The GetStringTypeW function returns character-type information for the characters in the specified source string. For each character in the string, the function sets one or more bits in the corresponding 16-bit element of the output array. Each bit identifies a given character type, such as whether the character is a letter, a digit, or neither.
BOOL GetStringTypeW(
DWORD dwInfoType, | // information-type options |
LPCWSTR lpSrcStr, | // address of source string |
int cchSrc, | // number of characters in string |
LPWORD lpCharType | // address of buffer for output |
); |
Parameters
dwInfoType
Specifies the type of character information the user wants to retrieve. The various types are divided into different levels (see the following Remarks section for a list of the information included in each type). This parameter can specify one of the following character type flags:
CT_CTYPE1 | Retrieve character type information. |
CT_CTYPE2 | Retrieve bidirectional layout information. |
CT_CTYPE3 | Retrieve text processing information. |
lpSrcStr
Points to the string for which character types are requested. If cchSrc is -1, the string is assumed to be null terminated. This must be a Unicode string.
cchSrc
Specifies the size, in characters, of the string pointed to by the lpSrcStr parameter. If this count includes a null terminator, the function returns character type information for the null terminator. If this value is -1, the string is assumed to be null terminated and the length is calculated automatically.
lpCharType
Points to an array of 16-bit values. The length of this array must be large enough to receive one 16-bit value for the number of characters specified in the cchSrc parameter. When the function returns, this array contains one word corresponding to each Unicode character in the source string.
Return Values
If the function succeeds, the return value is nonzero.
If the function fails, the return value is zero. To get extended error information, call GetLastError. GetLastError may return one of the following error codes:
ERROR_INVALID_FLAGS
ERROR_INVALID_PARAMETER
Remarks
Note that the GetStringTypeA function has one more parameter than the GetStringTypeW function: GetStringTypeA has a first parameter that is an LCID named Locale. This parameter does not exist in the GetStringTypeW function. Because of that parameter difference, an application cannot automatically invoke the proper A or W version of GetStringType* through the use of the #define UNICODE switch. An application can circumvent this limitation by using GetStringTypeEx; it is the recommended Win32 function.
The lpSrcStr and lpCharType pointers must not be the same. If they are the same, the function fails and GetLastError returns ERROR_INVALID_PARAMETER.
The character-type bits are divided into several levels. The information for one level can be retrieved by a single call to this function. Each level is limited to 16 bits of information so that the other mapping routines, which are limited to 16 bits of representation per character, can also return character-type information.
The character types supported by this function include the following.
Ctype 1
These types support ANSI C and POSIX (LC_CTYPE) character-typing functions. A combination of these values is returned in the array pointed to by the lpCharType parameter when the dwInfoType parameter is set to CT_CTYPE1.
Name | Value | Meaning |
C1_UPPER | 0x0001 | Uppercase |
C1_LOWER | 0x0002 | Lowercase |
C1_DIGIT | 0x0004 | Decimal digits |
C1_SPACE | 0x0008 | Space characters |
C1_PUNCT | 0x0010 | Punctuation |
C1_CNTRL | 0x0020 | Control characters |
C1_BLANK | 0x0040 | Blank characters |
C1_XDIGIT | 0x0080 | Hexadecimal digits |
C1_ALPHA | 0x0100 | Any linguistic character: alphabetic, syllabary, or ideographic |
The following character types are either constant or computable from basic types and do not need to be supported by this function.
Type | Description |
Alphanumeric | Alphabetic characters and digits (C1_ALPHA and C1_DIGIT) |
Printable | Graphic characters and blanks (all C1_* types except C1_CNTRL) |
Ctype 2
These types support proper layout of Unicode text. The direction attributes are assigned so that the bidirectional layout algorithm standardized by Unicode produces accurate results. These types are mutually exclusive. For more information about the use of these attributes, see The Unicode Standard: Worldwide Character Encoding, Volumes 1 and 2, Addison Wesley Publishing Company: 1991, 1992, ISBN 0201567881.
Name | Value | Meaning |
Strong: | ||
C2_LEFTTORIGHT | 0x1 | Left to right |
C2_RIGHTTOLEFT | 0x2 | Right to left |
Weak: | ||
C2_EUROPENUMBER | 0x3 | European number, European digit |
C2_EUROPESEPARATOR | 0x4 | European numeric separator |
C2_EUROPETERMINATOR | 0x5 | European numeric terminator |
C2_ARABICNUMBER | 0x6 | Arabic number |
C2_COMMONSEPARATOR | 0x7 | Common numeric separator |
Neutral: | ||
C2_BLOCKSEPARATOR | 0x8 | Block separator |
C2_SEGMENTSEPARATOR | 0x9 | Segment separator |
C2_WHITESPACE | 0xA | White space |
C2_OTHERNEUTRAL | 0xB | Other neutrals |
Not applicable: | ||
C2_NOTAPPLICABLE | 0x0 | No implicit directionality (for example, control codes) |
Ctype 3
These types are intended to be placeholders for extensions to the POSIX types required for general text processing or for the standard C library functions. These types are supported in the current version of Windows NT. A combination of these values is returned when dwInfoType is set to CT_CTYPE3.
Name | Value | Meaning |
C3_NONSPACING | 0x1 | Nonspacing mark |
C3_DIACRITIC | 0x2 | Diacritic nonspacing mark |
C3_VOWELMARK | 0x4 | Vowel nonspacing mark |
C3_SYMBOL | 0x8 | Symbol |
C3_KATAKANA | 0x10 | Katakana character |
C3_HIRAGANA | 0x20 | Hiragana character |
C3_HALFWIDTH | 0x40 | Half-width character |
C3_FULLWIDTH | 0x80 | Full-width character |
C3_IDEOGRAPH | 0x100 | Ideographic character |
C3_KASHIDA | 0x200 | Arabic Kashida character |
C3_ALPHA | 0x8000 | All linguistic characters (alphabetic, syllabary, and ideographic) |
Not applicable: | ||
C3_NOTAPPLICABLE | 0x0 | Not applicable |
See Also