NAME wnstr -- string operations SYNOPSIS #include "wnstr.h" wn_strncpy(out,in,n) char out[],in[]; int n; wn_stracpy(&out,in) char out[],in[]; wn_strncat(out,in,n) char out[],in[]; int n; wn_stracat(&out,s1,s2) char out[],s1[],s2[]; wn_stracat3(&out,s1,s2,s3) char out[],s1[],s2[],s3[]; wn_stracat4(&out,s1,s2,s3,s4) char out[],s1[],s2[],s3[],s4[]; wn_stracat5(&out,s1,s2,s3,s4,s5) char out[],s1[],s2[],s3[],s4[],s5[]; wn_stracat6(&out,s1,s2,s3,s4,s5,s6) char out[],s1[],s2[],s3[],s4[],s5[],s6[]; bool wn_char_in_string(c,s) char c,s[]; DESCRIPTION These routines operate on null-terminated character strings. They do not check for overflow of any receiving string. "wn_strncpy" is NOT the same as "strncpy"; it copies strlen(in) or "n" chars, whichever is less, and then null terminates. The target can become as long as n+1 chars, including the null-termination. "wn_stracpy" allocates (from the current memory group) strlen(in)+1 chars of memory for "out", and then copies "in" to it. "wn_strncat" is NOT the same as "strncat"; it appends chars from "in" while "out" has strlen < "n", and then null terminates. The target can become as long as n+1 chars, including the null-termination. "wn_stracat" allocates (from the current memory group) strlen(s1)+strlen(s2)+1 chars of memory for "out", then puts the concatonation of s1 and s2 in this memory. "wn_stracat3" concatonates 3 strings in the same manner, etc. "wn_char_in_string" returns TRUE iff the character "c" is contained in the null-terminated string "s". BUGS SEE ALSO wncmp AUTHOR Will Naylor