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9441cfe488
- This also shortens the Format.h implementation, and uses the print buffer fully (it was wasting a character). - This manifested as llvm-test failures, because one side effect was that raw_ostream would write garbage '\x00' values into the output stream if it happened that the string was at the end of the buffer. This meant that grep would report 'Binary file matches', which meant the silly pattern matching llvm-test eventually does would fail. Cute. :) git-svn-id: https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/llvm/trunk@79862 91177308-0d34-0410-b5e6-96231b3b80d8
149 lines
5.2 KiB
C++
149 lines
5.2 KiB
C++
//===- Format.h - Efficient printf-style formatting for streams -*- C++ -*-===//
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//
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// The LLVM Compiler Infrastructure
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//
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// This file is distributed under the University of Illinois Open Source
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// License. See LICENSE.TXT for details.
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//
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//===----------------------------------------------------------------------===//
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//
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// This file implements the format() function, which can be used with other
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// LLVM subsystems to provide printf-style formatting. This gives all the power
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// and risk of printf. This can be used like this (with raw_ostreams as an
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// example):
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//
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// OS << "mynumber: " << format("%4.5f", 1234.412) << '\n';
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//
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// Or if you prefer:
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//
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// OS << format("mynumber: %4.5f\n", 1234.412);
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//
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//===----------------------------------------------------------------------===//
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#ifndef LLVM_SUPPORT_FORMAT_H
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#define LLVM_SUPPORT_FORMAT_H
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#include <cstdio>
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#ifdef WIN32
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#define snprintf _snprintf
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#endif
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namespace llvm {
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/// format_object_base - This is a helper class used for handling formatted
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/// output. It is the abstract base class of a templated derived class.
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class format_object_base {
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protected:
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const char *Fmt;
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virtual void home(); // Out of line virtual method.
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/// snprint - Call snprintf() for this object, on the given buffer and size.
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virtual int snprint(char *Buffer, unsigned BufferSize) const = 0;
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public:
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format_object_base(const char *fmt) : Fmt(fmt) {}
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virtual ~format_object_base() {}
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/// print - Format the object into the specified buffer. On success, this
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/// returns the length of the formatted string. If the buffer is too small,
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/// this returns a length to retry with, which will be larger than BufferSize.
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unsigned print(char *Buffer, unsigned BufferSize) const {
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assert(BufferSize && "Invalid buffer size!");
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// Print the string, leaving room for the terminating null.
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int N = snprint(Buffer, BufferSize);
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// VC++ and old GlibC return negative on overflow, just double the size.
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if (N < 0)
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return BufferSize*2;
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// Other impls yield number of bytes needed, not including the final '\0'.
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if (unsigned(N) >= BufferSize)
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return N+1;
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// Otherwise N is the length of output (not including the final '\0').
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return N;
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}
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};
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/// format_object1 - This is a templated helper class used by the format
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/// function that captures the object to be formated and the format string. When
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/// actually printed, this synthesizes the string into a temporary buffer
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/// provided and returns whether or not it is big enough.
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template <typename T>
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class format_object1 : public format_object_base {
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T Val;
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public:
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format_object1(const char *fmt, const T &val)
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: format_object_base(fmt), Val(val) {
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}
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virtual int snprint(char *Buffer, unsigned BufferSize) const {
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return snprintf(Buffer, BufferSize, Fmt, Val);
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}
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};
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/// format_object2 - This is a templated helper class used by the format
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/// function that captures the object to be formated and the format string. When
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/// actually printed, this synthesizes the string into a temporary buffer
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/// provided and returns whether or not it is big enough.
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template <typename T1, typename T2>
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class format_object2 : public format_object_base {
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T1 Val1;
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T2 Val2;
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public:
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format_object2(const char *fmt, const T1 &val1, const T2 &val2)
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: format_object_base(fmt), Val1(val1), Val2(val2) {
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}
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virtual int snprint(char *Buffer, unsigned BufferSize) const {
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return snprintf(Buffer, BufferSize, Fmt, Val1, Val2);
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}
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};
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/// format_object3 - This is a templated helper class used by the format
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/// function that captures the object to be formated and the format string. When
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/// actually printed, this synthesizes the string into a temporary buffer
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/// provided and returns whether or not it is big enough.
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template <typename T1, typename T2, typename T3>
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class format_object3 : public format_object_base {
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T1 Val1;
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T2 Val2;
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T3 Val3;
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public:
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format_object3(const char *fmt, const T1 &val1, const T2 &val2,const T3 &val3)
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: format_object_base(fmt), Val1(val1), Val2(val2), Val3(val3) {
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}
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virtual int snprint(char *Buffer, unsigned BufferSize) const {
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return snprintf(Buffer, BufferSize, Fmt, Val1, Val2, Val3);
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}
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};
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/// format - This is a helper function that is used to produce formatted output.
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/// This is typically used like: OS << format("%0.4f", myfloat) << '\n';
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template <typename T>
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inline format_object1<T> format(const char *Fmt, const T &Val) {
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return format_object1<T>(Fmt, Val);
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}
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/// format - This is a helper function that is used to produce formatted output.
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/// This is typically used like: OS << format("%0.4f", myfloat) << '\n';
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template <typename T1, typename T2>
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inline format_object2<T1, T2> format(const char *Fmt, const T1 &Val1,
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const T2 &Val2) {
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return format_object2<T1, T2>(Fmt, Val1, Val2);
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}
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/// format - This is a helper function that is used to produce formatted output.
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/// This is typically used like: OS << format("%0.4f", myfloat) << '\n';
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template <typename T1, typename T2, typename T3>
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inline format_object3<T1, T2, T3> format(const char *Fmt, const T1 &Val1,
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const T2 &Val2, const T3 &Val3) {
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return format_object3<T1, T2, T3>(Fmt, Val1, Val2, Val3);
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}
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} // end namespace llvm
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#endif
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