std::from_chars
Defined in header <utility>
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std::from_chars_result from_chars(const char* first, const char* last, /*see below*/& value, int base = 10); |
(1) | (since C++17) |
std::from_chars_result from_chars(const char* first, const char* last, float& value, std::chars_format fmt = std::chars_format::general); |
(2) | (since C++17) |
std::from_chars_result from_chars(const char* first, const char* last, double& value, std::chars_format fmt = std::chars_format::general); |
(3) | (since C++17) |
std::from_chars_result from_chars(const char* first, const char* last, long double& value, std::chars_format fmt = std::chars_format::general); |
(4) | (since C++17) |
struct from_chars_result { const char* ptr; |
(5) | (since C++17) |
Analyzes the character sequence [first,last)
for a pattern described below. If no characters match the pattern or if the value obtained by parsing the matched characters is not representable in the type of value
, value
is unmodified, otherwise the characters matching the pattern are interpreted as a text representation of an arithmetic value, which is stored in value
.
value
. Digits in the range 10..35
(inclusive) are represented as lowercase characters a..z
(uppercase digits are not recognized). The library provides overloads for all signed and unsigned integer types and char
as the referenced type of the parameter value
.- the plus sign is not recognized (only the minus sign is permitted)
- if
fmt
has std::chars_format::scientific set but not std::chars_format::fixed, the exponent part is required (otherwise it is optional) - if
fmt
has std::chars_format::fixed set but not std::chars_format::scientific, the optional exponent is not permitted - if
fmt
is std::chars_format::hex, the prefix "0x" or "0X" is not permitted (the string "0x123" parses as the value "0" with unparsed remainder "x123").
Parameters
first, last | - | valid character range to parse |
value | - | the out-parameter where the parsed value is stored if successful |
base | - | integer base to use: a value between 2 and 36 (inclusive). |
fmt | - | floating-point formatting to use, a bitmask of type std::chars_format |
Return value
On success, returns a value of type from_chars_result
such that ptr
points at the first character not matching the pattern, or has the value equal to last
if all characters match and ec
is false
when converted to bool
.
If there is no pattern match, returns a value of type from_chars_result
such that ptr
equals first
and ec
equals std::errc::invalid_argument. value
is unmodified.
If the pattern was matched, but the parsed value is not in the range representable by the type of value
, returns value of type from_chars_result
such that ec
equals std::errc::result_out_of_range and ptr
points at the first character not matching the pattern. value
is unmodified.
Exceptions
(none)
Notes
Unlike other parsing functions in C++ and C libraries, std::from_chars
is locale-independent, non-allocating, and non-throwing. Only a small subset of parsing policies used by other libraries (such as std::sscanf) is provided. This is intended to allow the fastest possible implementation that is useful in common high-throughput contexts such as text-based interchange (JSON or XML).
The guarantee that std::from_chars can recover every floating-point value formatted by to_chars
exactly is only provided if both functions are from the same implementation.
Example
This section is incomplete Reason: no example |
See also
(C++11)(C++11)(C++11) |
converts a string to a signed integer (function) |
(C++11)(C++11)(C++11) |
converts a string to a floating point value (function) |
converts a byte string to an integer value (function) | |
converts a byte string to a floating point value (function) | |
reads formatted input from stdin, a file stream or a buffer (function) | |
extracts formatted data (public member function of std::basic_istream ) |