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Diffstat (limited to 'ACE/docs/wchar.txt')
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diff --git a/ACE/docs/wchar.txt b/ACE/docs/wchar.txt deleted file mode 100644 index 14c0d9e5ce0..00000000000 --- a/ACE/docs/wchar.txt +++ /dev/null @@ -1,128 +0,0 @@ -/** -@page wchar Wide Character/Unicode support in ACE - -Here's a first stab at some sort of documentation for the magic -wide-character (wchar) stuff in ACE. It should be possible to compile -ACE with wchar support on most platforms that ACE runs on. In some -cases, we don't enable wchar support by default since it increases the -footprint a bit. If you run into any problems, please use the -$ACE_ROOT/PROBLEM-REPORT-FORM to let us know. - -@subsection wchar_overview Overview - -There are three different wchar configurations that ACE can use. These are -no support mode, regular support mode, and full support mode (well, those are -the best names I can come up with for now). - -@subsection wchar_nosupport No Support - -By default, ACE will not use wchar_t at all. This is for platforms where -wchar_t does not exist or support for it is pretty flakey. - -@subsection wchar_regular Regular Support - -If ACE_HAS_WCHAR is defined, then ACE classes will be expanded to have extra -methods which take in wchar_t strings. Note that all the methods available -with No Support are also available here. This is the default in Windows -right now, and has been tested to work on Linux and VxWorks (well, only been -tested to compile/link of VxWorks). - -@subsection wchar_full Full Support - -Full support is turned on if ACE_HAS_WCHAR and ACE_USES_WCHAR are defined. -Like Regular Support, both char and wchar_t versions of some methods are -available, but unlike Regular Support, other methods that have char arguments -or return values may have wchar_t arguments or return values. - -This has only been tested in Windows, and is the default for Windows CE. - -@subsection wchar_othermacros Other Important Macros - -In addition to the ACE_HAS_WCHAR and ACE_USES_WCHAR mentioned above, there -are several other macros that are important when using wide character support -in ACE. - -These other macros are used in code to conditionally switch between char and -wchar_t. ACE_TCHAR is a char normally and wchar_t when ACE_USES_WCHAR is -defined. ACE_TEXT ("foo") expands to "foo" normally and L"foo" when -ACE_USES_WCHAR is defined. - -ACE_TEXT_CHAR_TO_TCHAR and ACE_TEXT_WCHAR_TO_TCHAR are used when a string -that is always a char or wchar_t string needs to be converted to a ACE_TCHAR -string. On the same note, ACE_TEXT_ALWAYS_CHAR is used when a string is -ACE_TCHAR * and needs to be a char * string. - -ACE_TEXT_WIDE ("foo") is unique in that it always maps to L"foo". It is not -a conditional macro. - -For string constants in code, ACE_TEXT and ACE_LIB_TEXT are used to put the -Unicode prefix (Usually 'L') before the string when needed. By default both -are controlled by ACE_USES_WCHAR. - -All ACE code except for the ACE library should use ACE_TEXT. ACE_LIB_TEXT -was introduced as a short-term fix for backwards compatibility purposes. -This allows ACE_TEXT to be overriden to act just like TEXT in Microsoft -Windows while not affecting ACE's interface. In the future ACE_LIB_TEXT and -this backwards compatibility will be deprecated and removed. - -Finally, on Windows there are a bunch of ACE_TEXT_Apicall type macros which -are used to choose the correct version of a Win32 API function depending on -ACE_USES_WCHAR. I'm hoping to remove these by adding a new ACE_OS_Win32 -class to perform the same task, but until then these ugly macros get the job -done. - -@subsection wchar_logmsg ACE_Log_Msg support - -One of the more troublesome aspect of supporting wide and Ansi strings is -the fact that the format strings for ACE_DEBUG and family always had to have -ACE_TEXT (or ACE_LIB_TEXT) around them. - -Now this should not be the case, since ACE_Log_Msg was extended to support -both types of format strings concurrently. This is okay, but when strings -are printed out via the format_string, care has to be taken. - -It is interesting how Unix and Windows treats the format specifiers -differently, based on their history. Win32 uses %s, %c, %S and %C, whereas -Linux seems to use %s, %c, %ls, and %lc. And they even treat %s and %c -differently. The route ACE takes is a bit of a mixture of both: - -- %c: prints out an Ansi character -- %C: prints out an Ansi string -- %s: prints out an ACE_TCHAR string -- %w: prints out a Wide character -- %W: prints out a Wide string - -An example, which will also function correctly even when ACE_USES_WCHAR is -defined: - -@verbatim -void print (char *a_str, wchar_t *w_str, ACE_TCHAR *t_str) -{ - ACE_DEBUG ((LM_DEBUG, - "%C %s %W\n", - a_str, - t_str, - w_str)); -} -@endverbatim - -@subsection wchar_win32macros Relation to Win32's UNICODE and _UNICODE macros - -It used to be that in previous versions of ACE that the Win32 macros affected -ACE in some way. This has been all removed in favor of the ACE_USES_WCHAR -and ACE_HAS_WCHAR macros. Along with this, the definition of some of the -Win32 string types (LPTSTR, LPCSTR, etc.) have been also removed. Since this -isn't a direct concern of ACE, they will have to be defined separately if -they are needed on non-Win32 platforms. - -The way I'd recommend doing this is to add the typdefs to config.h. - -@subsection wchar_legacy Legacy Support - -Most of the old macros (ACE_HAS_UNICODE, ACE_HAS_MOSTLY_UNICODE_APIS) are -ignored by default by ACE, since the new macros replaced them. If -ACE_LEGACY_MODE is defined, there is an attempt to map them to the new scheme -by just ACE_HAS_UNICODE == ACE_HAS_WCHAR and ACE_HAS_MOSTLY_UNICODE_APIS == -ACE_USES_WCHAR. - -*/ |