strspn
, wcsspn
, _mbsspn
, _mbsspn_l
Returns the index of the first character in a string that doesn't belong to a specified set of characters.
Important
_mbsspn
and _mbsspn_l
cannot be used in applications that execute in the Windows Runtime. For more information, see CRT functions not supported in Universal Windows Platform apps.
Syntax
size_t strspn(
const char *str,
const char *strCharSet
);
size_t wcsspn(
const wchar_t *str,
const wchar_t *strCharSet
);
size_t _mbsspn(
const unsigned char *str,
const unsigned char *strCharSet
);
size_t _mbsspn_l(
const unsigned char *str,
const unsigned char *strCharSet,
_locale_t locale
);
Parameters
str
Null-terminated string to search.
strCharSet
Null-terminated character set.
locale
Locale to use.
Return value
Returns an integer value specifying the length of the substring in str
that consists entirely of characters in strCharSet
. If str
begins with a character not in strCharSet
, the function returns 0.
Remarks
The strspn
function returns the index of the first character in str
that doesn't belong to the set of characters in strCharSet
. The search doesn't include terminating null characters.
wcsspn
and _mbsspn
are wide-character and multibyte-character versions of strspn
. The arguments of wcsspn
are wide-character strings. The arguments of _mbsspn
are multibyte-character strings. _mbsspn
validates its parameters. If str
or strCharSet
is NULL
, the invalid parameter handler is invoked, as described in Parameter validation . If execution is allowed to continue, _mbspn
sets errno
to EINVAL
and returns 0. strspn
and wcsspn
don't validate their parameters. These three functions behave identically otherwise.
The output value is affected by the setting of the LC_CTYPE
category setting of the locale. For more information, see setlocale
. The versions of these functions without the _l
suffix use the current locale for this locale-dependent behavior; the versions with the _l
suffix are identical except that they use the locale parameter passed in instead. For more information, see Locale.
By default, this function's global state is scoped to the application. To change this behavior, see Global state in the CRT.
Generic-text routine mappings
TCHAR.H routine | _UNICODE and _MBCS not defined |
_MBCS defined |
_UNICODE defined |
---|---|---|---|
_tcsspn |
strspn |
_mbsspn |
wcsspn |
n/a | n/a | _mbsspn_l |
n/a |
Requirements
Routine | Required header |
---|---|
strspn |
<string.h> |
wcsspn |
<string.h> or <wchar.h> |
_mbsspn , _mbsspn_l |
<mbstring.h> |
For more compatibility information, see Compatibility.
Example
// crt_strspn.c
// This program uses strspn to determine
// the length of the segment in the string "cabbage"
// consisting of a's, b's, and c's. In other words,
// it finds the first non-abc letter.
//
#include <string.h>
#include <stdio.h>
int main( void )
{
char string[] = "cabbage";
int result;
result = strspn( string, "abc" );
printf( "The portion of '%s' containing only a, b, or c "
"is %d bytes long\n", string, result );
}
The portion of 'cabbage' containing only a, b, or c is 5 bytes long
See also
String manipulation
Locale
Interpretation of multibyte-character sequences
_strspnp
, _wcsspnp
, _mbsspnp
, _mbsspnp_l
strcspn
, wcscspn
, _mbscspn
, _mbscspn_l
strncat
, _strncat_l
, wcsncat
, _wcsncat_l
, _mbsncat
, _mbsncat_l
strncmp
, wcsncmp
, _mbsncmp
, _mbsncmp_l
strncpy
, _strncpy_l
, wcsncpy
, _wcsncpy_l
, _mbsncpy
, _mbsncpy_l
_strnicmp
, _wcsnicmp
, _mbsnicmp
, _strnicmp_l
, _wcsnicmp_l
, _mbsnicmp_l
strrchr
, wcsrchr
, _mbsrchr
, _mbsrchr_l