_MAX can only occur if the array pointed to
by s contains a redundant shift sequence.
(size_t)-1 s points to an illegal byte sequence which does not form a
valid multibyte character. In this case, mbrtowc() sets
errno to indicate the error.
ERRORSmbrlen() may cause an error in the following cases:
[EILSEQ] s points to an invalid multibyte character.
[EINVAL] ps points to an invalid or uninitialized mbstate_t object.
SEE ALSOmblen(3), mbrtowc(3), setlocale(3)STANDARDS
The mbrlen() function conforms to ISO/IEC 9899/AMD1:1995 (``ISO C90,
Amendment 1''). The restrict qualifier is added at ISO/IEC 9899/1999
(``ISO C99'').
OpenBSD 4.9 November 9, 2009 OpenBSD 4.9