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std::basic_string::c_str(3) | C++ Standard Libary | std::basic_string::c_str(3) |
NAME¶
std::basic_string::c_str - std::basic_string::c_str
Synopsis¶
const CharT* c_str() const; (noexcept since C++11)
(constexpr since C++20)
Returns a pointer to a null-terminated character array with data equivalent
to those
stored in the string.
The pointer is such that the range [c_str(), c_str() + size()] is valid and
the
values in it correspond to the values stored in the string with an additional
null
character after the last position.
The pointer obtained from c_str() may be invalidated by:
* Passing a non-const reference to the string to any standard library
function, or
* Calling non-const member functions on the string
, excluding operator[], at(), front(), back(), begin(), rbegin(), end() and
rend()
(since C++11).
Writing to the character array accessed through c_str() is undefined
behavior.
c_str() and data() perform the same function. (since C++11)
Parameters¶
(none)
Return value¶
Pointer to the underlying character storage.
c_str()[i] == operator[](i) for every i in [0, size()). (until C++11)
c_str() + i == std::addressof(operator[](i)) for every i in (since
C++11)
[0, size()].
Complexity¶
Constant.
Notes¶
The pointer obtained from c_str() may only be treated as a
pointer to a
null-terminated character string if the string object does not contain other
null
characters.
Example¶
// Run this code
#include <algorithm>
#include <cassert>
#include <cstring>
#include <string>
extern "C" void c_func(const char* c_str)
{
printf("c_func called with '%s'\n", c_str);
}
int main()
{
std::string const s("Emplary");
const char* p = s.c_str();
assert(s.size() == std::strlen(p));
assert(std::equal(s.begin(), s.end(), p));
assert(std::equal(p, p + s.size(), s.begin()));
assert('\0' == *(p + s.size()));
c_func(s.c_str());
}
Output:¶
c_func called with 'Emplary'
See also¶
front accesses the first character
(DR*) (public member function)
back accesses the last character
(DR*) (public member function)
data returns a pointer to the first character of a string
(public member function)
2024.06.10 | http://cppreference.com |