// © 2018 and later: Unicode, Inc. and others. | |
// License & terms of use: http://www.unicode.org/copyright.html | |
#include "unicode/utypes.h" | |
#if !UCONFIG_NO_FORMATTING | |
#ifndef __UNUMBERFORMATTER_H__ | |
#define __UNUMBERFORMATTER_H__ | |
#include "unicode/parseerr.h" | |
#include "unicode/ufieldpositer.h" | |
#include "unicode/umisc.h" | |
#include "unicode/uformattedvalue.h" | |
/** | |
* \file | |
* \brief C-compatible API for localized number formatting; not recommended for C++. | |
* | |
* This is the C-compatible version of the NumberFormatter API introduced in ICU 60. C++ users should | |
* include unicode/numberformatter.h and use the proper C++ APIs. | |
* | |
* The C API accepts a number skeleton string for specifying the settings for formatting, which covers a | |
* very large subset of all possible number formatting features. For more information on number skeleton | |
* strings, see unicode/numberformatter.h. | |
* | |
* When using UNumberFormatter, which is treated as immutable, the results are exported to a mutable | |
* UFormattedNumber object, which you subsequently use for populating your string buffer or iterating over | |
* the fields. | |
* | |
* Example code: | |
* <pre> | |
* // Setup: | |
* UErrorCode ec = U_ZERO_ERROR; | |
* UNumberFormatter* uformatter = unumf_openForSkeletonAndLocale(u"precision-integer", -1, "en", &ec); | |
* UFormattedNumber* uresult = unumf_openResult(&ec); | |
* if (U_FAILURE(ec)) { return; } | |
* | |
* // Format a double: | |
* unumf_formatDouble(uformatter, 5142.3, uresult, &ec); | |
* if (U_FAILURE(ec)) { return; } | |
* | |
* // Export the string to a malloc'd buffer: | |
* int32_t len = unumf_resultToString(uresult, NULL, 0, &ec); | |
* // at this point, ec == U_BUFFER_OVERFLOW_ERROR | |
* ec = U_ZERO_ERROR; | |
* UChar* buffer = (UChar*) malloc((len+1)*sizeof(UChar)); | |
* unumf_resultToString(uresult, buffer, len+1, &ec); | |
* if (U_FAILURE(ec)) { return; } | |
* // buffer should equal "5,142" | |
* | |
* // Cleanup: | |
* unumf_close(uformatter); | |
* unumf_closeResult(uresult); | |
* free(buffer); | |
* </pre> | |
* | |
* If you are a C++ user linking against the C libraries, you can use the LocalPointer versions of these | |
* APIs. The following example uses LocalPointer with the decimal number and field position APIs: | |
* | |
* <pre> | |
* // Setup: | |
* LocalUNumberFormatterPointer uformatter(unumf_openForSkeletonAndLocale(u"percent", -1, "en", &ec)); | |
* LocalUFormattedNumberPointer uresult(unumf_openResult(&ec)); | |
* if (U_FAILURE(ec)) { return; } | |
* | |
* // Format a decimal number: | |
* unumf_formatDecimal(uformatter.getAlias(), "9.87E-3", -1, uresult.getAlias(), &ec); | |
* if (U_FAILURE(ec)) { return; } | |
* | |
* // Get the location of the percent sign: | |
* UFieldPosition ufpos = {UNUM_PERCENT_FIELD, 0, 0}; | |
* unumf_resultNextFieldPosition(uresult.getAlias(), &ufpos, &ec); | |
* // ufpos should contain beginIndex=7 and endIndex=8 since the string is "0.00987%" | |
* | |
* // No need to do any cleanup since we are using LocalPointer. | |
* </pre> | |
*/ | |
#ifndef U_HIDE_DRAFT_API | |
/** | |
* An enum declaring how to render units, including currencies. Example outputs when formatting 123 USD and 123 | |
* meters in <em>en-CA</em>: | |
* | |
* <p> | |
* <ul> | |
* <li>NARROW*: "$123.00" and "123 m" | |
* <li>SHORT: "US$ 123.00" and "123 m" | |
* <li>FULL_NAME: "123.00 US dollars" and "123 meters" | |
* <li>ISO_CODE: "USD 123.00" and undefined behavior | |
* <li>HIDDEN: "123.00" and "123" | |
* </ul> | |
* | |
* <p> | |
* This enum is similar to {@link UMeasureFormatWidth}. | |
* | |
* @draft ICU 60 | |
*/ | |
typedef enum UNumberUnitWidth { | |
/** | |
* Print an abbreviated version of the unit name. Similar to SHORT, but always use the shortest available | |
* abbreviation or symbol. This option can be used when the context hints at the identity of the unit. For more | |
* information on the difference between NARROW and SHORT, see SHORT. | |
* | |
* <p> | |
* In CLDR, this option corresponds to the "Narrow" format for measure units and the "¤¤¤¤¤" placeholder for | |
* currencies. | |
* | |
* @draft ICU 60 | |
*/ | |
UNUM_UNIT_WIDTH_NARROW, | |
/** | |
* Print an abbreviated version of the unit name. Similar to NARROW, but use a slightly wider abbreviation or | |
* symbol when there may be ambiguity. This is the default behavior. | |
* | |
* <p> | |
* For example, in <em>es-US</em>, the SHORT form for Fahrenheit is "{0} °F", but the NARROW form is "{0}°", | |
* since Fahrenheit is the customary unit for temperature in that locale. | |
* | |
* <p> | |
* In CLDR, this option corresponds to the "Short" format for measure units and the "¤" placeholder for | |
* currencies. | |
* | |
* @draft ICU 60 | |
*/ | |
UNUM_UNIT_WIDTH_SHORT, | |
/** | |
* Print the full name of the unit, without any abbreviations. | |
* | |
* <p> | |
* In CLDR, this option corresponds to the default format for measure units and the "¤¤¤" placeholder for | |
* currencies. | |
* | |
* @draft ICU 60 | |
*/ | |
UNUM_UNIT_WIDTH_FULL_NAME, | |
/** | |
* Use the three-digit ISO XXX code in place of the symbol for displaying currencies. The behavior of this | |
* option is currently undefined for use with measure units. | |
* | |
* <p> | |
* In CLDR, this option corresponds to the "¤¤" placeholder for currencies. | |
* | |
* @draft ICU 60 | |
*/ | |
UNUM_UNIT_WIDTH_ISO_CODE, | |
/** | |
* Format the number according to the specified unit, but do not display the unit. For currencies, apply | |
* monetary symbols and formats as with SHORT, but omit the currency symbol. For measure units, the behavior is | |
* equivalent to not specifying the unit at all. | |
* | |
* @draft ICU 60 | |
*/ | |
UNUM_UNIT_WIDTH_HIDDEN, | |
/** | |
* One more than the highest UNumberUnitWidth value. | |
* | |
* @internal ICU 60: The numeric value may change over time; see ICU ticket #12420. | |
*/ | |
UNUM_UNIT_WIDTH_COUNT | |
} UNumberUnitWidth; | |
#endif /* U_HIDE_DRAFT_API */ | |
#ifndef U_HIDE_DRAFT_API | |
/** | |
* An enum declaring the strategy for when and how to display grouping separators (i.e., the | |
* separator, often a comma or period, after every 2-3 powers of ten). The choices are several | |
* pre-built strategies for different use cases that employ locale data whenever possible. Example | |
* outputs for 1234 and 1234567 in <em>en-IN</em>: | |
* | |
* <ul> | |
* <li>OFF: 1234 and 12345 | |
* <li>MIN2: 1234 and 12,34,567 | |
* <li>AUTO: 1,234 and 12,34,567 | |
* <li>ON_ALIGNED: 1,234 and 12,34,567 | |
* <li>THOUSANDS: 1,234 and 1,234,567 | |
* </ul> | |
* | |
* <p> | |
* The default is AUTO, which displays grouping separators unless the locale data says that grouping | |
* is not customary. To force grouping for all numbers greater than 1000 consistently across locales, | |
* use ON_ALIGNED. On the other hand, to display grouping less frequently than the default, use MIN2 | |
* or OFF. See the docs of each option for details. | |
* | |
* <p> | |
* Note: This enum specifies the strategy for grouping sizes. To set which character to use as the | |
* grouping separator, use the "symbols" setter. | |
* | |
* @draft ICU 63 | |
*/ | |
typedef enum UNumberGroupingStrategy { | |
/** | |
* Do not display grouping separators in any locale. | |
* | |
* @draft ICU 61 | |
*/ | |
UNUM_GROUPING_OFF, | |
/** | |
* Display grouping using locale defaults, except do not show grouping on values smaller than | |
* 10000 (such that there is a <em>minimum of two digits</em> before the first separator). | |
* | |
* <p> | |
* Note that locales may restrict grouping separators to be displayed only on 1 million or | |
* greater (for example, ee and hu) or disable grouping altogether (for example, bg currency). | |
* | |
* <p> | |
* Locale data is used to determine whether to separate larger numbers into groups of 2 | |
* (customary in South Asia) or groups of 3 (customary in Europe and the Americas). | |
* | |
* @draft ICU 61 | |
*/ | |
UNUM_GROUPING_MIN2, | |
/** | |
* Display grouping using the default strategy for all locales. This is the default behavior. | |
* | |
* <p> | |
* Note that locales may restrict grouping separators to be displayed only on 1 million or | |
* greater (for example, ee and hu) or disable grouping altogether (for example, bg currency). | |
* | |
* <p> | |
* Locale data is used to determine whether to separate larger numbers into groups of 2 | |
* (customary in South Asia) or groups of 3 (customary in Europe and the Americas). | |
* | |
* @draft ICU 61 | |
*/ | |
UNUM_GROUPING_AUTO, | |
/** | |
* Always display the grouping separator on values of at least 1000. | |
* | |
* <p> | |
* This option ignores the locale data that restricts or disables grouping, described in MIN2 and | |
* AUTO. This option may be useful to normalize the alignment of numbers, such as in a | |
* spreadsheet. | |
* | |
* <p> | |
* Locale data is used to determine whether to separate larger numbers into groups of 2 | |
* (customary in South Asia) or groups of 3 (customary in Europe and the Americas). | |
* | |
* @draft ICU 61 | |
*/ | |
UNUM_GROUPING_ON_ALIGNED, | |
/** | |
* Use the Western defaults: groups of 3 and enabled for all numbers 1000 or greater. Do not use | |
* locale data for determining the grouping strategy. | |
* | |
* @draft ICU 61 | |
*/ | |
UNUM_GROUPING_THOUSANDS | |
#ifndef U_HIDE_INTERNAL_API | |
, | |
/** | |
* One more than the highest UNumberGroupingStrategy value. | |
* | |
* @internal ICU 62: The numeric value may change over time; see ICU ticket #12420. | |
*/ | |
UNUM_GROUPING_COUNT | |
#endif /* U_HIDE_INTERNAL_API */ | |
} UNumberGroupingStrategy; | |
#endif /* U_HIDE_DRAFT_API */ | |
#ifndef U_HIDE_DRAFT_API | |
/** | |
* An enum declaring how to denote positive and negative numbers. Example outputs when formatting | |
* 123, 0, and -123 in <em>en-US</em>: | |
* | |
* <ul> | |
* <li>AUTO: "123", "0", and "-123" | |
* <li>ALWAYS: "+123", "+0", and "-123" | |
* <li>NEVER: "123", "0", and "123" | |
* <li>ACCOUNTING: "$123", "$0", and "($123)" | |
* <li>ACCOUNTING_ALWAYS: "+$123", "+$0", and "($123)" | |
* <li>EXCEPT_ZERO: "+123", "0", and "-123" | |
* <li>ACCOUNTING_EXCEPT_ZERO: "+$123", "$0", and "($123)" | |
* </ul> | |
* | |
* <p> | |
* The exact format, including the position and the code point of the sign, differ by locale. | |
* | |
* @draft ICU 60 | |
*/ | |
typedef enum UNumberSignDisplay { | |
/** | |
* Show the minus sign on negative numbers, and do not show the sign on positive numbers. This is the default | |
* behavior. | |
* | |
* @draft ICU 60 | |
*/ | |
UNUM_SIGN_AUTO, | |
/** | |
* Show the minus sign on negative numbers and the plus sign on positive numbers, including zero. | |
* To hide the sign on zero, see {@link UNUM_SIGN_EXCEPT_ZERO}. | |
* | |
* @draft ICU 60 | |
*/ | |
UNUM_SIGN_ALWAYS, | |
/** | |
* Do not show the sign on positive or negative numbers. | |
* | |
* @draft ICU 60 | |
*/ | |
UNUM_SIGN_NEVER, | |
/** | |
* Use the locale-dependent accounting format on negative numbers, and do not show the sign on positive numbers. | |
* | |
* <p> | |
* The accounting format is defined in CLDR and varies by locale; in many Western locales, the format is a pair | |
* of parentheses around the number. | |
* | |
* <p> | |
* Note: Since CLDR defines the accounting format in the monetary context only, this option falls back to the | |
* AUTO sign display strategy when formatting without a currency unit. This limitation may be lifted in the | |
* future. | |
* | |
* @draft ICU 60 | |
*/ | |
UNUM_SIGN_ACCOUNTING, | |
/** | |
* Use the locale-dependent accounting format on negative numbers, and show the plus sign on | |
* positive numbers, including zero. For more information on the accounting format, see the | |
* ACCOUNTING sign display strategy. To hide the sign on zero, see | |
* {@link UNUM_SIGN_ACCOUNTING_EXCEPT_ZERO}. | |
* | |
* @draft ICU 60 | |
*/ | |
UNUM_SIGN_ACCOUNTING_ALWAYS, | |
/** | |
* Show the minus sign on negative numbers and the plus sign on positive numbers. Do not show a | |
* sign on zero. | |
* | |
* @draft ICU 61 | |
*/ | |
UNUM_SIGN_EXCEPT_ZERO, | |
/** | |
* Use the locale-dependent accounting format on negative numbers, and show the plus sign on | |
* positive numbers. Do not show a sign on zero. For more information on the accounting format, | |
* see the ACCOUNTING sign display strategy. | |
* | |
* @draft ICU 61 | |
*/ | |
UNUM_SIGN_ACCOUNTING_EXCEPT_ZERO, | |
/** | |
* One more than the highest UNumberSignDisplay value. | |
* | |
* @internal ICU 60: The numeric value may change over time; see ICU ticket #12420. | |
*/ | |
UNUM_SIGN_COUNT | |
} UNumberSignDisplay; | |
#endif /* U_HIDE_DRAFT_API */ | |
#ifndef U_HIDE_DRAFT_API | |
/** | |
* An enum declaring how to render the decimal separator. | |
* | |
* <p> | |
* <ul> | |
* <li>UNUM_DECIMAL_SEPARATOR_AUTO: "1", "1.1" | |
* <li>UNUM_DECIMAL_SEPARATOR_ALWAYS: "1.", "1.1" | |
* </ul> | |
* | |
* @draft ICU 60 | |
*/ | |
typedef enum UNumberDecimalSeparatorDisplay { | |
/** | |
* Show the decimal separator when there are one or more digits to display after the separator, and do not show | |
* it otherwise. This is the default behavior. | |
* | |
* @draft ICU 60 | |
*/ | |
UNUM_DECIMAL_SEPARATOR_AUTO, | |
/** | |
* Always show the decimal separator, even if there are no digits to display after the separator. | |
* | |
* @draft ICU 60 | |
*/ | |
UNUM_DECIMAL_SEPARATOR_ALWAYS, | |
/** | |
* One more than the highest UNumberDecimalSeparatorDisplay value. | |
* | |
* @internal ICU 60: The numeric value may change over time; see ICU ticket #12420. | |
*/ | |
UNUM_DECIMAL_SEPARATOR_COUNT | |
} UNumberDecimalSeparatorDisplay; | |
#endif /* U_HIDE_DRAFT_API */ | |
struct UNumberFormatter; | |
/** | |
* C-compatible version of icu::number::LocalizedNumberFormatter. | |
* | |
* NOTE: This is a C-compatible API; C++ users should build against numberformatter.h instead. | |
* | |
* @stable ICU 62 | |
*/ | |
typedef struct UNumberFormatter UNumberFormatter; | |
struct UFormattedNumber; | |
/** | |
* C-compatible version of icu::number::FormattedNumber. | |
* | |
* NOTE: This is a C-compatible API; C++ users should build against numberformatter.h instead. | |
* | |
* @stable ICU 62 | |
*/ | |
typedef struct UFormattedNumber UFormattedNumber; | |
/** | |
* Creates a new UNumberFormatter for the given skeleton string and locale. This is currently the only | |
* method for creating a new UNumberFormatter. | |
* | |
* Objects of type UNumberFormatter returned by this method are threadsafe. | |
* | |
* For more details on skeleton strings, see the documentation in numberformatter.h. For more details on | |
* the usage of this API, see the documentation at the top of unumberformatter.h. | |
* | |
* NOTE: This is a C-compatible API; C++ users should build against numberformatter.h instead. | |
* | |
* @param skeleton The skeleton string, like u"percent precision-integer" | |
* @param skeletonLen The number of UChars in the skeleton string, or -1 it it is NUL-terminated. | |
* @param locale The NUL-terminated locale ID. | |
* @param ec Set if an error occurs. | |
* @stable ICU 62 | |
*/ | |
U_STABLE UNumberFormatter* U_EXPORT2 | |
unumf_openForSkeletonAndLocale(const UChar* skeleton, int32_t skeletonLen, const char* locale, | |
UErrorCode* ec); | |
#ifndef U_HIDE_DRAFT_API | |
/** | |
* Like unumf_openForSkeletonAndLocale, but accepts a UParseError, which will be populated with the | |
* location of a skeleton syntax error if such a syntax error exists. | |
* | |
* @param skeleton The skeleton string, like u"percent precision-integer" | |
* @param skeletonLen The number of UChars in the skeleton string, or -1 it it is NUL-terminated. | |
* @param locale The NUL-terminated locale ID. | |
* @param perror A parse error struct populated if an error occurs when parsing. Can be NULL. | |
* If no error occurs, perror->offset will be set to -1. | |
* @param ec Set if an error occurs. | |
* @draft ICU 64 | |
*/ | |
U_DRAFT UNumberFormatter* U_EXPORT2 | |
unumf_openForSkeletonAndLocaleWithError( | |
const UChar* skeleton, int32_t skeletonLen, const char* locale, UParseError* perror, UErrorCode* ec); | |
#endif // U_HIDE_DRAFT_API | |
/** | |
* Creates an object to hold the result of a UNumberFormatter | |
* operation. The object can be used repeatedly; it is cleared whenever | |
* passed to a format function. | |
* | |
* @param ec Set if an error occurs. | |
* @stable ICU 62 | |
*/ | |
U_STABLE UFormattedNumber* U_EXPORT2 | |
unumf_openResult(UErrorCode* ec); | |
/** | |
* Uses a UNumberFormatter to format an integer to a UFormattedNumber. A string, field position, and other | |
* information can be retrieved from the UFormattedNumber. | |
* | |
* The UNumberFormatter can be shared between threads. Each thread should have its own local | |
* UFormattedNumber, however, for storing the result of the formatting operation. | |
* | |
* NOTE: This is a C-compatible API; C++ users should build against numberformatter.h instead. | |
* | |
* @param uformatter A formatter object created by unumf_openForSkeletonAndLocale or similar. | |
* @param value The number to be formatted. | |
* @param uresult The object that will be mutated to store the result; see unumf_openResult. | |
* @param ec Set if an error occurs. | |
* @stable ICU 62 | |
*/ | |
U_STABLE void U_EXPORT2 | |
unumf_formatInt(const UNumberFormatter* uformatter, int64_t value, UFormattedNumber* uresult, | |
UErrorCode* ec); | |
/** | |
* Uses a UNumberFormatter to format a double to a UFormattedNumber. A string, field position, and other | |
* information can be retrieved from the UFormattedNumber. | |
* | |
* The UNumberFormatter can be shared between threads. Each thread should have its own local | |
* UFormattedNumber, however, for storing the result of the formatting operation. | |
* | |
* NOTE: This is a C-compatible API; C++ users should build against numberformatter.h instead. | |
* | |
* @param uformatter A formatter object created by unumf_openForSkeletonAndLocale or similar. | |
* @param value The number to be formatted. | |
* @param uresult The object that will be mutated to store the result; see unumf_openResult. | |
* @param ec Set if an error occurs. | |
* @stable ICU 62 | |
*/ | |
U_STABLE void U_EXPORT2 | |
unumf_formatDouble(const UNumberFormatter* uformatter, double value, UFormattedNumber* uresult, | |
UErrorCode* ec); | |
/** | |
* Uses a UNumberFormatter to format a decimal number to a UFormattedNumber. A string, field position, and | |
* other information can be retrieved from the UFormattedNumber. | |
* | |
* The UNumberFormatter can be shared between threads. Each thread should have its own local | |
* UFormattedNumber, however, for storing the result of the formatting operation. | |
* | |
* The syntax of the unformatted number is a "numeric string" as defined in the Decimal Arithmetic | |
* Specification, available at http://speleotrove.com/decimal | |
* | |
* NOTE: This is a C-compatible API; C++ users should build against numberformatter.h instead. | |
* | |
* @param uformatter A formatter object created by unumf_openForSkeletonAndLocale or similar. | |
* @param value The numeric string to be formatted. | |
* @param valueLen The length of the numeric string, or -1 if it is NUL-terminated. | |
* @param uresult The object that will be mutated to store the result; see unumf_openResult. | |
* @param ec Set if an error occurs. | |
* @stable ICU 62 | |
*/ | |
U_STABLE void U_EXPORT2 | |
unumf_formatDecimal(const UNumberFormatter* uformatter, const char* value, int32_t valueLen, | |
UFormattedNumber* uresult, UErrorCode* ec); | |
#ifndef U_HIDE_DRAFT_API | |
/** | |
* Returns a representation of a UFormattedNumber as a UFormattedValue, | |
* which can be subsequently passed to any API requiring that type. | |
* | |
* The returned object is owned by the UFormattedNumber and is valid | |
* only as long as the UFormattedNumber is present and unchanged in memory. | |
* | |
* You can think of this method as a cast between types. | |
* | |
* @param uresult The object containing the formatted string. | |
* @param ec Set if an error occurs. | |
* @return A UFormattedValue owned by the input object. | |
* @draft ICU 64 | |
*/ | |
U_DRAFT const UFormattedValue* U_EXPORT2 | |
unumf_resultAsValue(const UFormattedNumber* uresult, UErrorCode* ec); | |
#endif /* U_HIDE_DRAFT_API */ | |
/** | |
* Extracts the result number string out of a UFormattedNumber to a UChar buffer if possible. | |
* If bufferCapacity is greater than the required length, a terminating NUL is written. | |
* If bufferCapacity is less than the required length, an error code is set. | |
* | |
* Also see ufmtval_getString, which returns a NUL-terminated string: | |
* | |
* int32_t len; | |
* const UChar* str = ufmtval_getString(unumf_resultAsValue(uresult, &ec), &len, &ec); | |
* | |
* NOTE: This is a C-compatible API; C++ users should build against numberformatter.h instead. | |
* | |
* @param uresult The object containing the formatted number. | |
* @param buffer Where to save the string output. | |
* @param bufferCapacity The number of UChars available in the buffer. | |
* @param ec Set if an error occurs. | |
* @return The required length. | |
* @stable ICU 62 | |
*/ | |
U_STABLE int32_t U_EXPORT2 | |
unumf_resultToString(const UFormattedNumber* uresult, UChar* buffer, int32_t bufferCapacity, | |
UErrorCode* ec); | |
/** | |
* Determines the start and end indices of the next occurrence of the given <em>field</em> in the | |
* output string. This allows you to determine the locations of, for example, the integer part, | |
* fraction part, or symbols. | |
* | |
* This is a simpler but less powerful alternative to {@link ufmtval_nextPosition}. | |
* | |
* If a field occurs just once, calling this method will find that occurrence and return it. If a | |
* field occurs multiple times, this method may be called repeatedly with the following pattern: | |
* | |
* <pre> | |
* UFieldPosition ufpos = {UNUM_GROUPING_SEPARATOR_FIELD, 0, 0}; | |
* while (unumf_resultNextFieldPosition(uresult, ufpos, &ec)) { | |
* // do something with ufpos. | |
* } | |
* </pre> | |
* | |
* This method is useful if you know which field to query. If you want all available field position | |
* information, use unumf_resultGetAllFieldPositions(). | |
* | |
* NOTE: All fields of the UFieldPosition must be initialized before calling this method. | |
* | |
* @param uresult The object containing the formatted number. | |
* @param ufpos | |
* Input+output variable. On input, the "field" property determines which field to look up, | |
* and the "endIndex" property determines where to begin the search. On output, the | |
* "beginIndex" field is set to the beginning of the first occurrence of the field after the | |
* input "endIndex", and "endIndex" is set to the end of that occurrence of the field | |
* (exclusive index). If a field position is not found, the FieldPosition is not changed and | |
* the method returns FALSE. | |
* @param ec Set if an error occurs. | |
* @stable ICU 62 | |
*/ | |
U_STABLE UBool U_EXPORT2 | |
unumf_resultNextFieldPosition(const UFormattedNumber* uresult, UFieldPosition* ufpos, UErrorCode* ec); | |
/** | |
* Populates the given iterator with all fields in the formatted output string. This allows you to | |
* determine the locations of the integer part, fraction part, and sign. | |
* | |
* This is an alternative to the more powerful {@link ufmtval_nextPosition} API. | |
* | |
* If you need information on only one field, use {@link ufmtval_nextPosition} or | |
* {@link unumf_resultNextFieldPosition}. | |
* | |
* @param uresult The object containing the formatted number. | |
* @param ufpositer | |
* A pointer to a UFieldPositionIterator created by {@link #ufieldpositer_open}. Iteration | |
* information already present in the UFieldPositionIterator is deleted, and the iterator is reset | |
* to apply to the fields in the formatted string created by this function call. The field values | |
* and indexes returned by {@link #ufieldpositer_next} represent fields denoted by | |
* the UNumberFormatFields enum. Fields are not returned in a guaranteed order. Fields cannot | |
* overlap, but they may nest. For example, 1234 could format as "1,234" which might consist of a | |
* grouping separator field for ',' and an integer field encompassing the entire string. | |
* @param ec Set if an error occurs. | |
* @stable ICU 62 | |
*/ | |
U_STABLE void U_EXPORT2 | |
unumf_resultGetAllFieldPositions(const UFormattedNumber* uresult, UFieldPositionIterator* ufpositer, | |
UErrorCode* ec); | |
/** | |
* Releases the UNumberFormatter created by unumf_openForSkeletonAndLocale(). | |
* | |
* @param uformatter An object created by unumf_openForSkeletonAndLocale(). | |
* @stable ICU 62 | |
*/ | |
U_STABLE void U_EXPORT2 | |
unumf_close(UNumberFormatter* uformatter); | |
/** | |
* Releases the UFormattedNumber created by unumf_openResult(). | |
* | |
* @param uresult An object created by unumf_openResult(). | |
* @stable ICU 62 | |
*/ | |
U_STABLE void U_EXPORT2 | |
unumf_closeResult(UFormattedNumber* uresult); | |
#if U_SHOW_CPLUSPLUS_API | |
U_NAMESPACE_BEGIN | |
/** | |
* \class LocalUNumberFormatterPointer | |
* "Smart pointer" class; closes a UNumberFormatter via unumf_close(). | |
* For most methods see the LocalPointerBase base class. | |
* | |
* Usage: | |
* <pre> | |
* LocalUNumberFormatterPointer uformatter(unumf_openForSkeletonAndLocale(...)); | |
* // no need to explicitly call unumf_close() | |
* </pre> | |
* | |
* @see LocalPointerBase | |
* @see LocalPointer | |
* @stable ICU 62 | |
*/ | |
U_DEFINE_LOCAL_OPEN_POINTER(LocalUNumberFormatterPointer, UNumberFormatter, unumf_close); | |
/** | |
* \class LocalUFormattedNumberPointer | |
* "Smart pointer" class; closes a UFormattedNumber via unumf_closeResult(). | |
* For most methods see the LocalPointerBase base class. | |
* | |
* Usage: | |
* <pre> | |
* LocalUFormattedNumberPointer uformatter(unumf_openResult(...)); | |
* // no need to explicitly call unumf_closeResult() | |
* </pre> | |
* | |
* @see LocalPointerBase | |
* @see LocalPointer | |
* @stable ICU 62 | |
*/ | |
U_DEFINE_LOCAL_OPEN_POINTER(LocalUFormattedNumberPointer, UFormattedNumber, unumf_closeResult); | |
U_NAMESPACE_END | |
#endif // U_SHOW_CPLUSPLUS_API | |
#endif //__UNUMBERFORMATTER_H__ | |
#endif /* #if !UCONFIG_NO_FORMATTING */ |