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authorSebastian Holtermann <sebholt@xwmw.org>2019-08-22 16:34:40 +0200
committerSebastian Holtermann <sebholt@xwmw.org>2019-08-22 16:38:10 +0200
commit9b334397f55b70689ff1d8f7d6767a34834e85b6 (patch)
treebc33e4dc90eef2c351e278219bc9743d40af632c /.clang-format
parent130dbe4a5d49baa4404a399860bd3a6182783ece (diff)
downloadcmake-9b334397f55b70689ff1d8f7d6767a34834e85b6.tar.gz
Source sweep: Use cmStrCat for string concatenation
This patch is generated by a python script that uses regular expressions to search for string concatenation patterns of the kind ``` std::string str = <ARG0>; str += <ARG1>; str += <ARG2>; ... ``` and replaces them with a single `cmStrCat` call ``` std::string str = cmStrCat(<ARG0>, <ARG1>, <ARG2>, ...); ``` If any `<ARGX>` is itself a concatenated string of the kind ``` a + b + c + ...; ``` then `<ARGX>` is split into multiple arguments for the `cmStrCat` call. If there's a sequence of literals in the `<ARGX>`, then all literals in the sequence are concatenated and merged into a single literal argument for the `cmStrCat` call. Single character strings are converted to single char arguments for the `cmStrCat` call. `std::to_string(...)` wrappings are removed from `cmStrCat` arguments, because it supports numeric types as well as string types. `arg.substr(x)` arguments to `cmStrCat` are replaced with `cm::string_view(arg).substr(x)`
Diffstat (limited to '.clang-format')
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