llvm-mirror/include/llvm/Support/Format.h
Chandler Carruth ae65e281f3 Update the file headers across all of the LLVM projects in the monorepo
to reflect the new license.

We understand that people may be surprised that we're moving the header
entirely to discuss the new license. We checked this carefully with the
Foundation's lawyer and we believe this is the correct approach.

Essentially, all code in the project is now made available by the LLVM
project under our new license, so you will see that the license headers
include that license only. Some of our contributors have contributed
code under our old license, and accordingly, we have retained a copy of
our old license notice in the top-level files in each project and
repository.

llvm-svn: 351636
2019-01-19 08:50:56 +00:00

257 lines
9.4 KiB
C++

//===- Format.h - Efficient printf-style formatting for streams -*- C++ -*-===//
//
// Part of the LLVM Project, under the Apache License v2.0 with LLVM Exceptions.
// See https://llvm.org/LICENSE.txt for license information.
// SPDX-License-Identifier: Apache-2.0 WITH LLVM-exception
//
//===----------------------------------------------------------------------===//
//
// 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/ArrayRef.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(char *Buffer, unsigned BufferSize) const = 0;
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(char *Buffer, unsigned BufferSize) const {
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 formatted 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.
// Helper to validate that format() parameters are scalars or pointers.
template <typename... Args> struct validate_format_parameters;
template <typename Arg, typename... Args>
struct validate_format_parameters<Arg, Args...> {
static_assert(std::is_scalar<Arg>::value,
"format can't be used with non fundamental / non pointer type");
validate_format_parameters() { validate_format_parameters<Args...>(); }
};
template <> struct validate_format_parameters<> {};
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
return _snprintf(Buffer, BufferSize, 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...) {
validate_format_parameters<Ts...>();
}
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 for left_justify, right_justify, and center_justify.
class FormattedString {
public:
enum Justification { JustifyNone, JustifyLeft, JustifyRight, JustifyCenter };
FormattedString(StringRef S, unsigned W, Justification J)
: Str(S), Width(W), Justify(J) {}
private:
StringRef Str;
unsigned Width;
Justification Justify;
friend class raw_ostream;
};
/// 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, FormattedString::JustifyLeft);
}
/// 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, FormattedString::JustifyRight);
}
/// center_justify - add spaces before and 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 center_justify(StringRef Str, unsigned Width) {
return FormattedString(Str, Width, FormattedString::JustifyCenter);
}
/// 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, 2) => ff
/// OS << format_hex_no_prefix(255, 2, true) => FF
/// OS << format_hex_no_prefix(255, 4) => 00ff
/// OS << format_hex_no_prefix(255, 1) => ff
inline FormattedNumber format_hex_no_prefix(uint64_t N, unsigned Width,
bool Upper = false) {
assert(Width <= 16 && "hex width must be <= 16");
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);
}
class FormattedBytes {
ArrayRef<uint8_t> Bytes;
// If not None, display offsets for each line relative to starting value.
Optional<uint64_t> FirstByteOffset;
uint32_t IndentLevel; // Number of characters to indent each line.
uint32_t NumPerLine; // Number of bytes to show per line.
uint8_t ByteGroupSize; // How many hex bytes are grouped without spaces
bool Upper; // Show offset and hex bytes as upper case.
bool ASCII; // Show the ASCII bytes for the hex bytes to the right.
friend class raw_ostream;
public:
FormattedBytes(ArrayRef<uint8_t> B, uint32_t IL, Optional<uint64_t> O,
uint32_t NPL, uint8_t BGS, bool U, bool A)
: Bytes(B), FirstByteOffset(O), IndentLevel(IL), NumPerLine(NPL),
ByteGroupSize(BGS), Upper(U), ASCII(A) {
if (ByteGroupSize > NumPerLine)
ByteGroupSize = NumPerLine;
}
};
inline FormattedBytes
format_bytes(ArrayRef<uint8_t> Bytes, Optional<uint64_t> FirstByteOffset = None,
uint32_t NumPerLine = 16, uint8_t ByteGroupSize = 4,
uint32_t IndentLevel = 0, bool Upper = false) {
return FormattedBytes(Bytes, IndentLevel, FirstByteOffset, NumPerLine,
ByteGroupSize, Upper, false);
}
inline FormattedBytes
format_bytes_with_ascii(ArrayRef<uint8_t> Bytes,
Optional<uint64_t> FirstByteOffset = None,
uint32_t NumPerLine = 16, uint8_t ByteGroupSize = 4,
uint32_t IndentLevel = 0, bool Upper = false) {
return FormattedBytes(Bytes, IndentLevel, FirstByteOffset, NumPerLine,
ByteGroupSize, Upper, true);
}
} // end namespace llvm
#endif