This implements the StringView::find_all() method by re-implemeting the
current method existing for String in StringUtils, and using that
implementation for both String and StringView.
The rewrite uses memmem() instead of strstr(), so the String::find_all()
argument type has been changed from String to StringView, as the null
byte is no longer required.
This patch reimplements the StringView::find methods in StringUtils, so
they can also be used by String. The methods now also take an optional
start parameter, which moves their API in line with String's respective
methods.
This also implements a StringView::find_ast(char) method, which is
currently functionally equivalent to find_last_of(char). This is because
find_last_of(char) will be removed in a further commit.
We had two functions for doing mostly the same thing. Combine both
of them into String::find() and use that everywhere.
Also add some tests to cover basic behavior.
This allows everybody to create a String version of their number
in a arbitrary bijective base. Bijective base meaning that the mapping
doesn't have a 0. In the usual mapping to the alphabet the follower
after 'Z' is 'AA'.
The mapping using the (uppercase) alphabet is used as a standard but
can be overridden specifying 'base' and 'map'.
The code was directly yanked from the Spreadsheet.
SPDX License Identifiers are a more compact / standardized
way of representing file license information.
See: https://spdx.dev/resources/use/#identifiers
This was done with the `ambr` search and replace tool.
ambr --no-parent-ignore --key-from-file --rep-from-file key.txt rep.txt *
We had an unusual optimization in AK::StringView where constructing
a StringView from a String would cause it to remember the internal
StringImpl pointer of the String.
This was used to make constructing a String from a StringView fast
and copy-free.
I tried removing this optimization and indeed we started seeing a
ton of allocation traffic. However, all of it was due to a silly
pattern where functions would take a StringView and then go on
to create a String from it.
I've gone through most of the code and updated those functions to
simply take a String directly instead, which now makes this
optimization unnecessary, and indeed a source of bloat instead.
So, let's get rid of it and make StringView a little smaller. :^)
(...and ASSERT_NOT_REACHED => VERIFY_NOT_REACHED)
Since all of these checks are done in release builds as well,
let's rename them to VERIFY to prevent confusion, as everyone is
used to assertions being compiled out in release.
We can introduce a new ASSERT macro that is specifically for debug
checks, but I'm doing this wholesale conversion first since we've
accumulated thousands of these already, and it's not immediately
obvious which ones are suitable for ASSERT.
This is an improved version of WrapperGenerator's snake_name(), which
seems like the kind of thing that could be useful elsewhere but would
end up getting duplicated - so let's add this to AK::String instead,
like to_{lowercase,uppercase}().
Arbitrarily split up to make git bisect easier.
These unnecessary #include's were found by combining an automated tool (which
determined likely candidates) and some brain power (which decided whether
the #include is also semantically superfluous).
Problem:
- Many constructors are defined as `{}` rather than using the ` =
default` compiler-provided constructor.
- Some types provide an implicit conversion operator from `nullptr_t`
instead of requiring the caller to default construct. This violates
the C++ Core Guidelines suggestion to declare single-argument
constructors explicit
(https://isocpp.github.io/CppCoreGuidelines/CppCoreGuidelines#c46-by-default-declare-single-argument-constructors-explicit).
Solution:
- Change default constructors to use the compiler-provided default
constructor.
- Remove implicit conversion operators from `nullptr_t` and change
usage to enforce type consistency without conversion.
Use SFINAE to enforce the fact that it's supposed to only be called for
Arithmetic types, rather than counting on the linker to tell us that an
instantiation of String::number(my_arg) was not found. This also adds
String::number for floating point types as a side-effect.
This is a convenience API when you just want the rest of the string
starting at some index. We already had substring_view() in the same
flavor, so this is a complement to that.
With this commit, <AK/Format.h> has a more supportive role and isn't
used directly.
Essentially, there now is a public 'vformat' function ('v' for vector)
which takes already type erased parameters. The name is choosen to
indicate that this function behaves similar to C-style functions taking
a va_list equivalent.
The interface for frontend users are now 'String::formatted' and
'StringBuilder::appendff'.
This is a strcpy()-like method with actually sane semantics:
* It accepts a non-empty buffer along with its size in bytes.
* It copies as much of the string as fits into the buffer.
* It always null-terminates the result.
* It returns, as a non-discardable boolean, whether the whole string has been
copied.
Intended usage looks like this:
bool fits = string.copy_characters_to_buffer(buffer, sizeof(buffer));
and then either
if (!fits) {
fprintf(stderr, "The name does not fit!!11");
return nullptr;
}
or, if you're sure the buffer is large enough,
// I'm totally sure it fits because [reasons go here].
ASSERT(fits);
or if you're feeling extremely adventurous,
(void)fits;
but don't do that, please.
Get rid of the weird old signature:
- int StringType::to_int(bool& ok) const
And replace it with sensible new signature:
- Optional<int> StringType::to_int() const
FileSystemPath::has_extension was jumping through hoops and allocating
memory to do a case insensitive comparison needlessly. Extend the
existing String::ends_with method to allow the caller to specify the
case sensitivity required.
As suggested by @awesomekling in a code review and (initially) ignored
by me :^)
Implementation is roughly based on LibJS's trim_string(), but with a fix
for trimming all-whitespace strings.
This adds a replace functionality that replaces a string that contains
occurences of a "needle" by a "replacement" value. With "all_occurences"
enabled, all occurences are being replaced, otherwise only the first
occurence is being replaced.
Move the "fast memcpy" stuff out of StdLibExtras.h and into Memory.h.
This will break a ton of things that were relying on StdLibExtras.h
to include a bunch of other headers. Fix will follow immediately after.
This makes it possible to include StdLibExtras.h from Types.h, which is
the main point of this exercise.
You can now #include <AK/Forward.h> to get most of the AK types as
forward declarations.
Header dependency explosion is one of the main contributors to compile
times at the moment, so this is a step towards smaller include graphs.
Now that we're trying to be more portable, we can't only rely on using
i32/u32 and i64/u64 since different systems have different combinations
of int/long/long long and unsigned/unsigned long/unsigned long long.
As suggested by Joshua, this commit adds the 2-clause BSD license as a
comment block to the top of every source file.
For the first pass, I've just added myself for simplicity. I encourage
everyone to add themselves as copyright holders of any file they've
added or modified in some significant way. If I've added myself in
error somewhere, feel free to replace it with the appropriate copyright
holder instead.
Going forward, all new source files should include a license header.
If the last character was the separator and keep_empty is true, the
previous if statement would have already appended the last empty part,
so no need to do this again.
This was even more problematic, because the result of split_view() is
expected to consist of true substrings that are usable with the
StringView::substring_view_starting_*_substring() methods, not of
equal strings located elsewhere.
Fixes https://github.com/SerenityOS/serenity/issues/970
See https://github.com/SerenityOS/serenity/pull/938
Using int was a mistake. This patch changes String, StringImpl,
StringView and StringBuilder to use size_t instead of int for lengths.
Obviously a lot of code needs to change as a result of this.
This is just a wrapper around strstr() for now. There are many better
ways to search for a string within a string, but I'm just adding a nice
API at the moment. :^)
This kind of thing is a bit annoying. On Serenity, size_t is the same
size as u32, but not the same type. Because of "long" or whatever.
This patch makes String not complain about duplicate overloads.
This was a workaround to be able to build on case-insensitive file
systems where it might get confused about <string.h> vs <String.h>.
Let's just not support building that way, so String.h can have an
objectively nicer name. :^)
Instead of manually doing String::format("%d"/"%u") everywhere, let's have
a String API for this. It's just a wrapper around format() for now, but it
could be made more efficient in the future.
StringView character buffer is not guaranteed to be null-terminated;
in particular it will not be null-terminated when making a substring.
This means it is not correct to check whether we've reached the end
of a StringView by comparing the next character to null; instead, we
need to do an explicit length (or pointer) comparison.
This is a small change to the existing split() functionality to support
the case of splitting a string and stopping at a certain number of
tokens. This is useful for parsing e.g. key/value pairs, where the value
may contain the delimiter you're splitting on.
We should work towards a pattern where we take StringView as function
arguments, and store String as member, to push the String construction
to the last possible moment.
Also run it across the whole tree to get everything using the One True Style.
We don't yet run this in an automated fashion as it's a little slow, but
there is a snippet to do so in makeall.sh.
It's now possible to edit widget properties inline in the properties window.
We're currently relying on the basic GVariant conversion functions to do
all the "parsing" but that's not gonna be good enough.
You're never gonna be right 100% of the time when guessing how much buffer
space you need. This avoids having to make that type of decision in a bunch
of cases. :^)