Summary
The NS_StringCutData function removes a section of the string's internal buffer. This is a low-level API.
  #include "nsStringAPI.h"
  nsresult NS_StringCutData(
    nsAString& aString,
    PRUint32 aCutStart,
    PRUint32 aCutLength
  );
Parameters
- aString
- [in] A nsAStringinstance to be modified.
- aCutStart
- [in] The starting index of the section to remove, measured in storage units.
- aCutLength
- [in] The length of the section to remove, measured in storage units. Pass PR_UINT32_MAX to specify the length from aCutStart to the end of the string.
Return Values
The NS_StringCutData function returns NS_OK if successful. Otherwise, it returns an error code.
Remarks
This function is defined inline as a wrapper around NS_StringSetDataRange.
Note: GCC requires the -fshort-wchar option to compile this example since PRUnichar is an unsigned short. This example should compile by default under MSVC.
Example Code
nsStringContainer str; NS_StringContainerInit(str); NS_StringSetData(str, L"hello world"); // remove " world" portion of string NS_StringCutData(str, 5, PR_UINT32_MAX); const PRUnichar* data; NS_StringGetData(str, &data); // data now ponts to the string: L"hello" NS_StringContainerFinish(str);
History
This function was frozen for Mozilla 1.7. See bug 239123 for details.