...one of the most highly
regarded and expertly designed C++ library projects in the
world.
— Herb Sutter and Andrei
Alexandrescu, C++
Coding Standards
Copyright © 2019, 2020 Krystian Stasiowski
Copyright © 2016-2019 Vinnie Falco
Distributed under the Boost Software License, Version 1.0. (See accompanying file LICENSE_1_0.txt or copy at http://www.boost.org/LICENSE_1_0.txt)
Table of Contents
This library provides a dynamically resizable string of characters with compile-time
fixed capacity and contiguous embedded storage in which the characters are placed
within the string object itself. Its API closely resembles that of std::string
.
A fixed capacity string is useful when:
constexpr
functions.
memcpy
for serialization purposes).
The library is usable in two different modes: standalone and Boost dependent. This library defaults to Boost dependent mode; standalone mode is opt-in through the use of a configuration macro.
When in Boost dependent mode, the library requires the use of at least C++11, in addition to Boost.Core, Boost.Utility, and Boost.ContainerHash. In standalone mode, C++17 is required but no libraries except for the standard library are needed.
The over-arching design goal is to resemble the interface and behavior of std::string
as much as possible. When any operation would exceed the maximum allowed size
of the string, std::length_error
is thrown if exceptions are enabled.
All algorithms which throw exceptions provide the strong exception safety guarantee.
This is intended to be a drop in replacement for std::string
.
The API of static_string
only
diverges from std::string
in few places, one of which is the addition
of the subview
function, for
which this implementation returns a string view instead of static_string
,
and certain functions that will never throw are marked as noexcept
,
which diverges from those of std::string
. The
available overloads for static_string
are identical to those of std::string
.
The iterator invalidation rules differ from those of std::string
:
static_string
invalidates
all iterators
static_string
s
invalidates all iterators
Depending on the character type and size used for a specialization of static_string
, certain optimizations are used
to reduce the size of the class type. Given the name of a specialization of the
form basic_static_string<N, CharT, Traits>
:
N
is 0, then the class
has no non-static data members. Given two objects a
and b
of type basic_static_string<0, T, Traits>
and static_string<0,
U, Traits>
respectively, the pointer value returned by data()
will be the same if T
and U
are the same.
static_string
will be the smallest standard
unsigned integer type that can represent the value N
.
Certain features can be enabled and disabled though defining configuration macros. The macros and the associated feature they control are:
BOOST_STATIC_STRING_STANDALONE
:
When defined, the library is put into standalone mode.
Thanks to Agustín Bergé, Peter Dimov, Glen Fernandes, and Christian Mazakas for their constant feedback and guidance during the development of this library.
The development of this library is sponsored by The C++ Alliance.
Defined in namespace boost::static_strings
: