NAME

c16rtomb, c32rtomb — convert a Unicode character code to a character (restartable)

SYNOPSIS

#include <uchar.h>

size_t c16rtomb(char *restrict
s, char16_t c16, mbstate_t *restrict ps);
size_t c32rtomb(char *restrict
s, char32_t c32, mbstate_t *restrict ps);

DESCRIPTION

[CX] [Option Start] The functionality described on this reference page is aligned with the ISO C standard. Any conflict between the requirements described here and the ISO C standard is unintentional. This volume of POSIX.1-2024 defers to the ISO C standard. [Option End]

If s is a null pointer, the c16rtomb() function shall be equivalent to the call:

c16rtomb(buf, L'\0', ps)

where buf is an internal buffer.

If s is not a null pointer, the c16rtomb() function shall determine the number of bytes needed to represent the character that corresponds to the wide character given by c16 (including any shift sequences), and store the resulting bytes in the array whose first element is pointed to by s. At most {MB_CUR_MAX} bytes shall be stored. If c16 is a null wide character, a null byte shall be stored, preceded by any shift sequence needed to restore the initial shift state; the resulting state described shall be the initial conversion state.

If ps is a null pointer, the c16rtomb() function shall use its own internal mbstate_t object, which shall be initialized at program start-up to the initial conversion state. Otherwise, the mbstate_t object pointed to by ps shall be used to completely describe the current conversion state of the associated character sequence.

The behavior of this function is affected by the LC_CTYPE category of the current locale.

The mbrtoc16() function shall not change the setting of errno if successful.

The c32rtomb() function shall behave the same way as c16rtomb() except that the second parameter shall be an object of type char32_t instead of char16_t. References to c16 in the above description shall apply as if they were c32 when they are being read as describing c32rtomb().

If called with a null ps argument, the c16rtomb() function need not be thread-safe; however, such calls shall avoid data races with calls to c16rtomb() with a non-null argument and with calls to all other functions.

If called with a null ps argument, the c32rtomb() function need not be thread-safe; however, such calls shall avoid data races with calls to c32rtomb() with a non-null argument and with calls to all other functions.

The implementation shall behave as if no function defined in this volume of POSIX.1-2024 calls c16rtomb() or c32rtomb() with a null pointer for ps.

RETURN VALUE

These functions shall return the number of bytes stored in the array object (including any shift sequences). When c16 or c32 is not a valid wide character, an encoding error shall occur. In this case, the function shall store the value of the macro [EILSEQ] in errno and shall return (size_t)-1; the conversion state is unspecified.

ERRORS

These functions shall fail if:

[EILSEQ]
An invalid wide-character code is detected.

These functions may fail if:

[EINVAL]
[CX] [Option Start] ps points to an object that contains an invalid conversion state. [Option End]

The following sections are informative.

EXAMPLES

None.

APPLICATION USAGE

None.

RATIONALE

None.

FUTURE DIRECTIONS

None.

SEE ALSO

mbrtoc16

XBD <uchar.h>

CHANGE HISTORY

First released in Issue 8. Included for alignment with the ISO/IEC 9899:2018 standard.

End of informative text.