Function std.utf.decodeFront
decodeFront is a variant of decode which specifically decodes
the first code point. Unlike decode, decodeFront accepts any
input range
of code units (rather than just a string or random access
range). It also takes the range by ref and pops off the elements as it
decodes them. If numCodeUnits is passed in, it gets set to the number
of code units which were in the code point which was decoded.
dchar decodeFront(Flag!("useReplacementDchar") useReplacementDchar = No .useReplacementDchar, S)
(
ref S str,
out size_t numCodeUnits
)
if (!isSomeString!S && isInputRange!S && isSomeChar!(ElementType!S));
dchar decodeFront(Flag!("useReplacementDchar") useReplacementDchar = No .useReplacementDchar, S)
(
ref S str,
out size_t numCodeUnits
) pure @trusted
if (isSomeString!S);
dchar decodeFront(Flag!("useReplacementDchar") useReplacementDchar = No .useReplacementDchar, S)
(
ref S str
)
if (isInputRange!S && isSomeChar!(ElementType!S));
Parameters
| Name | Description |
|---|---|
| useReplacementDchar | if invalid UTF, return replacementDchar rather than throwing |
| str | input string or indexable Range |
| numCodeUnits | set to number of code units processed |
Returns
decoded character
Throws
UTFException if str is not the start of a valid UTF
sequence. If an exception is thrown, then there is no guarantee as to
the number of code units which were popped off, as it depends on the
type of range being used and how many code units had to be popped off
before the code point was determined to be invalid.
Example
import std .range .primitives;
string str = "Hello, World!";
assert(str .decodeFront == 'H' && str == "ello, World!");
str = "å";
assert(str .decodeFront == 'å' && str .empty);
str = "å";
size_t i;
assert(str .decodeFront(i) == 'å' && i == 2 && str .empty);