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- //===- Format.h - Efficient printf-style formatting for streams -*- C++ -*-===//
- //
- // The LLVM Compiler Infrastructure
- //
- // This file is distributed under the University of Illinois Open Source
- // License. See LICENSE.TXT for details.
- //
- //===----------------------------------------------------------------------===//
- //
- // This file implements the format() function, which can be used with other
- // LLVM subsystems to provide printf-style formatting. This gives all the power
- // and risk of printf. This can be used like this (with raw_ostreams as an
- // example):
- //
- // OS << "mynumber: " << format("%4.5f", 1234.412) << '\n';
- //
- // Or if you prefer:
- //
- // OS << format("mynumber: %4.5f\n", 1234.412);
- //
- //===----------------------------------------------------------------------===//
- #ifndef LLVM_SUPPORT_FORMAT_H
- #define LLVM_SUPPORT_FORMAT_H
- #include "llvm/ADT/STLExtras.h"
- #include "llvm/ADT/StringRef.h"
- #include "llvm/Support/DataTypes.h"
- #include <cassert>
- #include <cstdio>
- #include <tuple>
- namespace llvm {
- /// This is a helper class used for handling formatted output. It is the
- /// abstract base class of a templated derived class.
- class format_object_base {
- protected:
- const char *Fmt;
- ~format_object_base() = default; // Disallow polymorphic deletion.
- format_object_base(const format_object_base &) = default;
- virtual void home(); // Out of line virtual method.
- /// Call snprintf() for this object, on the given buffer and size.
- virtual int snprint(_Out_ char *Buffer, unsigned BufferSize) const = 0; // HLSL Change - SAL
- public:
- format_object_base(const char *fmt) : Fmt(fmt) {}
- /// Format the object into the specified buffer. On success, this returns
- /// the length of the formatted string. If the buffer is too small, this
- /// returns a length to retry with, which will be larger than BufferSize.
- unsigned print(_Out_ char *Buffer, unsigned BufferSize) const { // HLSL Change - SAL
- assert(BufferSize && "Invalid buffer size!");
- // Print the string, leaving room for the terminating null.
- int N = snprint(Buffer, BufferSize);
- // VC++ and old GlibC return negative on overflow, just double the size.
- if (N < 0)
- return BufferSize * 2;
- // Other implementations yield number of bytes needed, not including the
- // final '\0'.
- if (unsigned(N) >= BufferSize)
- return N + 1;
- // Otherwise N is the length of output (not including the final '\0').
- return N;
- }
- };
- /// These are templated helper classes used by the format function that
- /// capture the object to be formated and the format string. When actually
- /// printed, this synthesizes the string into a temporary buffer provided and
- /// returns whether or not it is big enough.
- template <typename... Ts>
- class format_object final : public format_object_base {
- std::tuple<Ts...> Vals;
- template <std::size_t... Is>
- int snprint_tuple(char *Buffer, unsigned BufferSize,
- index_sequence<Is...>) const {
- #ifdef _MSC_VER
- // Use _TRUNCATE as the buffer size; truncation will still return -1 as
- // a result, thereby triggering the 'double on VC++' behavior in
- // caller, for example llvm::format_object_base::print(char * Buffer, unsigned int BufferSize)
- return _snprintf_s(Buffer, BufferSize, _TRUNCATE, Fmt, std::get<Is>(Vals)...);
- #else
- return snprintf(Buffer, BufferSize, Fmt, std::get<Is>(Vals)...);
- #endif
- }
- public:
- format_object(const char *fmt, const Ts &... vals)
- : format_object_base(fmt), Vals(vals...) {}
- int snprint(char *Buffer, unsigned BufferSize) const override {
- return snprint_tuple(Buffer, BufferSize, index_sequence_for<Ts...>());
- }
- };
- /// These are helper functions used to produce formatted output. They use
- /// template type deduction to construct the appropriate instance of the
- /// format_object class to simplify their construction.
- ///
- /// This is typically used like:
- /// \code
- /// OS << format("%0.4f", myfloat) << '\n';
- /// \endcode
- template <typename... Ts>
- inline format_object<Ts...> format(const char *Fmt, const Ts &... Vals) {
- return format_object<Ts...>(Fmt, Vals...);
- }
- /// This is a helper class used for left_justify() and right_justify().
- class FormattedString {
- StringRef Str;
- unsigned Width;
- bool RightJustify;
- friend class raw_ostream;
- public:
- FormattedString(StringRef S, unsigned W, bool R)
- : Str(S), Width(W), RightJustify(R) { }
- };
- /// left_justify - append spaces after string so total output is
- /// \p Width characters. If \p Str is larger that \p Width, full string
- /// is written with no padding.
- inline FormattedString left_justify(StringRef Str, unsigned Width) {
- return FormattedString(Str, Width, false);
- }
- /// right_justify - add spaces before string so total output is
- /// \p Width characters. If \p Str is larger that \p Width, full string
- /// is written with no padding.
- inline FormattedString right_justify(StringRef Str, unsigned Width) {
- return FormattedString(Str, Width, true);
- }
- /// This is a helper class used for format_hex() and format_decimal().
- class FormattedNumber {
- uint64_t HexValue;
- int64_t DecValue;
- unsigned Width;
- bool Hex;
- bool Upper;
- bool HexPrefix;
- friend class raw_ostream;
- public:
- FormattedNumber(uint64_t HV, int64_t DV, unsigned W, bool H, bool U,
- bool Prefix)
- : HexValue(HV), DecValue(DV), Width(W), Hex(H), Upper(U),
- HexPrefix(Prefix) {}
- };
- /// format_hex - Output \p N as a fixed width hexadecimal. If number will not
- /// fit in width, full number is still printed. Examples:
- /// OS << format_hex(255, 4) => 0xff
- /// OS << format_hex(255, 4, true) => 0xFF
- /// OS << format_hex(255, 6) => 0x00ff
- /// OS << format_hex(255, 2) => 0xff
- inline FormattedNumber format_hex(uint64_t N, unsigned Width,
- bool Upper = false) {
- assert(Width <= 18 && "hex width must be <= 18");
- return FormattedNumber(N, 0, Width, true, Upper, true);
- }
- /// format_hex_no_prefix - Output \p N as a fixed width hexadecimal. Does not
- /// prepend '0x' to the outputted string. If number will not fit in width,
- /// full number is still printed. Examples:
- /// OS << format_hex_no_prefix(255, 4) => ff
- /// OS << format_hex_no_prefix(255, 4, true) => FF
- /// OS << format_hex_no_prefix(255, 6) => 00ff
- /// OS << format_hex_no_prefix(255, 2) => ff
- inline FormattedNumber format_hex_no_prefix(uint64_t N, unsigned Width,
- bool Upper = false) {
- assert(Width <= 18 && "hex width must be <= 18");
- return FormattedNumber(N, 0, Width, true, Upper, false);
- }
- /// format_decimal - Output \p N as a right justified, fixed-width decimal. If
- /// number will not fit in width, full number is still printed. Examples:
- /// OS << format_decimal(0, 5) => " 0"
- /// OS << format_decimal(255, 5) => " 255"
- /// OS << format_decimal(-1, 3) => " -1"
- /// OS << format_decimal(12345, 3) => "12345"
- inline FormattedNumber format_decimal(int64_t N, unsigned Width) {
- return FormattedNumber(0, N, Width, false, false, false);
- }
- } // end namespace llvm
- #endif
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