Name

wcrtomb — convert a wide character to a multibyte sequence

Synopsis

#include <wchar.h>
size_t wcrtomb( char *  s,
  wchar_t   wc,
  mbstate_t *  ps);

DESCRIPTION

The main case for this function is when s is not NULL and wc is not L'\0'. In this case, the wcrtomb() function converts the wide character wc to its multibyte representation and stores it at the beginning of the character array pointed to by s. It updates the shift state *ps, and returns the length of said multibyte representation, that is, the number of bytes written at s.

A different case is when s is not NULL but wc is L'\0'. In this case the wcrtomb() function stores at the character array pointed to by s the shift sequence needed to bring *ps back to the initial state, followed by a '\0' byte. It updates the shift state *ps (i.e., brings it into the initial state), and returns the length of the shift sequence plus one, that is, the number of bytes written at s.

A third case is when s is NULL. In this case wc is ignored, and the function effectively returns wcrtomb(buf,L'\0',ps) where buf is an internal anonymous buffer.

In all of the above cases, if ps is a NULL pointer, a static anonymous state only known to the wcrtomb() function is used instead.

RETURN VALUE

The wcrtomb() function returns the number of bytes that have been or would have been written to the byte array at s. If wc can not be represented as a multibyte sequence (according to the current locale), (size_t) −1 is returned, and errno set to EILSEQ.

CONFORMING TO

C99.

NOTES

The behavior of wcrtomb() depends on the LC_CTYPE category of the current locale.

Passing NULL as ps is not multi-thread safe.

SEE ALSO

wcsrtombs(3)

COLOPHON

This page is part of release 2.79 of the Linux man-pages project. A description of the project, and information about reporting bugs, can be found at http://www.kernel.org/doc/man-pages/.


  Copyright (c) Bruno Haible <haibleclisp.cons.org>

This is free documentation; you can redistribute it and/or
modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as
published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of
the License, or (at your option) any later version.

References consulted:
  GNU glibc-2 source code and manual
  Dinkumware C library reference http://www.dinkumware.com/
  OpenGroup's Single Unix specification http://www.UNIX-systems.org/online.html
  ISO/IEC 9899:1999