|
ADC Home > Reference Library > Reference > Mac OS X > Mac OS X Man Pages
|
|
This document is a Mac OS X manual page. Manual pages are a command-line technology for providing documentation. You can view these manual pages locally using the man(1) command. These manual pages come from many different sources, and thus, have a variety of writing styles. For more information about the manual page format, see the manual page for manpages(5). |
STRTOK(3) BSD Library Functions Manual STRTOK(3)
NAME
strtok, strtok_r -- string tokens
LIBRARY
Standard C Library (libc, -lc)
SYNOPSIS
#include <string.h>
char *
strtok(char *restrict str, const char *restrict sep);
char *
strtok_r(char *restrict str, const char *restrict sep,
char **restrict lasts);
DESCRIPTION
This interface is obsoleted by strsep(3).
The strtok() function is used to isolate sequential tokens in a null-ter-minated null-terminated
minated string, str. These tokens are separated in the string by at
least one of the characters in sep. The first time that strtok() is
called, str should be specified; subsequent calls, wishing to obtain fur-ther further
ther tokens from the same string, should pass a null pointer instead.
The separator string, sep, must be supplied each time, and may change
between calls.
The implementation will behave as if no library function calls strtok().
The strtok_r() function is a reentrant version of strtok(). The context
pointer last must be provided on each call. The strtok_r() function may
also be used to nest two parsing loops within one another, as long as
separate context pointers are used.
The strtok() and strtok_r() functions return a pointer to the beginning
of each subsequent token in the string, after replacing the token itself
with a NUL character. When no more tokens remain, a null pointer is
returned.
EXAMPLES
The following uses strtok_r() to parse two strings using separate con-texts: contexts:
texts:
char test[80], blah[80];
char *sep = "\\/:;=-";
char *word, *phrase, *brkt, *brkb;
strcpy(test, "This;is.a:test:of=the/string\\tokenizer-function.");
for (word = strtok_r(test, sep, &brkt);
word;
word = strtok_r(NULL, sep, &brkt))
{
strcpy(blah, "blah:blat:blab:blag");
for (phrase = strtok_r(blah, sep, &brkb);
phrase;
phrase = strtok_r(NULL, sep, &brkb))
{
printf("So far we're at %s:%s\n", word, phrase);
}
}
SEE ALSO
memchr(3), strchr(3), strcspn(3), strpbrk(3), strrchr(3), strsep(3),
strspn(3), strstr(3), wcstok(3)
STANDARDS
The strtok() function conforms to ISO/IEC 9899:1990 (``ISO C90'').
BUGS
The System V strtok(), if handed a string containing only delimiter char-acters, characters,
acters, will not alter the next starting point, so that a call to
strtok() with a different (or empty) delimiter string may return a
non-NULL value. Since this implementation always alters the next start-ing starting
ing point, such a sequence of calls would always return NULL.
AUTHORS
Wes Peters, Softweyr LLC: <wes@softweyr.com>
Based on the FreeBSD 3.0 implementation.
BSD November 27, 1998 BSD
|