2

I have a

char txt_msg[80];

The array can contain up to 80 characters, e.g. there is no guarantee that there is a terminating null. If there are less than 80 characters however, there is a terminating null.

Right now I'm using this to get a std::string from this:

std::string(txt_msg, txt_msg + ::strnlen(txt_msg, sizeof(txt_msg)));

to create a C++ string, which looks kind of offensive. Is there a more C++y way to do that?

12
  • Will the function that fills the array "return" the number of characters it filled? Or "return" some other indicator if the null-terminator was added or not? May 14, 2021 at 16:49
  • 3
    You could do std::string(txt_msg, ::strnlen(txt_msg, sizeof txt_msg)); using the (char*, size) constructor instead of the the (begin, end) constructor. Hmmm, apparently strnlen isn't C or C++ standard (it's POSIX.1-2008), but wouldn't be hard to write.
    – Eljay
    May 14, 2021 at 16:49
  • @Someprogrammerdude No, this is inside a structure that gets filled by a C library. I only get the filled structure.
    – jpo234
    May 14, 2021 at 16:52
  • 2
    which looks kind of offensive I do not feel offended by it, looks fine.
    – KamilCuk
    May 14, 2021 at 16:55
  • 1
    @Remy I agree it's no more efficient than using strnlen ... but its 'better' in the sense that it doesn't rely on a non-standard function being available. May 14, 2021 at 17:26

3 Answers 3

2

I would probably have done something like this:

char txt_msg[80];

auto s = std::string(std::begin(txt_msg), std::find(std::begin(txt_msg), std::end(txt_msg), '\0'));

std::find will return the position of either the first null terminator or the end of the array.

2
  • This assume that the OP have access to the actual array, and it haven't decayed to a pointer. May 14, 2021 at 20:53
  • 1
    @Someprogrammerdude If that were true, this code would not even compile.
    – Galik
    May 14, 2021 at 21:58
0

Is there a more C++y way to do that?

As far as the construction of the std::string is concerned, not really. Though, at the very least, since you already know the max length of the char[], you can use the std::string(const char*, size_type) constructor instead of the std::string(InputIt, InputIt) constructor, thus the constructor can avoid having to calculate the length:

std::string(txt_msg, ::strnlen(txt_msg, sizeof(txt_msg));

Since strnlen() is a non-standard POSIX extension, it would not be hard to write a manual implementation, if needed:

#include <algorithm>

size_t strnlen(const char *s, size_t maxlen)
{
    const char *s_end = s + maxlen;
    const char *found = std::find(s, s_end, '\0');
    return (found != s_end) ? size_t(found - s) : maxlen;
}

That being said, a C++ solution to your problem would be to wrap the std::string construction in a helper template function, eg:

template<size_t N>
std::string to_string(const char (&arr)[N])
{
    return std::string(arr, strnlen(arr, N));
}

And then you can do this when needed:

char txt_msg[80];
...
std::string s = to_string(txt_msg);

Rather than doing this:

char txt_msg[80];
...
std::string s = std::string(txt_msg, txt_msg + strnlen(txt_msg, sizeof(txt_msg)));
//or
std::string s = std::string(txt_msg, strnlen(txt_msg, sizeof(txt_msg)));
7
  • @einpoklum std::to_string() only supports numeric types, not character arrays. And there is no sizeof() in my "final suggestion". What DRY violation are you referring to? May 16, 2021 at 18:58
  • Ok, so - I would be hesitant to have someone write a to_string() which does something else. Perhaps a different name for the function?
    – einpoklum
    May 16, 2021 at 18:59
  • @einpoklum name it whatever you want. I prefer using using something more consistent with the standard May 16, 2021 at 19:02
  • @einpoklum read my answer again more carefully. You are referring to code that I said NOT to use, which is related to the OP's original code. May 16, 2021 at 20:22
  • Oh yes, I'm sorry, I jumped a line. Another point is, that you force the user of to_string() to guess whether the string length will be the array size always, or sometimes less than that. It's not obvious. And the choice of name doesn't make it obvious either. Finally, you're still using a POSIX-only function in the implementation of to_string() while you have nice enough standard library facilities to use instead.
    – einpoklum
    May 16, 2021 at 20:39
0

Perhaps you should consider using an std::string_view - a non-owning string-like reference-type which can be used mostly like std::string; in your case, it would be backed by your message array:

auto sv = std::string_view{txt_msg, ::strnlen(txt_msg, std::extent_v<decltype(txt_msg)>};

But this is, still, indeed, quite iffy, and breaks the DRY principle badly: 3 repetitions. So, how about we write a little utility function? :

inline std::string_view 
constrain_by_nul(std::string_view sv) {
    return sv.substr(0, sv.find('\0'));
}

with this, you could write:

auto sv = constrain_by_nul(std::string_view{txt_msg, std::size(txt_msg)});

Better, but not quite there yet: We mention txt_msg twice. Unfortunately, we can't construct a string view directly from a container (IIANM). So maybe another utility function?

template<typename CharT, std::size_t N> 
std::basic_string_view<CharT>
inline make_string_view(CharT (&arr)[N]) { 
    return {arr, N};
};

Now you can write:

auto sv = constrain_by_nul(make_string_view(txt_msg));

And that's pretty much what you wanted to do in the first place. With decent compiler optimization it might actually compile to the same thing. And - no copying and no heap allocation, since it's not an std::string.


Read more about string views in this SO question: What is string_view?

2
  • std::extent_v<decltype(txt_msg)> can be replaced with std::size(txt_msg) instead. And in light of your want to avoid DRY, make_string_view() can use arr as-is instead of std::begin(arr) and N instead of std::end(arr): return std::string_view<CharT>{arr, N}; May 16, 2021 at 21:04
  • I wasn't aware of std::size(), thanks! And good point about the string_view construction. I've improved it even further...
    – einpoklum
    May 16, 2021 at 21:49

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