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Command: mbrlen | Section: 3 | Source: OpenBSD | File: mbrlen.3
MBRLEN(3) FreeBSD Library Functions Manual MBRLEN(3)
NAME
mbrlen - get number of bytes in a multibyte character (restartable)
SYNOPSIS
#include <wchar.h>
size_t
mbrlen(const char * restrict s, size_t n, mbstate_t * restrict ps);
DESCRIPTION
The mbrlen() function returns the number of bytes in the first multibyte
character of the multibyte string s. It examines at most the first n
bytes of s.
mbrlen() is equivalent to the following call, except that ps is evaluated
only once:
mbrtowc(NULL, s, n, (ps != NULL) ? ps : &internal);
Here, internal is an internal state object automatically initialized to
the initial conversion state at startup time of the program.
In state-dependent encodings, s may point to special sequence bytes
changing the shift state. Although such sequence bytes correspond to no
wide character, they affect the conversion state object pointed to by ps,
and mbrlen() treats the special sequence bytes as if they were part of
the subsequent multibyte character.
Unlike mblen(3), mbrlen() accepts the byte sequence if it is not a
complete character but the initial part of some valid character. In this
case, this function accepts all such bytes and saves them into the
conversion state object pointed to by ps. They will be used on
subsequent calls of this function to restart the conversion suspended.
The behaviour of mbrlen() is affected by the LC_CTYPE category of the
current locale.
There are the special cases:
s == NULL mbrlen() sets the conversion state object pointed to by ps to
the initial conversion state and always returns 0. Unlike
mblen(3), the value returned does not indicate whether the
current encoding of the locale is state-dependent.
In this case, mbrlen() ignores n.
n == 0 In this case, the first n bytes of s never form a complete
character. Thus, mbrlen() always returns (size_t)-2.
ps == NULL mbrlen() uses its own internal state object to keep the
conversion state instead of the ps argument.
Calling any other function in libc never changes the internal
state of mbrlen(), except for calling setlocale(3) with an
LC_CTYPE that differs from the current locale. Such
setlocale(3) calls cause the internal state of this function
to become indeterminate.
RETURN VALUES
The mbrlen() function returns:
0 s points to a NUL byte (`\0').
positive The value returned is the number of bytes in the valid
multibyte character pointed to by s. There are no cases
where this value is greater than n or the value of the
MB_CUR_MAX macro.
(size_t)-2 The first n bytes of s contain an incomplete multibyte
character that can potentially be completed by reading more
bytes. When n is at least MB_CUR_MAX, this can only occur if
s contains a redundant shift sequence.
(size_t)-1 s points to an illegal byte sequence which does not form a
valid multibyte character. In this case, mbrtowc() sets
errno to indicate the error.
ERRORS
mbrlen() may cause an error in the following cases:
[EILSEQ] s points to an invalid multibyte character.
[EINVAL] ps points to an invalid or uninitialized mbstate_t
object.
SEE ALSO
mblen(3), mbrtowc(3), setlocale(3)
STANDARDS
The mbrlen() function conforms to ISO/IEC 9899/AMD1:1995 ("ISO C90,
Amendment 1"). The restrict qualifier is added at ISO/IEC 9899/1999
("ISO C99").
FreeBSD 14.1-RELEASE-p8 March 29, 2022 FreeBSD 14.1-RELEASE-p8