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std::basic_string_view::data(3) | C++ Standard Libary | std::basic_string_view::data(3) |
NAME¶
std::basic_string_view::data - std::basic_string_view::data
Synopsis¶
constexpr const_pointer data() const noexcept; (since C++17)
Returns a pointer to the underlying character array. The pointer is such that
the
range [data(), data() + size()) is valid and the values in it correspond to
the
values of the view.
Parameters¶
(none)
Return value¶
A pointer to the underlying character array.
Complexity¶
Constant.
Notes¶
Unlike std::basic_string::data() and string literals,
std::basic_string_view::data()
returns a pointer to a buffer that is not necessarily null-terminated, for
example a
substring view (e.g. from remove_suffix). Therefore, it is typically a
mistake to
pass data() to a routine that takes just a const CharT* and expects a
null-terminated string.
Example¶
// Run this code
#include <cstring>
#include <cwchar>
#include <iostream>
#include <string>
#include <string_view>
int main()
{
std::wstring_view wcstr_v = L"xyzzy";
std::cout << std::wcslen(wcstr_v.data()) << '\n';
// OK: the underlying character array is null-terminated
char array[3] = {'B', 'a', 'r'};
std::string_view array_v(array, sizeof array);
// std::cout << std::strlen(array_v.data()) << '\n';
// error: the underlying character array is not null-terminated
std::string str(array_v.data(), array_v.size()); // OK
std::cout << std::strlen(str.data()) << '\n';
// OK: the underlying character array of a std::string is always
null-terminated
}
Output:¶
5
3
See also¶
front accesses the first character
(public member function)
back accesses the last character
(public member function)
data returns a pointer to the first character of a string
(public member function of
std::basic_string<CharT,Traits,Allocator>)
2024.06.10 | http://cppreference.com |