StrBuf::Append( const char * )
Append a null-terminated string to a StrBuf
. The string is
logically appended to the string pointed to by the StrBuf
's
buffer
.
Virtual? |
No |
|
Class |
||
Arguments |
|
pointer to the first byte of the null-terminated string |
Returns |
|
Notes
The StrBuf
's length
is incremented by the
number of bytes prior to the first null byte in the string.
If the memory for the StrBuf
's buffer
is not
large enough, new memory to contiguously contain the results of appending
the null-terminated string is allocated. If new memory is allocated, the
old memory is freed. Any memory allocated is separate from the memory for
the string.
Example
int main( int argc, char **argv ) { char chars[] = "zy"; StrBuf sb; sb.Set( "xyz" ); cout << "sb.Text() prior to sb.Append( chars ) returns "; cout << "\"" << sb.Text() << "\"\n"; cout << "sb.Length() prior to sb.Append( chars ) returns "; cout << sb.Length() << "\n\n"; sb.Append( chars ); // append char * to StrBuf cout << "sb.Text() after sb.Append( chars ) returns "; cout << "\"" << sb.Text() << "\"\n"; cout << "sb.Length() after sb.Append( chars ) returns "; cout << sb.Length() << "\n"; }
Executing the preceding code produces the following output:
sb.Text() prior to sb.Append( chars ) returns "xyz" sb.Length() prior to sb.Append( chars ) returns 3 sb.Text() after sb.Append( chars ) returns "xyzzy" sb.Length() after sb.Append( chars ) returns 5