wcschr
From cppreference.com
Defined in header <wchar.h>
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wchar_t *wcschr( const wchar_t *str, wchar_t ch ); |
(1) | (since C95) |
/*QWchar_t*/ *wcschr( /*QWchar_t*/ *str, wchar_t ch ); |
(2) | (since C23) |
1) Finds the first occurrence of the wide character
ch
in the wide string pointed to by str
.2) Type-generic function equivalent to (1). Let
T
be an unqualified wide character object type.
- If
str
is of type const T*, the return type is const wchar_t*. - Otherwise, if
str
is of type T*, the return type is wchar_t*. - Otherwise, the behavior is undefined.
- If
Parameters
str | - | pointer to the null-terminated wide string to be analyzed |
ch | - | wide character to search for |
Return value
Pointer to the found character in str
, or a null pointer if no such character is found.
Example
Run this code
#include <wchar.h> #include <stdio.h> #include <locale.h> int main(void) { wchar_t arr[] = L"白猫 黒猫 кошки"; wchar_t *cat = wcschr(arr, L'猫'); wchar_t *dog = wcschr(arr, L'犬'); setlocale(LC_ALL, "en_US.utf8"); if(cat) printf("The character 猫 found at position %td\n", cat-arr); else puts("The character 猫 not found"); if(dog) printf("The character 犬 found at position %td\n", dog-arr); else puts("The character 犬 not found"); }
Output:
The character 猫 found at position 1 The character 犬 not found
References
- C11 standard (ISO/IEC 9899:2011):
- 7.29.4.5.1 The wcschr function (p: 435)
- C99 standard (ISO/IEC 9899:1999):
- 7.24.4.5.1 The wcschr function (p: 381)
See also
(C95) |
finds the last occurrence of a wide character in a wide string (function) |
(C95) |
finds the first location of any wide character in one wide string, in another wide string (function) |
C++ documentation for wcschr
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