diff options
Diffstat (limited to 'include/ruby/internal/encoding/encoding.h')
-rw-r--r-- | include/ruby/internal/encoding/encoding.h | 32 |
1 files changed, 9 insertions, 23 deletions
diff --git a/include/ruby/internal/encoding/encoding.h b/include/ruby/internal/encoding/encoding.h index 9208d27ecf..a680651a81 100644 --- a/include/ruby/internal/encoding/encoding.h +++ b/include/ruby/internal/encoding/encoding.h @@ -28,6 +28,7 @@ #include "ruby/internal/attr/pure.h" #include "ruby/internal/attr/returns_nonnull.h" #include "ruby/internal/dllexport.h" +#include "ruby/internal/encoding/coderange.h" #include "ruby/internal/value.h" #include "ruby/internal/core/rbasic.h" #include "ruby/internal/fl_type.h" @@ -139,23 +140,6 @@ RBIMPL_ATTR_NOALIAS() int rb_char_to_option_kcode(int c, int *option, int *kcode); /** - * Creates a new encoding, using the passed one as a template. - * - * @param[in] name Name of the creating encoding. - * @param[in] src Template. - * @exception rb_eArgError Duplicated or malformed `name`. - * @return Replicated new encoding's index. - * @post Encoding named `name` is created as a copy of `src`, whose index - * is the return value. - * - * @internal - * - * `name` can be `NULL`, but that just raises an exception. OTOH it seems no - * sanity check is done against `src`...? - */ -int rb_enc_replicate(const char *name, rb_encoding *src); - -/** * Creates a new "dummy" encoding. Roughly speaking, an encoding is dummy when * it is stateful. Notable example of dummy encoding are those defined in * ISO/IEC 2022 @@ -375,8 +359,8 @@ rb_encoding *rb_enc_check(VALUE str1,VALUE str2); VALUE rb_enc_associate_index(VALUE obj, int encindex); /** - * Identical to rb_enc_associate(), except it takes an encoding itself instead - * of its index. + * Identical to rb_enc_associate_index(), except it takes an encoding itself + * instead of its index. * * @param[out] obj Object in question. * @param[in] enc An encoding. @@ -643,10 +627,12 @@ rb_enc_code_to_mbclen(int c, rb_encoding *enc) * Identical to rb_enc_uint_chr(), except it writes back to the passed buffer * instead of allocating one. * - * @param[in] c Code point. - * @param[out] buf Return buffer. - * @param[in] enc Target encoding scheme. - * @post `c` is encoded according to `enc`, then written to `buf`. + * @param[in] c Code point. + * @param[out] buf Return buffer. + * @param[in] enc Target encoding scheme. + * @retval <= 0 `c` is invalid in `enc`. + * @return otherwise Number of bytes written to `buf`. + * @post `c` is encoded according to `enc`, then written to `buf`. * * @internal * |