wcstok man page on Kali

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

NAME
       wcstok - split wide-character string into tokens

SYNOPSIS
       #include <wchar.h>

       wchar_t *wcstok(wchar_t *wcs, const wchar_t *delim, wchar_t **ptr);

DESCRIPTION
       The wcstok() function is the wide-character equivalent of the strtok(3)
       function, with an added argument to make it multithread-safe.   It  can
       be used to split a wide-character string wcs into tokens, where a token
       is defined as a	substring  not	containing  any	 wide-characters  from
       delim.

       The  search  starts  at	wcs, if wcs is not NULL, or at *ptr, if wcs is
       NULL.  First, any delimiter wide-characters are skipped, that  is,  the
       pointer	is  advanced  beyond any wide-characters which occur in delim.
       If the end of  the  wide-character  string  is  now  reached,  wcstok()
       returns	NULL,  to  indicate  that  no tokens were found, and stores an
       appropriate value in *ptr, so that subsequent calls  to	wcstok()  will
       continue	 to  return NULL.  Otherwise, the wcstok() function recognizes
       the beginning of a token and returns a pointer to it, but before	 doing
       that, it zero-terminates the token by replacing the next wide-character
       which occurs in delim with  a  null  wide  character  (L'\0'),  and  it
       updates *ptr so that subsequent calls will continue searching after the
       end of recognized token.

RETURN VALUE
       The wcstok() function returns a pointer to the next token, or  NULL  if
       no further token was found.

ATTRIBUTES
       For   an	  explanation	of   the  terms	 used  in  this	 section,  see
       attributes(7).

       ┌──────────┬───────────────┬─────────┐
       │Interface │ Attribute	  │ Value   │
       ├──────────┼───────────────┼─────────┤
       │wcstok()  │ Thread safety │ MT-Safe │
       └──────────┴───────────────┴─────────┘
CONFORMING TO
       POSIX.1-2001, POSIX.1-2008, C99.

NOTES
       The original wcs wide-character string is destructively modified during
       the operation.

EXAMPLE
       The  following code loops over the tokens contained in a wide-character
       string.

       wchar_t *wcs = ...;
       wchar_t *token;
       wchar_t *state;
       for (token = wcstok(wcs, " \t\n", &state);
	   token != NULL;
	   token = wcstok(NULL, " \t\n", &state)) {
	   ...
       }

SEE ALSO
       strtok(3), wcschr(3)

COLOPHON
       This page is part of release 4.14 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				  2015-08-08			     WCSTOK(3)
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