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).



RUNE(3)                  BSD Library Functions Manual                  RUNE(3)

NAME
     setrunelocale, setinvalidrune, sgetrune, sputrune, fgetrune, fungetrune, fputrune -- rune support for C

LIBRARY
     Standard C Library (libc, -lc)

SYNOPSIS
     #include <rune.h>
     #include <errno.h>

     int
     setrunelocale(char *locale);

     void
     setinvalidrune(rune_t rune);

     rune_t
     sgetrune(const char *string, size_t n, char const **result);

     int
     sputrune(rune_t rune, char *string, size_t n, char **result);

     #include <stdio.h>

     long
     fgetrune(FILE *stream);

     int
     fungetrune(rune_t rune, FILE *stream);

     int
     fputrune(rune_t rune, FILE *stream);

DESCRIPTION
     The 4.4BSD ``rune'' functions have been deprecated in favour of the ISO C99 extended multibyte and wide
     character facilities and should not be used in new applications.  Consider using setlocale(3),
     mbrtowc(3), wcrtomb(3), fgetwc(3), ungetwc(3), and fputwc(3) instead.

     The setrunelocale() controls the type of encoding used to represent runes as multibyte strings as well
     as the properties of the runes as defined in <ctype.h>.  The locale argument indicates which locale to
     load.  If the locale is successfully loaded, 0 is returned, otherwise an errno value is returned to
     indicate the type of error.

     The setinvalidrune() function sets the value of the global value _INVALID_RUNE to be rune.

     The sgetrune() function tries to read a single multibyte character from string, which is at most n
     bytes long.  If sgetrune() is successful, the rune is returned.  If result is not NULL, *result will
     point to the first byte which was not converted in string.  If the first n bytes of string do not
     describe a full multibyte character, _INVALID_RUNE is returned and *result will point to string.  If
     there is an encoding error at the start of string, _INVALID_RUNE is returned and *result will point to
     the second character of string.

     the sputrune() function tries to encode rune as a multibyte string and store it at string, but no more
     than n bytes will be stored.  If result is not NULL, *result will be set to point to the first byte in
     string following the new multibyte character.  If string is NULL, *result will point to (char *)0 + x,
     where x is the number of bytes that would be needed to store the multibyte value.  If the multibyte
     character would consist of more than n bytes and result is not NULL, *result will be set to NULL.  In
     all cases, sputrune() will return the number of bytes which would be needed to store rune as a multi-byte multibyte
     byte character.

     The fgetrune() function operates the same as sgetrune() with the exception that it attempts to read
     enough bytes from stream to decode a single rune.  It returns either EOF on end of file, _INVALID_RUNE
     on an encoding error, or the rune decoded if all went well.

     The fungetrune() function pushes the multibyte encoding, as provided by sputrune(), of rune onto stream
     such that the next fgetrune() call will return rune.  It returns EOF if it fails and 0 on success.

     The fputrune() function writes the multibyte encoding of rune, as provided by sputrune(), onto stream.
     It returns EOF on failure and 0 on success.

RETURN VALUES
     The setrunelocale() function returns one of the following values:

     0                  The setrunelocale() function was successful.

     [EINVAL]           The locale name was incorrect.

     [ENOENT]           The locale could not be found.

     [EFTYPE]           The file found was not a valid file.

     The sgetrune() function either returns the rune read or _INVALID_RUNE.  The sputrune() function returns
     the number of bytes needed to store rune as a multibyte string.

FILES
     $PATH_LOCALE/locale/LC_CTYPE
     /usr/share/locale/locale/LC_CTYPE  binary LC_CTYPE file for the locale locale.

SEE ALSO
     mbrune(3), setlocale(3), euc(4), utf2(4), utf8(5)

HISTORY
     These functions first appeared in 4.4BSD.

     The setrunelocale() function and the other non-ANSI rune functions were inspired by Plan 9 from Bell
     Labs.

BSD                             October 6, 2002                            BSD

Did this document help you?
Yes: Tell us what works for you.
It’s good, but: Report typos, inaccuracies, and so forth.
It wasn’t helpful: Tell us what would have helped.