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1=head1 NAME
2
3perlapi - autogenerated documentation for the perl public API
4
5=head1 DESCRIPTION
6
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7This file contains the documentation of the perl public API generated by
8embed.pl, specifically a listing of functions, macros, flags, and variables
9that may be used by extension writers. The interfaces of any functions that
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10are not listed here are subject to change without notice. For this reason,
11blindly using functions listed in proto.h is to be avoided when writing
12extensions.
13
14Note that all Perl API global variables must be referenced with the C<PL_>
15prefix. Some macros are provided for compatibility with the older,
16unadorned names, but this support may be disabled in a future release.
17
18The listing is alphabetical, case insensitive.
19
20=over 8
21
22=item AvFILL
23
24Same as C<av_len()>. Deprecated, use C<av_len()> instead.
25
26 int AvFILL(AV* av)
27
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28=for hackers
29Found in file av.h
30
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31=item av_clear
32
33Clears an array, making it empty. Does not free the memory used by the
34array itself.
35
36 void av_clear(AV* ar)
37
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38=for hackers
39Found in file av.c
40
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41=item av_delete
42
43Deletes the element indexed by C<key> from the array. Returns the
44deleted element. C<flags> is currently ignored.
45
46 SV* av_delete(AV* ar, I32 key, I32 flags)
47
48=for hackers
49Found in file av.c
50
51=item av_exists
52
53Returns true if the element indexed by C<key> has been initialized.
54
55This relies on the fact that uninitialized array elements are set to
56C<&PL_sv_undef>.
57
58 bool av_exists(AV* ar, I32 key)
59
60=for hackers
61Found in file av.c
62
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63=item av_extend
64
65Pre-extend an array. The C<key> is the index to which the array should be
66extended.
67
68 void av_extend(AV* ar, I32 key)
69
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70=for hackers
71Found in file av.c
72
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73=item av_fetch
74
75Returns the SV at the specified index in the array. The C<key> is the
76index. If C<lval> is set then the fetch will be part of a store. Check
77that the return value is non-null before dereferencing it to a C<SV*>.
78
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79See L<perlguts/"Understanding the Magic of Tied Hashes and Arrays"> for
80more information on how to use this function on tied arrays.
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81
82 SV** av_fetch(AV* ar, I32 key, I32 lval)
83
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84=for hackers
85Found in file av.c
86
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87=item av_fill
88
89Ensure than an array has a given number of elements, equivalent to
90Perl's C<$#array = $fill;>.
91
92 void av_fill(AV* ar, I32 fill)
93
94=for hackers
95Found in file av.c
96
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97=item av_len
98
99Returns the highest index in the array. Returns -1 if the array is
100empty.
101
102 I32 av_len(AV* ar)
103
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104=for hackers
105Found in file av.c
106
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107=item av_make
108
109Creates a new AV and populates it with a list of SVs. The SVs are copied
110into the array, so they may be freed after the call to av_make. The new AV
111will have a reference count of 1.
112
113 AV* av_make(I32 size, SV** svp)
114
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115=for hackers
116Found in file av.c
117
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118=item av_pop
119
120Pops an SV off the end of the array. Returns C<&PL_sv_undef> if the array
121is empty.
122
123 SV* av_pop(AV* ar)
124
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125=for hackers
126Found in file av.c
127
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128=item av_push
129
130Pushes an SV onto the end of the array. The array will grow automatically
131to accommodate the addition.
132
133 void av_push(AV* ar, SV* val)
134
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135=for hackers
136Found in file av.c
137
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138=item av_shift
139
140Shifts an SV off the beginning of the array.
141
142 SV* av_shift(AV* ar)
143
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144=for hackers
145Found in file av.c
146
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147=item av_store
148
149Stores an SV in an array. The array index is specified as C<key>. The
150return value will be NULL if the operation failed or if the value did not
151need to be actually stored within the array (as in the case of tied
152arrays). Otherwise it can be dereferenced to get the original C<SV*>. Note
153that the caller is responsible for suitably incrementing the reference
154count of C<val> before the call, and decrementing it if the function
155returned NULL.
156
96f1132b 157See L<perlguts/"Understanding the Magic of Tied Hashes and Arrays"> for
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158more information on how to use this function on tied arrays.
159
160 SV** av_store(AV* ar, I32 key, SV* val)
161
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162=for hackers
163Found in file av.c
164
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165=item av_undef
166
167Undefines the array. Frees the memory used by the array itself.
168
169 void av_undef(AV* ar)
170
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171=for hackers
172Found in file av.c
173
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174=item av_unshift
175
176Unshift the given number of C<undef> values onto the beginning of the
177array. The array will grow automatically to accommodate the addition. You
178must then use C<av_store> to assign values to these new elements.
179
180 void av_unshift(AV* ar, I32 num)
181
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182=for hackers
183Found in file av.c
184
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185=item ax
186
187Variable which is setup by C<xsubpp> to indicate the stack base offset,
188used by the C<ST>, C<XSprePUSH> and C<XSRETURN> macros. The C<dMARK> macro
189must be called prior to setup the C<MARK> variable.
190
191 I32 ax
192
193=for hackers
194Found in file XSUB.h
195
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196=item bytes_from_utf8
197
198Converts a string C<s> of length C<len> from UTF8 into byte encoding.
199Unlike <utf8_to_bytes> but like C<bytes_to_utf8>, returns a pointer to
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200the newly-created string, and updates C<len> to contain the new
201length. Returns the original string if no conversion occurs, C<len>
202is unchanged. Do nothing if C<is_utf8> points to 0. Sets C<is_utf8> to
2030 if C<s> is converted or contains all 7bit characters.
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204
205NOTE: this function is experimental and may change or be
206removed without notice.
207
208 U8* bytes_from_utf8(U8 *s, STRLEN *len, bool *is_utf8)
209
210=for hackers
211Found in file utf8.c
212
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213=item bytes_to_utf8
214
215Converts a string C<s> of length C<len> from ASCII into UTF8 encoding.
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216Returns a pointer to the newly-created string, and sets C<len> to
217reflect the new length.
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219NOTE: this function is experimental and may change or be
220removed without notice.
221
222 U8* bytes_to_utf8(U8 *s, STRLEN *len)
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223
224=for hackers
225Found in file utf8.c
226
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227=item call_argv
228
229Performs a callback to the specified Perl sub. See L<perlcall>.
230
231NOTE: the perl_ form of this function is deprecated.
232
233 I32 call_argv(const char* sub_name, I32 flags, char** argv)
234
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235=for hackers
236Found in file perl.c
237
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238=item call_method
239
240Performs a callback to the specified Perl method. The blessed object must
241be on the stack. See L<perlcall>.
242
243NOTE: the perl_ form of this function is deprecated.
244
245 I32 call_method(const char* methname, I32 flags)
246
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247=for hackers
248Found in file perl.c
249
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250=item call_pv
251
252Performs a callback to the specified Perl sub. See L<perlcall>.
253
254NOTE: the perl_ form of this function is deprecated.
255
256 I32 call_pv(const char* sub_name, I32 flags)
257
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258=for hackers
259Found in file perl.c
260
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261=item call_sv
262
263Performs a callback to the Perl sub whose name is in the SV. See
264L<perlcall>.
265
266NOTE: the perl_ form of this function is deprecated.
267
268 I32 call_sv(SV* sv, I32 flags)
269
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270=for hackers
271Found in file perl.c
272
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273=item CLASS
274
275Variable which is setup by C<xsubpp> to indicate the
276class name for a C++ XS constructor. This is always a C<char*>. See C<THIS>.
277
278 char* CLASS
279
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280=for hackers
281Found in file XSUB.h
282
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283=item Copy
284
285The XSUB-writer's interface to the C C<memcpy> function. The C<src> is the
286source, C<dest> is the destination, C<nitems> is the number of items, and C<type> is
287the type. May fail on overlapping copies. See also C<Move>.
288
289 void Copy(void* src, void* dest, int nitems, type)
290
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291=for hackers
292Found in file handy.h
293
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294=item croak
295
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296This is the XSUB-writer's interface to Perl's C<die> function.
297Normally use this function the same way you use the C C<printf>
298function. See C<warn>.
299
300If you want to throw an exception object, assign the object to
301C<$@> and then pass C<Nullch> to croak():
302
303 errsv = get_sv("@", TRUE);
304 sv_setsv(errsv, exception_object);
305 croak(Nullch);
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306
307 void croak(const char* pat, ...)
308
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309=for hackers
310Found in file util.c
311
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312=item CvSTASH
313
314Returns the stash of the CV.
315
316 HV* CvSTASH(CV* cv)
317
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318=for hackers
319Found in file cv.h
320
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321=item cv_const_sv
322
323If C<cv> is a constant sub eligible for inlining. returns the constant
324value returned by the sub. Otherwise, returns NULL.
325
326Constant subs can be created with C<newCONSTSUB> or as described in
327L<perlsub/"Constant Functions">.
328
329 SV* cv_const_sv(CV* cv)
330
331=for hackers
fa519979 332Found in file op.c
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334=item dAX
335
336Sets up the C<ax> variable.
337This is usually handled automatically by C<xsubpp> by calling C<dXSARGS>.
338
339 dAX;
340
341=for hackers
342Found in file XSUB.h
343
344=item dITEMS
345
346Sets up the C<items> variable.
347This is usually handled automatically by C<xsubpp> by calling C<dXSARGS>.
348
349 dITEMS;
350
351=for hackers
352Found in file XSUB.h
353
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354=item dMARK
355
356Declare a stack marker variable, C<mark>, for the XSUB. See C<MARK> and
357C<dORIGMARK>.
358
359 dMARK;
360
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361=for hackers
362Found in file pp.h
363
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364=item dORIGMARK
365
366Saves the original stack mark for the XSUB. See C<ORIGMARK>.
367
368 dORIGMARK;
369
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370=for hackers
371Found in file pp.h
372
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373=item dSP
374
375Declares a local copy of perl's stack pointer for the XSUB, available via
376the C<SP> macro. See C<SP>.
377
378 dSP;
379
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380=for hackers
381Found in file pp.h
382
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383=item dXSARGS
384
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385Sets up stack and mark pointers for an XSUB, calling dSP and dMARK.
386Sets up the C<ax> and C<items> variables by calling C<dAX> and C<dITEMS>.
387This is usually handled automatically by C<xsubpp>.
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388
389 dXSARGS;
390
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391=for hackers
392Found in file XSUB.h
393
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394=item dXSI32
395
396Sets up the C<ix> variable for an XSUB which has aliases. This is usually
397handled automatically by C<xsubpp>.
398
399 dXSI32;
400
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401=for hackers
402Found in file XSUB.h
403
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404=item ENTER
405
406Opening bracket on a callback. See C<LEAVE> and L<perlcall>.
407
408 ENTER;
409
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410=for hackers
411Found in file scope.h
412
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413=item eval_pv
414
415Tells Perl to C<eval> the given string and return an SV* result.
416
417NOTE: the perl_ form of this function is deprecated.
418
419 SV* eval_pv(const char* p, I32 croak_on_error)
420
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421=for hackers
422Found in file perl.c
423
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424=item eval_sv
425
426Tells Perl to C<eval> the string in the SV.
427
428NOTE: the perl_ form of this function is deprecated.
429
430 I32 eval_sv(SV* sv, I32 flags)
431
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432=for hackers
433Found in file perl.c
434
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435=item EXTEND
436
437Used to extend the argument stack for an XSUB's return values. Once
4375e838 438used, guarantees that there is room for at least C<nitems> to be pushed
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439onto the stack.
440
441 void EXTEND(SP, int nitems)
442
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443=for hackers
444Found in file pp.h
445
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446=item fbm_compile
447
448Analyses the string in order to make fast searches on it using fbm_instr()
449-- the Boyer-Moore algorithm.
450
451 void fbm_compile(SV* sv, U32 flags)
452
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453=for hackers
454Found in file util.c
455
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456=item fbm_instr
457
458Returns the location of the SV in the string delimited by C<str> and
459C<strend>. It returns C<Nullch> if the string can't be found. The C<sv>
460does not have to be fbm_compiled, but the search will not be as fast
461then.
462
463 char* fbm_instr(unsigned char* big, unsigned char* bigend, SV* littlesv, U32 flags)
464
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465=for hackers
466Found in file util.c
467
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468=item FREETMPS
469
470Closing bracket for temporaries on a callback. See C<SAVETMPS> and
471L<perlcall>.
472
473 FREETMPS;
474
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475=for hackers
476Found in file scope.h
477
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478=item getcwd_sv
479
480Fill the sv with current working directory
481
482 int getcwd_sv(SV* sv)
483
484=for hackers
485Found in file util.c
486
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487=item get_av
488
489Returns the AV of the specified Perl array. If C<create> is set and the
490Perl variable does not exist then it will be created. If C<create> is not
491set and the variable does not exist then NULL is returned.
492
493NOTE: the perl_ form of this function is deprecated.
494
495 AV* get_av(const char* name, I32 create)
496
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497=for hackers
498Found in file perl.c
499
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500=item get_cv
501
502Returns the CV of the specified Perl subroutine. If C<create> is set and
503the Perl subroutine does not exist then it will be declared (which has the
504same effect as saying C<sub name;>). If C<create> is not set and the
505subroutine does not exist then NULL is returned.
506
507NOTE: the perl_ form of this function is deprecated.
508
509 CV* get_cv(const char* name, I32 create)
510
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511=for hackers
512Found in file perl.c
513
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514=item get_hv
515
516Returns the HV of the specified Perl hash. If C<create> is set and the
517Perl variable does not exist then it will be created. If C<create> is not
518set and the variable does not exist then NULL is returned.
519
520NOTE: the perl_ form of this function is deprecated.
521
522 HV* get_hv(const char* name, I32 create)
523
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524=for hackers
525Found in file perl.c
526
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527=item get_sv
528
529Returns the SV of the specified Perl scalar. If C<create> is set and the
530Perl variable does not exist then it will be created. If C<create> is not
531set and the variable does not exist then NULL is returned.
532
533NOTE: the perl_ form of this function is deprecated.
534
535 SV* get_sv(const char* name, I32 create)
536
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537=for hackers
538Found in file perl.c
539
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540=item GIMME
541
542A backward-compatible version of C<GIMME_V> which can only return
543C<G_SCALAR> or C<G_ARRAY>; in a void context, it returns C<G_SCALAR>.
544Deprecated. Use C<GIMME_V> instead.
545
546 U32 GIMME
547
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548=for hackers
549Found in file op.h
550
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551=item GIMME_V
552
553The XSUB-writer's equivalent to Perl's C<wantarray>. Returns C<G_VOID>,
90fdbbb7 554C<G_SCALAR> or C<G_ARRAY> for void, scalar or list context,
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555respectively.
556
557 U32 GIMME_V
558
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559=for hackers
560Found in file op.h
561
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562=item grok_bin
563
564converts a string representing a binary number to numeric form.
565
566On entry I<start> and I<*len> give the string to scan, I<*flags> gives
567conversion flags, and I<result> should be NULL or a pointer to an NV.
568The scan stops at the end of the string, or the first invalid character.
569On return I<*len> is set to the length scanned string, and I<*flags> gives
570output flags.
571
572If the value is <= UV_MAX it is returned as a UV, the output flags are clear,
573and nothing is written to I<*result>. If the value is > UV_MAX C<grok_bin>
574returns UV_MAX, sets C<PERL_SCAN_GREATER_THAN_UV_MAX> in the output flags,
575and writes the value to I<*result> (or the value is discarded if I<result>
576is NULL).
577
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578The hex number may optinally be prefixed with "0b" or "b" unless
579C<PERL_SCAN_DISALLOW_PREFIX> is set in I<*flags> on entry. If
580C<PERL_SCAN_ALLOW_UNDERSCORES> is set in I<*flags> then the binary
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581number may use '_' characters to separate digits.
582
583 UV grok_bin(char* start, STRLEN* len, I32* flags, NV *result)
584
585=for hackers
586Found in file numeric.c
587
588=item grok_hex
589
590converts a string representing a hex number to numeric form.
591
592On entry I<start> and I<*len> give the string to scan, I<*flags> gives
593conversion flags, and I<result> should be NULL or a pointer to an NV.
594The scan stops at the end of the string, or the first non-hex-digit character.
595On return I<*len> is set to the length scanned string, and I<*flags> gives
596output flags.
597
598If the value is <= UV_MAX it is returned as a UV, the output flags are clear,
599and nothing is written to I<*result>. If the value is > UV_MAX C<grok_hex>
600returns UV_MAX, sets C<PERL_SCAN_GREATER_THAN_UV_MAX> in the output flags,
601and writes the value to I<*result> (or the value is discarded if I<result>
602is NULL).
603
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604The hex number may optinally be prefixed with "0x" or "x" unless
605C<PERL_SCAN_DISALLOW_PREFIX> is set in I<*flags> on entry. If
606C<PERL_SCAN_ALLOW_UNDERSCORES> is set in I<*flags> then the hex
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607number may use '_' characters to separate digits.
608
609 UV grok_hex(char* start, STRLEN* len, I32* flags, NV *result)
610
611=for hackers
612Found in file numeric.c
613
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614=item grok_number
615
616Recognise (or not) a number. The type of the number is returned
617(0 if unrecognised), otherwise it is a bit-ORed combination of
618IS_NUMBER_IN_UV, IS_NUMBER_GREATER_THAN_UV_MAX, IS_NUMBER_NOT_INT,
793edb8a 619IS_NUMBER_NEG, IS_NUMBER_INFINITY, IS_NUMBER_NAN (defined in perl.h).
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620
621If the value of the number can fit an in UV, it is returned in the *valuep
622IS_NUMBER_IN_UV will be set to indicate that *valuep is valid, IS_NUMBER_IN_UV
623will never be set unless *valuep is valid, but *valuep may have been assigned
624to during processing even though IS_NUMBER_IN_UV is not set on return.
625If valuep is NULL, IS_NUMBER_IN_UV will be set for the same cases as when
626valuep is non-NULL, but no actual assignment (or SEGV) will occur.
627
628IS_NUMBER_NOT_INT will be set with IS_NUMBER_IN_UV if trailing decimals were
629seen (in which case *valuep gives the true value truncated to an integer), and
630IS_NUMBER_NEG if the number is negative (in which case *valuep holds the
631absolute value). IS_NUMBER_IN_UV is not set if e notation was used or the
632number is larger than a UV.
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633
634 int grok_number(const char *pv, STRLEN len, UV *valuep)
635
636=for hackers
98994639 637Found in file numeric.c
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638
639=item grok_numeric_radix
640
641Scan and skip for a numeric decimal separator (radix).
642
643 bool grok_numeric_radix(const char **sp, const char *send)
644
645=for hackers
98994639 646Found in file numeric.c
dd5dc04f 647
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648=item grok_oct
649
650
651 UV grok_oct(char* start, STRLEN* len, I32* flags, NV *result)
652
653=for hackers
654Found in file numeric.c
655
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656=item GvSV
657
658Return the SV from the GV.
659
660 SV* GvSV(GV* gv)
661
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662=for hackers
663Found in file gv.h
664
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665=item gv_fetchmeth
666
667Returns the glob with the given C<name> and a defined subroutine or
668C<NULL>. The glob lives in the given C<stash>, or in the stashes
a453c169 669accessible via @ISA and UNIVERSAL::.
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670
671The argument C<level> should be either 0 or -1. If C<level==0>, as a
672side-effect creates a glob with the given C<name> in the given C<stash>
673which in the case of success contains an alias for the subroutine, and sets
1c846c1f 674up caching info for this glob. Similarly for all the searched stashes.
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675
676This function grants C<"SUPER"> token as a postfix of the stash name. The
677GV returned from C<gv_fetchmeth> may be a method cache entry, which is not
4929bf7b 678visible to Perl code. So when calling C<call_sv>, you should not use
954c1994 679the GV directly; instead, you should use the method's CV, which can be
1c846c1f 680obtained from the GV with the C<GvCV> macro.
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681
682 GV* gv_fetchmeth(HV* stash, const char* name, STRLEN len, I32 level)
683
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684=for hackers
685Found in file gv.c
686
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687=item gv_fetchmethod
688
6d0f518e 689See L<gv_fetchmethod_autoload>.
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GS
690
691 GV* gv_fetchmethod(HV* stash, const char* name)
692
497711e7
GS
693=for hackers
694Found in file gv.c
695
954c1994
GS
696=item gv_fetchmethod_autoload
697
698Returns the glob which contains the subroutine to call to invoke the method
699on the C<stash>. In fact in the presence of autoloading this may be the
700glob for "AUTOLOAD". In this case the corresponding variable $AUTOLOAD is
1c846c1f 701already setup.
954c1994
GS
702
703The third parameter of C<gv_fetchmethod_autoload> determines whether
704AUTOLOAD lookup is performed if the given method is not present: non-zero
1c846c1f 705means yes, look for AUTOLOAD; zero means no, don't look for AUTOLOAD.
954c1994 706Calling C<gv_fetchmethod> is equivalent to calling C<gv_fetchmethod_autoload>
1c846c1f 707with a non-zero C<autoload> parameter.
954c1994
GS
708
709These functions grant C<"SUPER"> token as a prefix of the method name. Note
710that if you want to keep the returned glob for a long time, you need to
711check for it being "AUTOLOAD", since at the later time the call may load a
712different subroutine due to $AUTOLOAD changing its value. Use the glob
1c846c1f 713created via a side effect to do this.
954c1994
GS
714
715These functions have the same side-effects and as C<gv_fetchmeth> with
716C<level==0>. C<name> should be writable if contains C<':'> or C<'
717''>. The warning against passing the GV returned by C<gv_fetchmeth> to
1c846c1f 718C<call_sv> apply equally to these functions.
954c1994
GS
719
720 GV* gv_fetchmethod_autoload(HV* stash, const char* name, I32 autoload)
721
497711e7
GS
722=for hackers
723Found in file gv.c
724
954c1994
GS
725=item gv_stashpv
726
386d01d6
GS
727Returns a pointer to the stash for a specified package. C<name> should
728be a valid UTF-8 string. If C<create> is set then the package will be
729created if it does not already exist. If C<create> is not set and the
730package does not exist then NULL is returned.
954c1994
GS
731
732 HV* gv_stashpv(const char* name, I32 create)
733
497711e7
GS
734=for hackers
735Found in file gv.c
736
954c1994
GS
737=item gv_stashsv
738
386d01d6
GS
739Returns a pointer to the stash for a specified package, which must be a
740valid UTF-8 string. See C<gv_stashpv>.
954c1994
GS
741
742 HV* gv_stashsv(SV* sv, I32 create)
743
497711e7
GS
744=for hackers
745Found in file gv.c
746
954c1994
GS
747=item G_ARRAY
748
90fdbbb7 749Used to indicate list context. See C<GIMME_V>, C<GIMME> and
954c1994
GS
750L<perlcall>.
751
497711e7
GS
752=for hackers
753Found in file cop.h
754
954c1994
GS
755=item G_DISCARD
756
757Indicates that arguments returned from a callback should be discarded. See
758L<perlcall>.
759
497711e7
GS
760=for hackers
761Found in file cop.h
762
954c1994
GS
763=item G_EVAL
764
765Used to force a Perl C<eval> wrapper around a callback. See
766L<perlcall>.
767
497711e7
GS
768=for hackers
769Found in file cop.h
770
954c1994
GS
771=item G_NOARGS
772
773Indicates that no arguments are being sent to a callback. See
774L<perlcall>.
775
497711e7
GS
776=for hackers
777Found in file cop.h
778
954c1994
GS
779=item G_SCALAR
780
781Used to indicate scalar context. See C<GIMME_V>, C<GIMME>, and
782L<perlcall>.
783
497711e7
GS
784=for hackers
785Found in file cop.h
786
954c1994
GS
787=item G_VOID
788
789Used to indicate void context. See C<GIMME_V> and L<perlcall>.
790
497711e7
GS
791=for hackers
792Found in file cop.h
793
954c1994
GS
794=item HEf_SVKEY
795
796This flag, used in the length slot of hash entries and magic structures,
797specifies the structure contains a C<SV*> pointer where a C<char*> pointer
798is to be expected. (For information only--not to be used).
799
497711e7
GS
800=for hackers
801Found in file hv.h
802
954c1994
GS
803=item HeHASH
804
805Returns the computed hash stored in the hash entry.
806
807 U32 HeHASH(HE* he)
808
497711e7
GS
809=for hackers
810Found in file hv.h
811
954c1994
GS
812=item HeKEY
813
814Returns the actual pointer stored in the key slot of the hash entry. The
815pointer may be either C<char*> or C<SV*>, depending on the value of
816C<HeKLEN()>. Can be assigned to. The C<HePV()> or C<HeSVKEY()> macros are
817usually preferable for finding the value of a key.
818
819 void* HeKEY(HE* he)
820
497711e7
GS
821=for hackers
822Found in file hv.h
823
954c1994
GS
824=item HeKLEN
825
826If this is negative, and amounts to C<HEf_SVKEY>, it indicates the entry
827holds an C<SV*> key. Otherwise, holds the actual length of the key. Can
828be assigned to. The C<HePV()> macro is usually preferable for finding key
829lengths.
830
831 STRLEN HeKLEN(HE* he)
832
497711e7
GS
833=for hackers
834Found in file hv.h
835
954c1994
GS
836=item HePV
837
838Returns the key slot of the hash entry as a C<char*> value, doing any
839necessary dereferencing of possibly C<SV*> keys. The length of the string
840is placed in C<len> (this is a macro, so do I<not> use C<&len>). If you do
841not care about what the length of the key is, you may use the global
842variable C<PL_na>, though this is rather less efficient than using a local
843variable. Remember though, that hash keys in perl are free to contain
844embedded nulls, so using C<strlen()> or similar is not a good way to find
845the length of hash keys. This is very similar to the C<SvPV()> macro
846described elsewhere in this document.
847
848 char* HePV(HE* he, STRLEN len)
849
497711e7
GS
850=for hackers
851Found in file hv.h
852
954c1994
GS
853=item HeSVKEY
854
855Returns the key as an C<SV*>, or C<Nullsv> if the hash entry does not
856contain an C<SV*> key.
857
858 SV* HeSVKEY(HE* he)
859
497711e7
GS
860=for hackers
861Found in file hv.h
862
954c1994
GS
863=item HeSVKEY_force
864
865Returns the key as an C<SV*>. Will create and return a temporary mortal
866C<SV*> if the hash entry contains only a C<char*> key.
867
868 SV* HeSVKEY_force(HE* he)
869
497711e7
GS
870=for hackers
871Found in file hv.h
872
954c1994
GS
873=item HeSVKEY_set
874
875Sets the key to a given C<SV*>, taking care to set the appropriate flags to
876indicate the presence of an C<SV*> key, and returns the same
877C<SV*>.
878
879 SV* HeSVKEY_set(HE* he, SV* sv)
880
497711e7
GS
881=for hackers
882Found in file hv.h
883
954c1994
GS
884=item HeVAL
885
886Returns the value slot (type C<SV*>) stored in the hash entry.
887
888 SV* HeVAL(HE* he)
889
497711e7
GS
890=for hackers
891Found in file hv.h
892
954c1994
GS
893=item HvNAME
894
895Returns the package name of a stash. See C<SvSTASH>, C<CvSTASH>.
896
897 char* HvNAME(HV* stash)
898
497711e7
GS
899=for hackers
900Found in file hv.h
901
954c1994
GS
902=item hv_clear
903
904Clears a hash, making it empty.
905
906 void hv_clear(HV* tb)
907
497711e7
GS
908=for hackers
909Found in file hv.c
910
954c1994
GS
911=item hv_delete
912
913Deletes a key/value pair in the hash. The value SV is removed from the
1c846c1f 914hash and returned to the caller. The C<klen> is the length of the key.
954c1994
GS
915The C<flags> value will normally be zero; if set to G_DISCARD then NULL
916will be returned.
917
da58a35d 918 SV* hv_delete(HV* tb, const char* key, I32 klen, I32 flags)
954c1994 919
497711e7
GS
920=for hackers
921Found in file hv.c
922
954c1994
GS
923=item hv_delete_ent
924
925Deletes a key/value pair in the hash. The value SV is removed from the
926hash and returned to the caller. The C<flags> value will normally be zero;
927if set to G_DISCARD then NULL will be returned. C<hash> can be a valid
928precomputed hash value, or 0 to ask for it to be computed.
929
930 SV* hv_delete_ent(HV* tb, SV* key, I32 flags, U32 hash)
931
497711e7
GS
932=for hackers
933Found in file hv.c
934
954c1994
GS
935=item hv_exists
936
937Returns a boolean indicating whether the specified hash key exists. The
938C<klen> is the length of the key.
939
da58a35d 940 bool hv_exists(HV* tb, const char* key, I32 klen)
954c1994 941
497711e7
GS
942=for hackers
943Found in file hv.c
944
954c1994
GS
945=item hv_exists_ent
946
947Returns a boolean indicating whether the specified hash key exists. C<hash>
948can be a valid precomputed hash value, or 0 to ask for it to be
949computed.
950
951 bool hv_exists_ent(HV* tb, SV* key, U32 hash)
952
497711e7
GS
953=for hackers
954Found in file hv.c
955
954c1994
GS
956=item hv_fetch
957
958Returns the SV which corresponds to the specified key in the hash. The
959C<klen> is the length of the key. If C<lval> is set then the fetch will be
960part of a store. Check that the return value is non-null before
1c846c1f 961dereferencing it to a C<SV*>.
954c1994 962
96f1132b 963See L<perlguts/"Understanding the Magic of Tied Hashes and Arrays"> for more
954c1994
GS
964information on how to use this function on tied hashes.
965
da58a35d 966 SV** hv_fetch(HV* tb, const char* key, I32 klen, I32 lval)
954c1994 967
497711e7
GS
968=for hackers
969Found in file hv.c
970
954c1994
GS
971=item hv_fetch_ent
972
973Returns the hash entry which corresponds to the specified key in the hash.
974C<hash> must be a valid precomputed hash number for the given C<key>, or 0
975if you want the function to compute it. IF C<lval> is set then the fetch
976will be part of a store. Make sure the return value is non-null before
977accessing it. The return value when C<tb> is a tied hash is a pointer to a
978static location, so be sure to make a copy of the structure if you need to
1c846c1f 979store it somewhere.
954c1994 980
96f1132b 981See L<perlguts/"Understanding the Magic of Tied Hashes and Arrays"> for more
954c1994
GS
982information on how to use this function on tied hashes.
983
984 HE* hv_fetch_ent(HV* tb, SV* key, I32 lval, U32 hash)
985
497711e7
GS
986=for hackers
987Found in file hv.c
988
954c1994
GS
989=item hv_iterinit
990
991Prepares a starting point to traverse a hash table. Returns the number of
992keys in the hash (i.e. the same as C<HvKEYS(tb)>). The return value is
1c846c1f 993currently only meaningful for hashes without tie magic.
954c1994
GS
994
995NOTE: Before version 5.004_65, C<hv_iterinit> used to return the number of
996hash buckets that happen to be in use. If you still need that esoteric
997value, you can get it through the macro C<HvFILL(tb)>.
998
999 I32 hv_iterinit(HV* tb)
1000
497711e7
GS
1001=for hackers
1002Found in file hv.c
1003
954c1994
GS
1004=item hv_iterkey
1005
1006Returns the key from the current position of the hash iterator. See
1007C<hv_iterinit>.
1008
1009 char* hv_iterkey(HE* entry, I32* retlen)
1010
497711e7
GS
1011=for hackers
1012Found in file hv.c
1013
954c1994
GS
1014=item hv_iterkeysv
1015
1016Returns the key as an C<SV*> from the current position of the hash
1017iterator. The return value will always be a mortal copy of the key. Also
1018see C<hv_iterinit>.
1019
1020 SV* hv_iterkeysv(HE* entry)
1021
497711e7
GS
1022=for hackers
1023Found in file hv.c
1024
954c1994
GS
1025=item hv_iternext
1026
1027Returns entries from a hash iterator. See C<hv_iterinit>.
1028
1029 HE* hv_iternext(HV* tb)
1030
497711e7
GS
1031=for hackers
1032Found in file hv.c
1033
954c1994
GS
1034=item hv_iternextsv
1035
1036Performs an C<hv_iternext>, C<hv_iterkey>, and C<hv_iterval> in one
1037operation.
1038
1039 SV* hv_iternextsv(HV* hv, char** key, I32* retlen)
1040
497711e7
GS
1041=for hackers
1042Found in file hv.c
1043
954c1994
GS
1044=item hv_iterval
1045
1046Returns the value from the current position of the hash iterator. See
1047C<hv_iterkey>.
1048
1049 SV* hv_iterval(HV* tb, HE* entry)
1050
497711e7
GS
1051=for hackers
1052Found in file hv.c
1053
954c1994
GS
1054=item hv_magic
1055
1056Adds magic to a hash. See C<sv_magic>.
1057
1058 void hv_magic(HV* hv, GV* gv, int how)
1059
497711e7
GS
1060=for hackers
1061Found in file hv.c
1062
954c1994
GS
1063=item hv_store
1064
1065Stores an SV in a hash. The hash key is specified as C<key> and C<klen> is
1066the length of the key. The C<hash> parameter is the precomputed hash
1067value; if it is zero then Perl will compute it. The return value will be
1068NULL if the operation failed or if the value did not need to be actually
1069stored within the hash (as in the case of tied hashes). Otherwise it can
1070be dereferenced to get the original C<SV*>. Note that the caller is
1071responsible for suitably incrementing the reference count of C<val> before
1c846c1f 1072the call, and decrementing it if the function returned NULL.
954c1994 1073
96f1132b 1074See L<perlguts/"Understanding the Magic of Tied Hashes and Arrays"> for more
954c1994
GS
1075information on how to use this function on tied hashes.
1076
da58a35d 1077 SV** hv_store(HV* tb, const char* key, I32 klen, SV* val, U32 hash)
954c1994 1078
497711e7
GS
1079=for hackers
1080Found in file hv.c
1081
954c1994
GS
1082=item hv_store_ent
1083
1084Stores C<val> in a hash. The hash key is specified as C<key>. The C<hash>
1085parameter is the precomputed hash value; if it is zero then Perl will
1086compute it. The return value is the new hash entry so created. It will be
1087NULL if the operation failed or if the value did not need to be actually
1088stored within the hash (as in the case of tied hashes). Otherwise the
f22d8e4b 1089contents of the return value can be accessed using the C<He?> macros
954c1994
GS
1090described here. Note that the caller is responsible for suitably
1091incrementing the reference count of C<val> before the call, and
1c846c1f 1092decrementing it if the function returned NULL.
954c1994 1093
96f1132b 1094See L<perlguts/"Understanding the Magic of Tied Hashes and Arrays"> for more
954c1994
GS
1095information on how to use this function on tied hashes.
1096
1097 HE* hv_store_ent(HV* tb, SV* key, SV* val, U32 hash)
1098
497711e7
GS
1099=for hackers
1100Found in file hv.c
1101
954c1994
GS
1102=item hv_undef
1103
1104Undefines the hash.
1105
1106 void hv_undef(HV* tb)
1107
497711e7
GS
1108=for hackers
1109Found in file hv.c
1110
954c1994
GS
1111=item isALNUM
1112
4375e838 1113Returns a boolean indicating whether the C C<char> is an ASCII alphanumeric
f1cbbd6e 1114character (including underscore) or digit.
954c1994
GS
1115
1116 bool isALNUM(char ch)
1117
497711e7
GS
1118=for hackers
1119Found in file handy.h
1120
954c1994
GS
1121=item isALPHA
1122
4375e838 1123Returns a boolean indicating whether the C C<char> is an ASCII alphabetic
954c1994
GS
1124character.
1125
1126 bool isALPHA(char ch)
1127
497711e7
GS
1128=for hackers
1129Found in file handy.h
1130
954c1994
GS
1131=item isDIGIT
1132
4375e838 1133Returns a boolean indicating whether the C C<char> is an ASCII
954c1994
GS
1134digit.
1135
1136 bool isDIGIT(char ch)
1137
497711e7
GS
1138=for hackers
1139Found in file handy.h
1140
954c1994
GS
1141=item isLOWER
1142
1143Returns a boolean indicating whether the C C<char> is a lowercase
1144character.
1145
1146 bool isLOWER(char ch)
1147
497711e7
GS
1148=for hackers
1149Found in file handy.h
1150
954c1994
GS
1151=item isSPACE
1152
1153Returns a boolean indicating whether the C C<char> is whitespace.
1154
1155 bool isSPACE(char ch)
1156
497711e7
GS
1157=for hackers
1158Found in file handy.h
1159
954c1994
GS
1160=item isUPPER
1161
1162Returns a boolean indicating whether the C C<char> is an uppercase
1163character.
1164
1165 bool isUPPER(char ch)
1166
497711e7
GS
1167=for hackers
1168Found in file handy.h
1169
eebe1485
SC
1170=item is_utf8_char
1171
5da9da9e 1172Tests if some arbitrary number of bytes begins in a valid UTF-8
4d4e713d 1173character. Note that an INVARIANT (i.e. ASCII) character is a valid UTF-8 character.
5da9da9e
JH
1174The actual number of bytes in the UTF-8 character will be returned if
1175it is valid, otherwise 0.
282f25c9 1176
eebe1485
SC
1177 STRLEN is_utf8_char(U8 *p)
1178
1179=for hackers
1180Found in file utf8.c
1181
1182=item is_utf8_string
1183
5da9da9e
JH
1184Returns true if first C<len> bytes of the given string form a valid UTF8
1185string, false otherwise. Note that 'a valid UTF8 string' does not mean
1186'a string that contains UTF8' because a valid ASCII string is a valid
1187UTF8 string.
eebe1485
SC
1188
1189 bool is_utf8_string(U8 *s, STRLEN len)
1190
1191=for hackers
1192Found in file utf8.c
1193
954c1994
GS
1194=item items
1195
1196Variable which is setup by C<xsubpp> to indicate the number of
1197items on the stack. See L<perlxs/"Variable-length Parameter Lists">.
1198
1199 I32 items
1200
497711e7
GS
1201=for hackers
1202Found in file XSUB.h
1203
954c1994
GS
1204=item ix
1205
1206Variable which is setup by C<xsubpp> to indicate which of an
1207XSUB's aliases was used to invoke it. See L<perlxs/"The ALIAS: Keyword">.
1208
1209 I32 ix
1210
497711e7
GS
1211=for hackers
1212Found in file XSUB.h
1213
954c1994
GS
1214=item LEAVE
1215
1216Closing bracket on a callback. See C<ENTER> and L<perlcall>.
1217
1218 LEAVE;
1219
497711e7
GS
1220=for hackers
1221Found in file scope.h
1222
7d3fb230
BS
1223=item load_module
1224
1225Loads the module whose name is pointed to by the string part of name.
1226Note that the actual module name, not its filename, should be given.
1227Eg, "Foo::Bar" instead of "Foo/Bar.pm". flags can be any of
1228PERL_LOADMOD_DENY, PERL_LOADMOD_NOIMPORT, or PERL_LOADMOD_IMPORT_OPS
1229(or 0 for no flags). ver, if specified, provides version semantics
1230similar to C<use Foo::Bar VERSION>. The optional trailing SV*
1231arguments can be used to specify arguments to the module's import()
1232method, similar to C<use Foo::Bar VERSION LIST>.
1233
1234 void load_module(U32 flags, SV* name, SV* ver, ...)
1235
1236=for hackers
1237Found in file op.c
1238
954c1994
GS
1239=item looks_like_number
1240
645c22ef
DM
1241Test if the content of an SV looks like a number (or is a number).
1242C<Inf> and C<Infinity> are treated as numbers (so will not issue a
1243non-numeric warning), even if your atof() doesn't grok them.
954c1994
GS
1244
1245 I32 looks_like_number(SV* sv)
1246
497711e7
GS
1247=for hackers
1248Found in file sv.c
1249
954c1994
GS
1250=item MARK
1251
1252Stack marker variable for the XSUB. See C<dMARK>.
1253
497711e7
GS
1254=for hackers
1255Found in file pp.h
1256
954c1994
GS
1257=item mg_clear
1258
1259Clear something magical that the SV represents. See C<sv_magic>.
1260
1261 int mg_clear(SV* sv)
1262
497711e7
GS
1263=for hackers
1264Found in file mg.c
1265
954c1994
GS
1266=item mg_copy
1267
1268Copies the magic from one SV to another. See C<sv_magic>.
1269
1270 int mg_copy(SV* sv, SV* nsv, const char* key, I32 klen)
1271
497711e7
GS
1272=for hackers
1273Found in file mg.c
1274
954c1994
GS
1275=item mg_find
1276
1277Finds the magic pointer for type matching the SV. See C<sv_magic>.
1278
1279 MAGIC* mg_find(SV* sv, int type)
1280
497711e7
GS
1281=for hackers
1282Found in file mg.c
1283
954c1994
GS
1284=item mg_free
1285
1286Free any magic storage used by the SV. See C<sv_magic>.
1287
1288 int mg_free(SV* sv)
1289
497711e7
GS
1290=for hackers
1291Found in file mg.c
1292
954c1994
GS
1293=item mg_get
1294
1295Do magic after a value is retrieved from the SV. See C<sv_magic>.
1296
1297 int mg_get(SV* sv)
1298
497711e7
GS
1299=for hackers
1300Found in file mg.c
1301
954c1994
GS
1302=item mg_length
1303
1304Report on the SV's length. See C<sv_magic>.
1305
1306 U32 mg_length(SV* sv)
1307
497711e7
GS
1308=for hackers
1309Found in file mg.c
1310
954c1994
GS
1311=item mg_magical
1312
1313Turns on the magical status of an SV. See C<sv_magic>.
1314
1315 void mg_magical(SV* sv)
1316
497711e7
GS
1317=for hackers
1318Found in file mg.c
1319
954c1994
GS
1320=item mg_set
1321
1322Do magic after a value is assigned to the SV. See C<sv_magic>.
1323
1324 int mg_set(SV* sv)
1325
497711e7
GS
1326=for hackers
1327Found in file mg.c
1328
954c1994
GS
1329=item Move
1330
1331The XSUB-writer's interface to the C C<memmove> function. The C<src> is the
1332source, C<dest> is the destination, C<nitems> is the number of items, and C<type> is
1333the type. Can do overlapping moves. See also C<Copy>.
1334
1335 void Move(void* src, void* dest, int nitems, type)
1336
497711e7
GS
1337=for hackers
1338Found in file handy.h
1339
954c1994
GS
1340=item New
1341
1342The XSUB-writer's interface to the C C<malloc> function.
1343
1344 void New(int id, void* ptr, int nitems, type)
1345
497711e7
GS
1346=for hackers
1347Found in file handy.h
1348
954c1994
GS
1349=item newAV
1350
1351Creates a new AV. The reference count is set to 1.
1352
1353 AV* newAV()
1354
497711e7
GS
1355=for hackers
1356Found in file av.c
1357
954c1994
GS
1358=item Newc
1359
1360The XSUB-writer's interface to the C C<malloc> function, with
1361cast.
1362
1363 void Newc(int id, void* ptr, int nitems, type, cast)
1364
497711e7
GS
1365=for hackers
1366Found in file handy.h
1367
954c1994
GS
1368=item newCONSTSUB
1369
1370Creates a constant sub equivalent to Perl C<sub FOO () { 123 }> which is
1371eligible for inlining at compile-time.
1372
beab0874 1373 CV* newCONSTSUB(HV* stash, char* name, SV* sv)
954c1994 1374
497711e7 1375=for hackers
fa519979 1376Found in file op.c
497711e7 1377
954c1994
GS
1378=item newHV
1379
1380Creates a new HV. The reference count is set to 1.
1381
1382 HV* newHV()
1383
497711e7
GS
1384=for hackers
1385Found in file hv.c
1386
954c1994
GS
1387=item newRV_inc
1388
1389Creates an RV wrapper for an SV. The reference count for the original SV is
1390incremented.
1391
1392 SV* newRV_inc(SV* sv)
1393
497711e7
GS
1394=for hackers
1395Found in file sv.h
1396
954c1994
GS
1397=item newRV_noinc
1398
1399Creates an RV wrapper for an SV. The reference count for the original
1400SV is B<not> incremented.
1401
1402 SV* newRV_noinc(SV *sv)
1403
497711e7
GS
1404=for hackers
1405Found in file sv.c
1406
cd1ee231
JH
1407=item newSV
1408
1409Create a new null SV, or if len > 0, create a new empty SVt_PV type SV
1410with an initial PV allocation of len+1. Normally accessed via the C<NEWSV>
1411macro.
1412
1413 SV* newSV(STRLEN len)
1414
1415=for hackers
1416Found in file sv.c
1417
954c1994
GS
1418=item NEWSV
1419
1420Creates a new SV. A non-zero C<len> parameter indicates the number of
1421bytes of preallocated string space the SV should have. An extra byte for a
1422tailing NUL is also reserved. (SvPOK is not set for the SV even if string
444155da 1423space is allocated.) The reference count for the new SV is set to 1.
954c1994
GS
1424C<id> is an integer id between 0 and 1299 (used to identify leaks).
1425
1426 SV* NEWSV(int id, STRLEN len)
1427
497711e7
GS
1428=for hackers
1429Found in file handy.h
1430
954c1994
GS
1431=item newSViv
1432
1433Creates a new SV and copies an integer into it. The reference count for the
1434SV is set to 1.
1435
1436 SV* newSViv(IV i)
1437
497711e7
GS
1438=for hackers
1439Found in file sv.c
1440
954c1994
GS
1441=item newSVnv
1442
1443Creates a new SV and copies a floating point value into it.
1444The reference count for the SV is set to 1.
1445
1446 SV* newSVnv(NV n)
1447
497711e7
GS
1448=for hackers
1449Found in file sv.c
1450
954c1994
GS
1451=item newSVpv
1452
1453Creates a new SV and copies a string into it. The reference count for the
1454SV is set to 1. If C<len> is zero, Perl will compute the length using
1455strlen(). For efficiency, consider using C<newSVpvn> instead.
1456
1457 SV* newSVpv(const char* s, STRLEN len)
1458
497711e7
GS
1459=for hackers
1460Found in file sv.c
1461
954c1994
GS
1462=item newSVpvf
1463
645c22ef 1464Creates a new SV and initializes it with the string formatted like
954c1994
GS
1465C<sprintf>.
1466
1467 SV* newSVpvf(const char* pat, ...)
1468
497711e7
GS
1469=for hackers
1470Found in file sv.c
1471
954c1994
GS
1472=item newSVpvn
1473
1474Creates a new SV and copies a string into it. The reference count for the
1c846c1f 1475SV is set to 1. Note that if C<len> is zero, Perl will create a zero length
954c1994
GS
1476string. You are responsible for ensuring that the source string is at least
1477C<len> bytes long.
1478
1479 SV* newSVpvn(const char* s, STRLEN len)
1480
497711e7
GS
1481=for hackers
1482Found in file sv.c
1483
1c846c1f
NIS
1484=item newSVpvn_share
1485
645c22ef
DM
1486Creates a new SV with its SvPVX pointing to a shared string in the string
1487table. If the string does not already exist in the table, it is created
1488first. Turns on READONLY and FAKE. The string's hash is stored in the UV
1489slot of the SV; if the C<hash> parameter is non-zero, that value is used;
1490otherwise the hash is computed. The idea here is that as the string table
1491is used for shared hash keys these strings will have SvPVX == HeKEY and
1492hash lookup will avoid string compare.
1c846c1f 1493
ae154d6d 1494 SV* newSVpvn_share(const char* s, I32 len, U32 hash)
1c846c1f
NIS
1495
1496=for hackers
1497Found in file sv.c
1498
954c1994
GS
1499=item newSVrv
1500
1501Creates a new SV for the RV, C<rv>, to point to. If C<rv> is not an RV then
1502it will be upgraded to one. If C<classname> is non-null then the new SV will
1503be blessed in the specified package. The new SV is returned and its
1504reference count is 1.
1505
1506 SV* newSVrv(SV* rv, const char* classname)
1507
497711e7
GS
1508=for hackers
1509Found in file sv.c
1510
954c1994
GS
1511=item newSVsv
1512
1513Creates a new SV which is an exact duplicate of the original SV.
645c22ef 1514(Uses C<sv_setsv>).
954c1994
GS
1515
1516 SV* newSVsv(SV* old)
1517
497711e7
GS
1518=for hackers
1519Found in file sv.c
1520
1a3327fb
JH
1521=item newSVuv
1522
1523Creates a new SV and copies an unsigned integer into it.
1524The reference count for the SV is set to 1.
1525
1526 SV* newSVuv(UV u)
1527
497711e7
GS
1528=for hackers
1529Found in file sv.c
1530
954c1994
GS
1531=item newXS
1532
1533Used by C<xsubpp> to hook up XSUBs as Perl subs.
1534
497711e7 1535=for hackers
fa519979 1536Found in file op.c
497711e7 1537
954c1994
GS
1538=item newXSproto
1539
1540Used by C<xsubpp> to hook up XSUBs as Perl subs. Adds Perl prototypes to
1541the subs.
1542
497711e7
GS
1543=for hackers
1544Found in file XSUB.h
1545
954c1994
GS
1546=item Newz
1547
1548The XSUB-writer's interface to the C C<malloc> function. The allocated
1549memory is zeroed with C<memzero>.
1550
1551 void Newz(int id, void* ptr, int nitems, type)
1552
497711e7
GS
1553=for hackers
1554Found in file handy.h
1555
954c1994
GS
1556=item Nullav
1557
1558Null AV pointer.
1559
497711e7
GS
1560=for hackers
1561Found in file av.h
1562
954c1994
GS
1563=item Nullch
1564
1565Null character pointer.
1566
497711e7
GS
1567=for hackers
1568Found in file handy.h
1569
954c1994
GS
1570=item Nullcv
1571
1572Null CV pointer.
1573
497711e7
GS
1574=for hackers
1575Found in file cv.h
1576
954c1994
GS
1577=item Nullhv
1578
1579Null HV pointer.
1580
497711e7
GS
1581=for hackers
1582Found in file hv.h
1583
954c1994
GS
1584=item Nullsv
1585
1586Null SV pointer.
1587
497711e7
GS
1588=for hackers
1589Found in file handy.h
1590
954c1994
GS
1591=item ORIGMARK
1592
1593The original stack mark for the XSUB. See C<dORIGMARK>.
1594
497711e7
GS
1595=for hackers
1596Found in file pp.h
1597
954c1994
GS
1598=item perl_alloc
1599
1600Allocates a new Perl interpreter. See L<perlembed>.
1601
1602 PerlInterpreter* perl_alloc()
1603
497711e7
GS
1604=for hackers
1605Found in file perl.c
1606
645c22ef
DM
1607=item perl_clone
1608
1609Create and return a new interpreter by cloning the current one.
1610
1611 PerlInterpreter* perl_clone(PerlInterpreter* interp, UV flags)
1612
1613=for hackers
1614Found in file sv.c
1615
954c1994
GS
1616=item perl_construct
1617
1618Initializes a new Perl interpreter. See L<perlembed>.
1619
1620 void perl_construct(PerlInterpreter* interp)
1621
497711e7
GS
1622=for hackers
1623Found in file perl.c
1624
954c1994
GS
1625=item perl_destruct
1626
1627Shuts down a Perl interpreter. See L<perlembed>.
1628
d9f424b2 1629 int perl_destruct(PerlInterpreter* interp)
954c1994 1630
497711e7
GS
1631=for hackers
1632Found in file perl.c
1633
954c1994
GS
1634=item perl_free
1635
1636Releases a Perl interpreter. See L<perlembed>.
1637
1638 void perl_free(PerlInterpreter* interp)
1639
497711e7
GS
1640=for hackers
1641Found in file perl.c
1642
954c1994
GS
1643=item perl_parse
1644
1645Tells a Perl interpreter to parse a Perl script. See L<perlembed>.
1646
1647 int perl_parse(PerlInterpreter* interp, XSINIT_t xsinit, int argc, char** argv, char** env)
1648
497711e7
GS
1649=for hackers
1650Found in file perl.c
1651
954c1994
GS
1652=item perl_run
1653
1654Tells a Perl interpreter to run. See L<perlembed>.
1655
1656 int perl_run(PerlInterpreter* interp)
1657
497711e7
GS
1658=for hackers
1659Found in file perl.c
1660
954c1994
GS
1661=item PL_modglobal
1662
ae154d6d 1663C<PL_modglobal> is a general purpose, interpreter global HV for use by
954c1994 1664extensions that need to keep information on a per-interpreter basis.
ae154d6d
JH
1665In a pinch, it can also be used as a symbol table for extensions
1666to share data among each other. It is a good idea to use keys
954c1994
GS
1667prefixed by the package name of the extension that owns the data.
1668
1669 HV* PL_modglobal
1670
497711e7
GS
1671=for hackers
1672Found in file intrpvar.h
1673
954c1994
GS
1674=item PL_na
1675
1676A convenience variable which is typically used with C<SvPV> when one
1677doesn't care about the length of the string. It is usually more efficient
1678to either declare a local variable and use that instead or to use the
1679C<SvPV_nolen> macro.
1680
1681 STRLEN PL_na
1682
497711e7
GS
1683=for hackers
1684Found in file thrdvar.h
1685
954c1994
GS
1686=item PL_sv_no
1687
1688This is the C<false> SV. See C<PL_sv_yes>. Always refer to this as
1689C<&PL_sv_no>.
1690
1691 SV PL_sv_no
1692
497711e7
GS
1693=for hackers
1694Found in file intrpvar.h
1695
954c1994
GS
1696=item PL_sv_undef
1697
1698This is the C<undef> SV. Always refer to this as C<&PL_sv_undef>.
1699
1700 SV PL_sv_undef
1701
497711e7
GS
1702=for hackers
1703Found in file intrpvar.h
1704
954c1994
GS
1705=item PL_sv_yes
1706
1707This is the C<true> SV. See C<PL_sv_no>. Always refer to this as
1708C<&PL_sv_yes>.
1709
1710 SV PL_sv_yes
1711
497711e7
GS
1712=for hackers
1713Found in file intrpvar.h
1714
954c1994
GS
1715=item POPi
1716
1717Pops an integer off the stack.
1718
1719 IV POPi
1720
497711e7
GS
1721=for hackers
1722Found in file pp.h
1723
954c1994
GS
1724=item POPl
1725
1726Pops a long off the stack.
1727
1728 long POPl
1729
497711e7
GS
1730=for hackers
1731Found in file pp.h
1732
954c1994
GS
1733=item POPn
1734
1735Pops a double off the stack.
1736
1737 NV POPn
1738
497711e7
GS
1739=for hackers
1740Found in file pp.h
1741
954c1994
GS
1742=item POPp
1743
fa519979
JH
1744Pops a string off the stack. Deprecated. New code should provide
1745a STRLEN n_a and use POPpx.
954c1994
GS
1746
1747 char* POPp
1748
497711e7
GS
1749=for hackers
1750Found in file pp.h
1751
fa519979
JH
1752=item POPpbytex
1753
1754Pops a string off the stack which must consist of bytes i.e. characters < 256.
1755Requires a variable STRLEN n_a in scope.
1756
1757 char* POPpbytex
1758
1759=for hackers
1760Found in file pp.h
1761
1762=item POPpx
1763
1764Pops a string off the stack.
1765Requires a variable STRLEN n_a in scope.
1766
1767 char* POPpx
1768
1769=for hackers
1770Found in file pp.h
1771
954c1994
GS
1772=item POPs
1773
1774Pops an SV off the stack.
1775
1776 SV* POPs
1777
497711e7
GS
1778=for hackers
1779Found in file pp.h
1780
954c1994
GS
1781=item PUSHi
1782
1783Push an integer onto the stack. The stack must have room for this element.
1784Handles 'set' magic. See C<XPUSHi>.
1785
1786 void PUSHi(IV iv)
1787
497711e7
GS
1788=for hackers
1789Found in file pp.h
1790
954c1994
GS
1791=item PUSHMARK
1792
1793Opening bracket for arguments on a callback. See C<PUTBACK> and
1794L<perlcall>.
1795
1796 PUSHMARK;
1797
497711e7
GS
1798=for hackers
1799Found in file pp.h
1800
954c1994
GS
1801=item PUSHn
1802
1803Push a double onto the stack. The stack must have room for this element.
1804Handles 'set' magic. See C<XPUSHn>.
1805
1806 void PUSHn(NV nv)
1807
497711e7
GS
1808=for hackers
1809Found in file pp.h
1810
954c1994
GS
1811=item PUSHp
1812
1813Push a string onto the stack. The stack must have room for this element.
1814The C<len> indicates the length of the string. Handles 'set' magic. See
1815C<XPUSHp>.
1816
1817 void PUSHp(char* str, STRLEN len)
1818
497711e7
GS
1819=for hackers
1820Found in file pp.h
1821
954c1994
GS
1822=item PUSHs
1823
1c846c1f 1824Push an SV onto the stack. The stack must have room for this element.
954c1994
GS
1825Does not handle 'set' magic. See C<XPUSHs>.
1826
1827 void PUSHs(SV* sv)
1828
497711e7
GS
1829=for hackers
1830Found in file pp.h
1831
954c1994
GS
1832=item PUSHu
1833
1834Push an unsigned integer onto the stack. The stack must have room for this
1835element. See C<XPUSHu>.
1836
1837 void PUSHu(UV uv)
1838
497711e7
GS
1839=for hackers
1840Found in file pp.h
1841
954c1994
GS
1842=item PUTBACK
1843
1844Closing bracket for XSUB arguments. This is usually handled by C<xsubpp>.
1845See C<PUSHMARK> and L<perlcall> for other uses.
1846
1847 PUTBACK;
1848
497711e7
GS
1849=for hackers
1850Found in file pp.h
1851
954c1994
GS
1852=item Renew
1853
1854The XSUB-writer's interface to the C C<realloc> function.
1855
1856 void Renew(void* ptr, int nitems, type)
1857
497711e7
GS
1858=for hackers
1859Found in file handy.h
1860
954c1994
GS
1861=item Renewc
1862
1863The XSUB-writer's interface to the C C<realloc> function, with
1864cast.
1865
1866 void Renewc(void* ptr, int nitems, type, cast)
1867
497711e7
GS
1868=for hackers
1869Found in file handy.h
1870
954c1994
GS
1871=item require_pv
1872
7d3fb230
BS
1873Tells Perl to C<require> the file named by the string argument. It is
1874analogous to the Perl code C<eval "require '$file'">. It's even
1875implemented that way; consider using Perl_load_module instead.
954c1994
GS
1876
1877NOTE: the perl_ form of this function is deprecated.
1878
1879 void require_pv(const char* pv)
1880
497711e7
GS
1881=for hackers
1882Found in file perl.c
1883
954c1994
GS
1884=item RETVAL
1885
1886Variable which is setup by C<xsubpp> to hold the return value for an
1887XSUB. This is always the proper type for the XSUB. See
1888L<perlxs/"The RETVAL Variable">.
1889
1890 (whatever) RETVAL
1891
497711e7
GS
1892=for hackers
1893Found in file XSUB.h
1894
954c1994
GS
1895=item Safefree
1896
1897The XSUB-writer's interface to the C C<free> function.
1898
49b8b560 1899 void Safefree(void* ptr)
954c1994 1900
497711e7
GS
1901=for hackers
1902Found in file handy.h
1903
954c1994
GS
1904=item savepv
1905
1906Copy a string to a safe spot. This does not use an SV.
1907
1908 char* savepv(const char* sv)
1909
497711e7
GS
1910=for hackers
1911Found in file util.c
1912
954c1994
GS
1913=item savepvn
1914
1915Copy a string to a safe spot. The C<len> indicates number of bytes to
1916copy. This does not use an SV.
1917
1918 char* savepvn(const char* sv, I32 len)
1919
497711e7
GS
1920=for hackers
1921Found in file util.c
1922
954c1994
GS
1923=item SAVETMPS
1924
1925Opening bracket for temporaries on a callback. See C<FREETMPS> and
1926L<perlcall>.
1927
1928 SAVETMPS;
1929
497711e7
GS
1930=for hackers
1931Found in file scope.h
1932
6e9d1081
NC
1933=item scan_bin
1934
1935For backwards compatibility. Use C<grok_bin> instead.
1936
1937 NV scan_bin(char* start, STRLEN len, STRLEN* retlen)
1938
1939=for hackers
1940Found in file numeric.c
1941
1942=item scan_hex
1943
1944For backwards compatibility. Use C<grok_hex> instead.
1945
1946 NV scan_hex(char* start, STRLEN len, STRLEN* retlen)
1947
1948=for hackers
1949Found in file numeric.c
1950
1951=item scan_oct
1952
1953For backwards compatibility. Use C<grok_oct> instead.
1954
1955 NV scan_oct(char* start, STRLEN len, STRLEN* retlen)
1956
1957=for hackers
1958Found in file numeric.c
1959
cd1ee231
JH
1960=item sharedsv_find
1961
1962Tries to find if a given SV has a shared backend, either by
1963looking at magic, or by checking if it is tied again threads::shared.
1964
1965 shared_sv* sharedsv_find(SV* sv)
1966
1967=for hackers
1968Found in file sharedsv.c
1969
1970=item sharedsv_init
1971
1972Saves a space for keeping SVs wider than an interpreter,
1973currently only stores a pointer to the first interpreter.
1974
1975 void sharedsv_init()
1976
1977=for hackers
1978Found in file sharedsv.c
1979
1980=item sharedsv_lock
1981
1982Recursive locks on a sharedsv.
1983Locks are dynamicly scoped at the level of the first lock.
1984 void sharedsv_lock(shared_sv* ssv)
1985
1986=for hackers
1987Found in file sharedsv.c
1988
1989=item sharedsv_new
1990
1991Allocates a new shared sv struct, you must yourself create the SV/AV/HV.
1992 shared_sv* sharedsv_new()
1993
1994=for hackers
1995Found in file sharedsv.c
1996
1997=item sharedsv_thrcnt_dec
1998
1999Decrements the threadcount of a shared sv. When a threads frontend is freed
2000this function should be called.
2001
2002 void sharedsv_thrcnt_dec(shared_sv* ssv)
2003
2004=for hackers
2005Found in file sharedsv.c
2006
2007=item sharedsv_thrcnt_inc
2008
2009Increments the threadcount of a sharedsv.
2010 void sharedsv_thrcnt_inc(shared_sv* ssv)
2011
2012=for hackers
2013Found in file sharedsv.c
2014
2015=item sharedsv_unlock
2016
2017Recursively unlocks a shared sv.
2018
2019 void sharedsv_unlock(shared_sv* ssv)
2020
2021=for hackers
2022Found in file sharedsv.c
2023
8d344e3e
IN
2024=item sortsv
2025
2026
15c78202 2027Sort an array. Here is an example:
8d344e3e
IN
2028
2029 sortsv(AvARRAY(av), av_len(av)+1, Perl_sv_cmp_locale);
2030
2031 void sortsv(SV ** array, size_t num_elts, SVCOMPARE_t f)
2032
2033=for hackers
2034Found in file pp_ctl.c
2035
954c1994
GS
2036=item SP
2037
2038Stack pointer. This is usually handled by C<xsubpp>. See C<dSP> and
2039C<SPAGAIN>.
2040
497711e7
GS
2041=for hackers
2042Found in file pp.h
2043
954c1994
GS
2044=item SPAGAIN
2045
2046Refetch the stack pointer. Used after a callback. See L<perlcall>.
2047
2048 SPAGAIN;
2049
497711e7
GS
2050=for hackers
2051Found in file pp.h
2052
954c1994
GS
2053=item ST
2054
2055Used to access elements on the XSUB's stack.
2056
2057 SV* ST(int ix)
2058
497711e7
GS
2059=for hackers
2060Found in file XSUB.h
2061
954c1994
GS
2062=item strEQ
2063
2064Test two strings to see if they are equal. Returns true or false.
2065
2066 bool strEQ(char* s1, char* s2)
2067
497711e7
GS
2068=for hackers
2069Found in file handy.h
2070
954c1994
GS
2071=item strGE
2072
2073Test two strings to see if the first, C<s1>, is greater than or equal to
2074the second, C<s2>. Returns true or false.
2075
2076 bool strGE(char* s1, char* s2)
2077
497711e7
GS
2078=for hackers
2079Found in file handy.h
2080
954c1994
GS
2081=item strGT
2082
2083Test two strings to see if the first, C<s1>, is greater than the second,
2084C<s2>. Returns true or false.
2085
2086 bool strGT(char* s1, char* s2)
2087
497711e7
GS
2088=for hackers
2089Found in file handy.h
2090
954c1994
GS
2091=item strLE
2092
2093Test two strings to see if the first, C<s1>, is less than or equal to the
2094second, C<s2>. Returns true or false.
2095
2096 bool strLE(char* s1, char* s2)
2097
497711e7
GS
2098=for hackers
2099Found in file handy.h
2100
954c1994
GS
2101=item strLT
2102
2103Test two strings to see if the first, C<s1>, is less than the second,
2104C<s2>. Returns true or false.
2105
2106 bool strLT(char* s1, char* s2)
2107
497711e7
GS
2108=for hackers
2109Found in file handy.h
2110
954c1994
GS
2111=item strNE
2112
2113Test two strings to see if they are different. Returns true or
2114false.
2115
2116 bool strNE(char* s1, char* s2)
2117
497711e7
GS
2118=for hackers
2119Found in file handy.h
2120
954c1994
GS
2121=item strnEQ
2122
2123Test two strings to see if they are equal. The C<len> parameter indicates
2124the number of bytes to compare. Returns true or false. (A wrapper for
2125C<strncmp>).
2126
2127 bool strnEQ(char* s1, char* s2, STRLEN len)
2128
497711e7
GS
2129=for hackers
2130Found in file handy.h
2131
954c1994
GS
2132=item strnNE
2133
2134Test two strings to see if they are different. The C<len> parameter
2135indicates the number of bytes to compare. Returns true or false. (A
2136wrapper for C<strncmp>).
2137
2138 bool strnNE(char* s1, char* s2, STRLEN len)
2139
497711e7
GS
2140=for hackers
2141Found in file handy.h
2142
954c1994
GS
2143=item StructCopy
2144
4375e838 2145This is an architecture-independent macro to copy one structure to another.
954c1994
GS
2146
2147 void StructCopy(type src, type dest, type)
2148
497711e7
GS
2149=for hackers
2150Found in file handy.h
2151
954c1994
GS
2152=item SvCUR
2153
2154Returns the length of the string which is in the SV. See C<SvLEN>.
2155
2156 STRLEN SvCUR(SV* sv)
2157
497711e7
GS
2158=for hackers
2159Found in file sv.h
2160
954c1994
GS
2161=item SvCUR_set
2162
2163Set the length of the string which is in the SV. See C<SvCUR>.
2164
2165 void SvCUR_set(SV* sv, STRLEN len)
2166
497711e7
GS
2167=for hackers
2168Found in file sv.h
2169
954c1994
GS
2170=item SvEND
2171
2172Returns a pointer to the last character in the string which is in the SV.
2173See C<SvCUR>. Access the character as *(SvEND(sv)).
2174
2175 char* SvEND(SV* sv)
2176
497711e7
GS
2177=for hackers
2178Found in file sv.h
2179
954c1994
GS
2180=item SvGETMAGIC
2181
2182Invokes C<mg_get> on an SV if it has 'get' magic. This macro evaluates its
2183argument more than once.
2184
2185 void SvGETMAGIC(SV* sv)
2186
497711e7
GS
2187=for hackers
2188Found in file sv.h
2189
954c1994
GS
2190=item SvGROW
2191
2192Expands the character buffer in the SV so that it has room for the
2193indicated number of bytes (remember to reserve space for an extra trailing
8cf8f3d1 2194NUL character). Calls C<sv_grow> to perform the expansion if necessary.
954c1994
GS
2195Returns a pointer to the character buffer.
2196
679ac26e 2197 char * SvGROW(SV* sv, STRLEN len)
954c1994 2198
497711e7
GS
2199=for hackers
2200Found in file sv.h
2201
954c1994
GS
2202=item SvIOK
2203
2204Returns a boolean indicating whether the SV contains an integer.
2205
2206 bool SvIOK(SV* sv)
2207
497711e7
GS
2208=for hackers
2209Found in file sv.h
2210
954c1994
GS
2211=item SvIOKp
2212
2213Returns a boolean indicating whether the SV contains an integer. Checks
2214the B<private> setting. Use C<SvIOK>.
2215
2216 bool SvIOKp(SV* sv)
2217
497711e7
GS
2218=for hackers
2219Found in file sv.h
2220
e331fc52
JH
2221=item SvIOK_notUV
2222
2223Returns a boolean indicating whether the SV contains an signed integer.
2224
2225 void SvIOK_notUV(SV* sv)
2226
2227=for hackers
2228Found in file sv.h
2229
954c1994
GS
2230=item SvIOK_off
2231
2232Unsets the IV status of an SV.
2233
2234 void SvIOK_off(SV* sv)
2235
497711e7
GS
2236=for hackers
2237Found in file sv.h
2238
954c1994
GS
2239=item SvIOK_on
2240
2241Tells an SV that it is an integer.
2242
2243 void SvIOK_on(SV* sv)
2244
497711e7
GS
2245=for hackers
2246Found in file sv.h
2247
954c1994
GS
2248=item SvIOK_only
2249
2250Tells an SV that it is an integer and disables all other OK bits.
2251
2252 void SvIOK_only(SV* sv)
2253
497711e7
GS
2254=for hackers
2255Found in file sv.h
2256
e331fc52
JH
2257=item SvIOK_only_UV
2258
2259Tells and SV that it is an unsigned integer and disables all other OK bits.
2260
2261 void SvIOK_only_UV(SV* sv)
2262
2263=for hackers
2264Found in file sv.h
2265
2266=item SvIOK_UV
2267
2268Returns a boolean indicating whether the SV contains an unsigned integer.
2269
2270 void SvIOK_UV(SV* sv)
2271
2272=for hackers
2273Found in file sv.h
2274
954c1994
GS
2275=item SvIV
2276
645c22ef
DM
2277Coerces the given SV to an integer and returns it. See C<SvIVx> for a
2278version which guarantees to evaluate sv only once.
954c1994
GS
2279
2280 IV SvIV(SV* sv)
2281
497711e7
GS
2282=for hackers
2283Found in file sv.h
2284
6e9d1081 2285=item SvIVX
954c1994 2286
6e9d1081
NC
2287Returns the raw value in the SV's IV slot, without checks or conversions.
2288Only use when you are sure SvIOK is true. See also C<SvIV()>.
954c1994 2289
6e9d1081 2290 IV SvIVX(SV* sv)
954c1994 2291
497711e7
GS
2292=for hackers
2293Found in file sv.h
2294
6e9d1081 2295=item SvIVx
645c22ef 2296
6e9d1081
NC
2297Coerces the given SV to an integer and returns it. Guarantees to evaluate
2298sv only once. Use the more efficent C<SvIV> otherwise.
645c22ef 2299
6e9d1081 2300 IV SvIVx(SV* sv)
645c22ef
DM
2301
2302=for hackers
2303Found in file sv.h
2304
954c1994
GS
2305=item SvLEN
2306
91e74348
JH
2307Returns the size of the string buffer in the SV, not including any part
2308attributable to C<SvOOK>. See C<SvCUR>.
954c1994
GS
2309
2310 STRLEN SvLEN(SV* sv)
2311
497711e7
GS
2312=for hackers
2313Found in file sv.h
2314
954c1994
GS
2315=item SvNIOK
2316
2317Returns a boolean indicating whether the SV contains a number, integer or
2318double.
2319
2320 bool SvNIOK(SV* sv)
2321
497711e7
GS
2322=for hackers
2323Found in file sv.h
2324
954c1994
GS
2325=item SvNIOKp
2326
2327Returns a boolean indicating whether the SV contains a number, integer or
2328double. Checks the B<private> setting. Use C<SvNIOK>.
2329
2330 bool SvNIOKp(SV* sv)
2331
497711e7
GS
2332=for hackers
2333Found in file sv.h
2334
954c1994
GS
2335=item SvNIOK_off
2336
2337Unsets the NV/IV status of an SV.
2338
2339 void SvNIOK_off(SV* sv)
2340
497711e7
GS
2341=for hackers
2342Found in file sv.h
2343
954c1994
GS
2344=item SvNOK
2345
2346Returns a boolean indicating whether the SV contains a double.
2347
2348 bool SvNOK(SV* sv)
2349
497711e7
GS
2350=for hackers
2351Found in file sv.h
2352
954c1994
GS
2353=item SvNOKp
2354
2355Returns a boolean indicating whether the SV contains a double. Checks the
2356B<private> setting. Use C<SvNOK>.
2357
2358 bool SvNOKp(SV* sv)
2359
497711e7
GS
2360=for hackers
2361Found in file sv.h
2362
954c1994
GS
2363=item SvNOK_off
2364
2365Unsets the NV status of an SV.
2366
2367 void SvNOK_off(SV* sv)
2368
497711e7
GS
2369=for hackers
2370Found in file sv.h
2371
954c1994
GS
2372=item SvNOK_on
2373
2374Tells an SV that it is a double.
2375
2376 void SvNOK_on(SV* sv)
2377
497711e7
GS
2378=for hackers
2379Found in file sv.h
2380
954c1994
GS
2381=item SvNOK_only
2382
2383Tells an SV that it is a double and disables all other OK bits.
2384
2385 void SvNOK_only(SV* sv)
2386
497711e7
GS
2387=for hackers
2388Found in file sv.h
2389
954c1994
GS
2390=item SvNV
2391
645c22ef
DM
2392Coerce the given SV to a double and return it. See C<SvNVx> for a version
2393which guarantees to evaluate sv only once.
954c1994
GS
2394
2395 NV SvNV(SV* sv)
2396
497711e7
GS
2397=for hackers
2398Found in file sv.h
2399
8cf8f3d1 2400=item SvNVx
645c22ef 2401
8cf8f3d1
NIS
2402Coerces the given SV to a double and returns it. Guarantees to evaluate
2403sv only once. Use the more efficent C<SvNV> otherwise.
645c22ef 2404
8cf8f3d1 2405 NV SvNVx(SV* sv)
645c22ef
DM
2406
2407=for hackers
2408Found in file sv.h
2409
8cf8f3d1 2410=item SvNVX
954c1994 2411
8cf8f3d1
NIS
2412Returns the raw value in the SV's NV slot, without checks or conversions.
2413Only use when you are sure SvNOK is true. See also C<SvNV()>.
954c1994 2414
8cf8f3d1 2415 NV SvNVX(SV* sv)
954c1994 2416
497711e7
GS
2417=for hackers
2418Found in file sv.h
2419
954c1994
GS
2420=item SvOK
2421
2422Returns a boolean indicating whether the value is an SV.
2423
2424 bool SvOK(SV* sv)
2425
497711e7
GS
2426=for hackers
2427Found in file sv.h
2428
954c1994
GS
2429=item SvOOK
2430
2431Returns a boolean indicating whether the SvIVX is a valid offset value for
2432the SvPVX. This hack is used internally to speed up removal of characters
2433from the beginning of a SvPV. When SvOOK is true, then the start of the
2434allocated string buffer is really (SvPVX - SvIVX).
2435
2436 bool SvOOK(SV* sv)
2437
497711e7
GS
2438=for hackers
2439Found in file sv.h
2440
954c1994
GS
2441=item SvPOK
2442
2443Returns a boolean indicating whether the SV contains a character
2444string.
2445
2446 bool SvPOK(SV* sv)
2447
497711e7
GS
2448=for hackers
2449Found in file sv.h
2450
954c1994
GS
2451=item SvPOKp
2452
2453Returns a boolean indicating whether the SV contains a character string.
2454Checks the B<private> setting. Use C<SvPOK>.
2455
2456 bool SvPOKp(SV* sv)
2457
497711e7
GS
2458=for hackers
2459Found in file sv.h
2460
954c1994
GS
2461=item SvPOK_off
2462
2463Unsets the PV status of an SV.
2464
2465 void SvPOK_off(SV* sv)
2466
497711e7
GS
2467=for hackers
2468Found in file sv.h
2469
954c1994
GS
2470=item SvPOK_on
2471
2472Tells an SV that it is a string.
2473
2474 void SvPOK_on(SV* sv)
2475
497711e7
GS
2476=for hackers
2477Found in file sv.h
2478
954c1994
GS
2479=item SvPOK_only
2480
2481Tells an SV that it is a string and disables all other OK bits.
d5ce4a7c 2482Will also turn off the UTF8 status.
954c1994
GS
2483
2484 void SvPOK_only(SV* sv)
2485
497711e7
GS
2486=for hackers
2487Found in file sv.h
2488
914184e1
JH
2489=item SvPOK_only_UTF8
2490
d5ce4a7c
GA
2491Tells an SV that it is a string and disables all other OK bits,
2492and leaves the UTF8 status as it was.
f1a1024e 2493
914184e1
JH
2494 void SvPOK_only_UTF8(SV* sv)
2495
2496=for hackers
2497Found in file sv.h
2498
954c1994
GS
2499=item SvPV
2500
2501Returns a pointer to the string in the SV, or a stringified form of the SV
645c22ef
DM
2502if the SV does not contain a string. Handles 'get' magic. See also
2503C<SvPVx> for a version which guarantees to evaluate sv only once.
954c1994
GS
2504
2505 char* SvPV(SV* sv, STRLEN len)
2506
497711e7
GS
2507=for hackers
2508Found in file sv.h
2509
645c22ef
DM
2510=item SvPVbyte
2511
2512Like C<SvPV>, but converts sv to byte representation first if necessary.
2513
2514 char* SvPVbyte(SV* sv, STRLEN len)
2515
2516=for hackers
2517Found in file sv.h
2518
2519=item SvPVbytex
2520
2521Like C<SvPV>, but converts sv to byte representation first if necessary.
2522Guarantees to evalute sv only once; use the more efficient C<SvPVbyte>
2523otherwise.
2524
2525
2526 char* SvPVbytex(SV* sv, STRLEN len)
2527
2528=for hackers
2529Found in file sv.h
2530
2531=item SvPVbytex_force
2532
2533Like C<SvPV_force>, but converts sv to byte representation first if necessary.
2534Guarantees to evalute sv only once; use the more efficient C<SvPVbyte_force>
2535otherwise.
2536
2537 char* SvPVbytex_force(SV* sv, STRLEN len)
2538
2539=for hackers
2540Found in file sv.h
2541
2542=item SvPVbyte_force
2543
2544Like C<SvPV_force>, but converts sv to byte representation first if necessary.
2545
2546 char* SvPVbyte_force(SV* sv, STRLEN len)
2547
2548=for hackers
2549Found in file sv.h
2550
2551=item SvPVbyte_nolen
2552
2553Like C<SvPV_nolen>, but converts sv to byte representation first if necessary.
2554
2555 char* SvPVbyte_nolen(SV* sv, STRLEN len)
2556
2557=for hackers
2558Found in file sv.h
2559
2560=item SvPVutf8
2561
2562Like C<SvPV>, but converts sv to uft8 first if necessary.
2563
2564 char* SvPVutf8(SV* sv, STRLEN len)
2565
2566=for hackers
2567Found in file sv.h
2568
2569=item SvPVutf8x
2570
2571Like C<SvPV>, but converts sv to uft8 first if necessary.
2572Guarantees to evalute sv only once; use the more efficient C<SvPVutf8>
2573otherwise.
2574
2575 char* SvPVutf8x(SV* sv, STRLEN len)
2576
2577=for hackers
2578Found in file sv.h
2579
2580=item SvPVutf8x_force
2581
2582Like C<SvPV_force>, but converts sv to uft8 first if necessary.
2583Guarantees to evalute sv only once; use the more efficient C<SvPVutf8_force>
2584otherwise.
2585
2586 char* SvPVutf8x_force(SV* sv, STRLEN len)
2587
2588=for hackers
2589Found in file sv.h
2590
2591=item SvPVutf8_force
2592
2593Like C<SvPV_force>, but converts sv to uft8 first if necessary.
2594
2595 char* SvPVutf8_force(SV* sv, STRLEN len)
2596
2597=for hackers
2598Found in file sv.h
2599
2600=item SvPVutf8_nolen
2601
2602Like C<SvPV_nolen>, but converts sv to uft8 first if necessary.
2603
2604 char* SvPVutf8_nolen(SV* sv, STRLEN len)
2605
2606=for hackers
2607Found in file sv.h
2608
8cf8f3d1 2609=item SvPVX
645c22ef 2610
8cf8f3d1
NIS
2611Returns a pointer to the physical string in the SV. The SV must contain a
2612string.
645c22ef 2613
8cf8f3d1 2614 char* SvPVX(SV* sv)
645c22ef
DM
2615
2616=for hackers
2617Found in file sv.h
2618
8cf8f3d1 2619=item SvPVx
954c1994 2620
8cf8f3d1 2621A version of C<SvPV> which guarantees to evaluate sv only once.
954c1994 2622
8cf8f3d1 2623 char* SvPVx(SV* sv, STRLEN len)
954c1994 2624
497711e7
GS
2625=for hackers
2626Found in file sv.h
2627
954c1994
GS
2628=item SvPV_force
2629
2630Like <SvPV> but will force the SV into becoming a string (SvPOK). You want
2631force if you are going to update the SvPVX directly.
2632
2633 char* SvPV_force(SV* sv, STRLEN len)
2634
497711e7
GS
2635=for hackers
2636Found in file sv.h
2637
645c22ef
DM
2638=item SvPV_force_nomg
2639
2640Like <SvPV> but will force the SV into becoming a string (SvPOK). You want
2641force if you are going to update the SvPVX directly. Doesn't process magic.
2642
2643 char* SvPV_force_nomg(SV* sv, STRLEN len)
2644
2645=for hackers
2646Found in file sv.h
2647
954c1994
GS
2648=item SvPV_nolen
2649
2650Returns a pointer to the string in the SV, or a stringified form of the SV
2651if the SV does not contain a string. Handles 'get' magic.
2652
2653 char* SvPV_nolen(SV* sv)
2654
497711e7
GS
2655=for hackers
2656Found in file sv.h
2657
954c1994
GS
2658=item SvREFCNT
2659
2660Returns the value of the object's reference count.
2661
2662 U32 SvREFCNT(SV* sv)
2663
497711e7
GS
2664=for hackers
2665Found in file sv.h
2666
954c1994
GS
2667=item SvREFCNT_dec
2668
2669Decrements the reference count of the given SV.
2670
2671 void SvREFCNT_dec(SV* sv)
2672
497711e7
GS
2673=for hackers
2674Found in file sv.h
2675
954c1994
GS
2676=item SvREFCNT_inc
2677
2678Increments the reference count of the given SV.
2679
2680 SV* SvREFCNT_inc(SV* sv)
2681
497711e7
GS
2682=for hackers
2683Found in file sv.h
2684
954c1994
GS
2685=item SvROK
2686
2687Tests if the SV is an RV.
2688
2689 bool SvROK(SV* sv)
2690
497711e7
GS
2691=for hackers
2692Found in file sv.h
2693
954c1994
GS
2694=item SvROK_off
2695
2696Unsets the RV status of an SV.
2697
2698 void SvROK_off(SV* sv)
2699
497711e7
GS
2700=for hackers
2701Found in file sv.h
2702
954c1994
GS
2703=item SvROK_on
2704
2705Tells an SV that it is an RV.
2706
2707 void SvROK_on(SV* sv)
2708
497711e7
GS
2709=for hackers
2710Found in file sv.h
2711
954c1994
GS
2712=item SvRV
2713
2714Dereferences an RV to return the SV.
2715
2716 SV* SvRV(SV* sv)
2717
497711e7
GS
2718=for hackers
2719Found in file sv.h
2720
954c1994
GS
2721=item SvSETMAGIC
2722
2723Invokes C<mg_set> on an SV if it has 'set' magic. This macro evaluates its
2724argument more than once.
2725
2726 void SvSETMAGIC(SV* sv)
2727
497711e7
GS
2728=for hackers
2729Found in file sv.h
2730
645c22ef
DM
2731=item SvSetMagicSV
2732
2733Like C<SvSetSV>, but does any set magic required afterwards.
2734
2735 void SvSetMagicSV(SV* dsb, SV* ssv)
2736
2737=for hackers
2738Found in file sv.h
2739
2740=item SvSetMagicSV_nosteal
2741
2742Like C<SvSetMagicSV>, but does any set magic required afterwards.
2743
2744 void SvSetMagicSV_nosteal(SV* dsv, SV* ssv)
2745
2746=for hackers
2747Found in file sv.h
2748
954c1994
GS
2749=item SvSetSV
2750
2751Calls C<sv_setsv> if dsv is not the same as ssv. May evaluate arguments
2752more than once.
2753
2754 void SvSetSV(SV* dsb, SV* ssv)
2755
497711e7
GS
2756=for hackers
2757Found in file sv.h
2758
954c1994
GS
2759=item SvSetSV_nosteal
2760
2761Calls a non-destructive version of C<sv_setsv> if dsv is not the same as
2762ssv. May evaluate arguments more than once.
2763
2764 void SvSetSV_nosteal(SV* dsv, SV* ssv)
2765
497711e7
GS
2766=for hackers
2767Found in file sv.h
2768
954c1994
GS
2769=item SvSTASH
2770
2771Returns the stash of the SV.
2772
2773 HV* SvSTASH(SV* sv)
2774
497711e7
GS
2775=for hackers
2776Found in file sv.h
2777
954c1994
GS
2778=item SvTAINT
2779
2780Taints an SV if tainting is enabled
2781
2782 void SvTAINT(SV* sv)
2783
497711e7
GS
2784=for hackers
2785Found in file sv.h
2786
954c1994
GS
2787=item SvTAINTED
2788
2789Checks to see if an SV is tainted. Returns TRUE if it is, FALSE if
2790not.
2791
2792 bool SvTAINTED(SV* sv)
2793
497711e7
GS
2794=for hackers
2795Found in file sv.h
2796
954c1994
GS
2797=item SvTAINTED_off
2798
2799Untaints an SV. Be I<very> careful with this routine, as it short-circuits
2800some of Perl's fundamental security features. XS module authors should not
2801use this function unless they fully understand all the implications of
2802unconditionally untainting the value. Untainting should be done in the
2803standard perl fashion, via a carefully crafted regexp, rather than directly
2804untainting variables.
2805
2806 void SvTAINTED_off(SV* sv)
2807
497711e7
GS
2808=for hackers
2809Found in file sv.h
2810
954c1994
GS
2811=item SvTAINTED_on
2812
2813Marks an SV as tainted.
2814
2815 void SvTAINTED_on(SV* sv)
2816
497711e7
GS
2817=for hackers
2818Found in file sv.h
2819
954c1994
GS
2820=item SvTRUE
2821
2822Returns a boolean indicating whether Perl would evaluate the SV as true or
2823false, defined or undefined. Does not handle 'get' magic.
2824
2825 bool SvTRUE(SV* sv)
2826
497711e7
GS
2827=for hackers
2828Found in file sv.h
2829
8cf8f3d1 2830=item svtype
8d344e3e 2831
8cf8f3d1
NIS
2832An enum of flags for Perl types. These are found in the file B<sv.h>
2833in the C<svtype> enum. Test these flags with the C<SvTYPE> macro.
34f7a5fe 2834
497711e7
GS
2835=for hackers
2836Found in file sv.h
2837
8cf8f3d1 2838=item SvTYPE
cd1ee231 2839
8cf8f3d1
NIS
2840Returns the type of the SV. See C<svtype>.
2841
2842 svtype SvTYPE(SV* sv)
954c1994 2843
497711e7
GS
2844=for hackers
2845Found in file sv.h
2846
954c1994
GS
2847=item SVt_IV
2848
2849Integer type flag for scalars. See C<svtype>.
2850
497711e7
GS
2851=for hackers
2852Found in file sv.h
2853
954c1994
GS
2854=item SVt_NV
2855
2856Double type flag for scalars. See C<svtype>.
2857
497711e7
GS
2858=for hackers
2859Found in file sv.h
2860
954c1994
GS
2861=item SVt_PV
2862
2863Pointer type flag for scalars. See C<svtype>.
2864
497711e7
GS
2865=for hackers
2866Found in file sv.h
2867
954c1994
GS
2868=item SVt_PVAV
2869
2870Type flag for arrays. See C<svtype>.
2871
497711e7
GS
2872=for hackers
2873Found in file sv.h
2874
954c1994
GS
2875=item SVt_PVCV
2876
2877Type flag for code refs. See C<svtype>.
2878
497711e7
GS
2879=for hackers
2880Found in file sv.h
2881
954c1994
GS
2882=item SVt_PVHV
2883
2884Type flag for hashes. See C<svtype>.
2885
497711e7
GS
2886=for hackers
2887Found in file sv.h
2888
954c1994
GS
2889=item SVt_PVMG
2890
2891Type flag for blessed scalars. See C<svtype>.
2892
497711e7
GS
2893=for hackers
2894Found in file sv.h
2895
a8586c98
JH
2896=item SvUOK
2897
2898Returns a boolean indicating whether the SV contains an unsigned integer.
2899
2900 void SvUOK(SV* sv)
2901
2902=for hackers
2903Found in file sv.h
2904
954c1994
GS
2905=item SvUPGRADE
2906
2907Used to upgrade an SV to a more complex form. Uses C<sv_upgrade> to
2908perform the upgrade if necessary. See C<svtype>.
2909
2910 void SvUPGRADE(SV* sv, svtype type)
2911
497711e7
GS
2912=for hackers
2913Found in file sv.h
2914
914184e1
JH
2915=item SvUTF8
2916
2917Returns a boolean indicating whether the SV contains UTF-8 encoded data.
2918
2919 void SvUTF8(SV* sv)
2920
2921=for hackers
2922Found in file sv.h
2923
2924=item SvUTF8_off
2925
2926Unsets the UTF8 status of an SV.
2927
2928 void SvUTF8_off(SV *sv)
2929
2930=for hackers
2931Found in file sv.h
2932
2933=item SvUTF8_on
2934
d5ce4a7c
GA
2935Turn on the UTF8 status of an SV (the data is not changed, just the flag).
2936Do not use frivolously.
914184e1
JH
2937
2938 void SvUTF8_on(SV *sv)
2939
2940=for hackers
2941Found in file sv.h
2942
954c1994
GS
2943=item SvUV
2944
645c22ef
DM
2945Coerces the given SV to an unsigned integer and returns it. See C<SvUVx>
2946for a version which guarantees to evaluate sv only once.
954c1994
GS
2947
2948 UV SvUV(SV* sv)
2949
497711e7
GS
2950=for hackers
2951Found in file sv.h
2952
89423764 2953=item SvUVX
954c1994 2954
89423764
GS
2955Returns the raw value in the SV's UV slot, without checks or conversions.
2956Only use when you are sure SvIOK is true. See also C<SvUV()>.
954c1994 2957
89423764 2958 UV SvUVX(SV* sv)
954c1994 2959
497711e7
GS
2960=for hackers
2961Found in file sv.h
2962
89423764 2963=item SvUVx
645c22ef 2964
89423764
GS
2965Coerces the given SV to an unsigned integer and returns it. Guarantees to
2966evaluate sv only once. Use the more efficent C<SvUV> otherwise.
645c22ef 2967
89423764 2968 UV SvUVx(SV* sv)
645c22ef
DM
2969
2970=for hackers
2971Found in file sv.h
2972
2973=item sv_2bool
2974
2975This function is only called on magical items, and is only used by
8cf8f3d1 2976sv_true() or its macro equivalent.
645c22ef
DM
2977
2978 bool sv_2bool(SV* sv)
2979
2980=for hackers
2981Found in file sv.c
2982
2983=item sv_2cv
2984
2985Using various gambits, try to get a CV from an SV; in addition, try if
2986possible to set C<*st> and C<*gvp> to the stash and GV associated with it.
2987
2988 CV* sv_2cv(SV* sv, HV** st, GV** gvp, I32 lref)
2989
2990=for hackers
2991Found in file sv.c
2992
2993=item sv_2io
2994
2995Using various gambits, try to get an IO from an SV: the IO slot if its a
2996GV; or the recursive result if we're an RV; or the IO slot of the symbol
2997named after the PV if we're a string.
2998
2999 IO* sv_2io(SV* sv)
3000
3001=for hackers
3002Found in file sv.c
3003
3004=item sv_2iv
3005
3006Return the integer value of an SV, doing any necessary string conversion,
3007magic etc. Normally used via the C<SvIV(sv)> and C<SvIVx(sv)> macros.
3008
3009 IV sv_2iv(SV* sv)
3010
3011=for hackers
3012Found in file sv.c
3013
954c1994
GS
3014=item sv_2mortal
3015
793edb8a
JH
3016Marks an existing SV as mortal. The SV will be destroyed "soon", either
3017by an explicit call to FREETMPS, or by an implicit call at places such as
3018statement boundaries. See also C<sv_newmortal> and C<sv_mortalcopy>.
954c1994
GS
3019
3020 SV* sv_2mortal(SV* sv)
3021
497711e7
GS
3022=for hackers
3023Found in file sv.c
3024
645c22ef
DM
3025=item sv_2nv
3026
3027Return the num value of an SV, doing any necessary string or integer
3028conversion, magic etc. Normally used via the C<SvNV(sv)> and C<SvNVx(sv)>
3029macros.
3030
3031 NV sv_2nv(SV* sv)
3032
3033=for hackers
3034Found in file sv.c
3035
451be7b1
DM
3036=item sv_2pvbyte
3037
3038Return a pointer to the byte-encoded representation of the SV, and set *lp
3039to its length. May cause the SV to be downgraded from UTF8 as a
3040side-effect.
3041
3042Usually accessed via the C<SvPVbyte> macro.
3043
3044 char* sv_2pvbyte(SV* sv, STRLEN* lp)
3045
3046=for hackers
3047Found in file sv.c
3048
645c22ef
DM
3049=item sv_2pvbyte_nolen
3050
3051Return a pointer to the byte-encoded representation of the SV.
3052May cause the SV to be downgraded from UTF8 as a side-effect.
3053
3054Usually accessed via the C<SvPVbyte_nolen> macro.
3055
3056 char* sv_2pvbyte_nolen(SV* sv)
3057
3058=for hackers
3059Found in file sv.c
3060
451be7b1
DM
3061=item sv_2pvutf8
3062
3063Return a pointer to the UTF8-encoded representation of the SV, and set *lp
3064to its length. May cause the SV to be upgraded to UTF8 as a side-effect.
3065
3066Usually accessed via the C<SvPVutf8> macro.
3067
3068 char* sv_2pvutf8(SV* sv, STRLEN* lp)
3069
3070=for hackers
3071Found in file sv.c
3072
645c22ef
DM
3073=item sv_2pvutf8_nolen
3074
3075Return a pointer to the UTF8-encoded representation of the SV.
3076May cause the SV to be upgraded to UTF8 as a side-effect.
3077
3078Usually accessed via the C<SvPVutf8_nolen> macro.
3079
3080 char* sv_2pvutf8_nolen(SV* sv)
3081
3082=for hackers
3083Found in file sv.c
3084
3085=item sv_2pv_flags
3086
ff276b08 3087Returns a pointer to the string value of an SV, and sets *lp to its length.
645c22ef
DM
3088If flags includes SV_GMAGIC, does an mg_get() first. Coerces sv to a string
3089if necessary.
3090Normally invoked via the C<SvPV_flags> macro. C<sv_2pv()> and C<sv_2pv_nomg>
3091usually end up here too.
3092
3093 char* sv_2pv_flags(SV* sv, STRLEN* lp, I32 flags)
3094
3095=for hackers
3096Found in file sv.c
3097
3098=item sv_2pv_nolen
3099
3100Like C<sv_2pv()>, but doesn't return the length too. You should usually
3101use the macro wrapper C<SvPV_nolen(sv)> instead.
3102 char* sv_2pv_nolen(SV* sv)
3103
3104=for hackers
3105Found in file sv.c
3106
3107=item sv_2uv
3108
3109Return the unsigned integer value of an SV, doing any necessary string
3110conversion, magic etc. Normally used via the C<SvUV(sv)> and C<SvUVx(sv)>
3111macros.
3112
3113 UV sv_2uv(SV* sv)
3114
3115=for hackers
3116Found in file sv.c
3117
3118=item sv_backoff
3119
3120Remove any string offset. You should normally use the C<SvOOK_off> macro
3121wrapper instead.
3122
3123 int sv_backoff(SV* sv)
3124
3125=for hackers
3126Found in file sv.c
3127
954c1994
GS
3128=item sv_bless
3129
3130Blesses an SV into a specified package. The SV must be an RV. The package
3131must be designated by its stash (see C<gv_stashpv()>). The reference count
3132of the SV is unaffected.
3133
3134 SV* sv_bless(SV* sv, HV* stash)
3135
497711e7
GS
3136=for hackers
3137Found in file sv.c
3138
954c1994
GS
3139=item sv_catpv
3140
3141Concatenates the string onto the end of the string which is in the SV.
d5ce4a7c
GA
3142If the SV has the UTF8 status set, then the bytes appended should be
3143valid UTF8. Handles 'get' magic, but not 'set' magic. See C<sv_catpv_mg>.
954c1994
GS
3144
3145 void sv_catpv(SV* sv, const char* ptr)
3146
497711e7
GS
3147=for hackers
3148Found in file sv.c
3149
954c1994
GS
3150=item sv_catpvf
3151
d5ce4a7c
GA
3152Processes its arguments like C<sprintf> and appends the formatted
3153output to an SV. If the appended data contains "wide" characters
3154(including, but not limited to, SVs with a UTF-8 PV formatted with %s,
3155and characters >255 formatted with %c), the original SV might get
3156upgraded to UTF-8. Handles 'get' magic, but not 'set' magic.
3157C<SvSETMAGIC()> must typically be called after calling this function
3158to handle 'set' magic.
954c1994
GS
3159
3160 void sv_catpvf(SV* sv, const char* pat, ...)
3161
497711e7
GS
3162=for hackers
3163Found in file sv.c
3164
954c1994
GS
3165=item sv_catpvf_mg
3166
3167Like C<sv_catpvf>, but also handles 'set' magic.
3168
3169 void sv_catpvf_mg(SV *sv, const char* pat, ...)
3170
497711e7
GS
3171=for hackers
3172Found in file sv.c
3173
954c1994
GS
3174=item sv_catpvn
3175
3176Concatenates the string onto the end of the string which is in the SV. The
d5ce4a7c
GA
3177C<len> indicates number of bytes to copy. If the SV has the UTF8
3178status set, then the bytes appended should be valid UTF8.
3179Handles 'get' magic, but not 'set' magic. See C<sv_catpvn_mg>.
954c1994
GS
3180
3181 void sv_catpvn(SV* sv, const char* ptr, STRLEN len)
3182
497711e7
GS
3183=for hackers
3184Found in file sv.c
3185
8d6d96c1
HS
3186=item sv_catpvn_flags
3187
3188Concatenates the string onto the end of the string which is in the SV. The
3189C<len> indicates number of bytes to copy. If the SV has the UTF8
3190status set, then the bytes appended should be valid UTF8.
3191If C<flags> has C<SV_GMAGIC> bit set, will C<mg_get> on C<dsv> if
3192appropriate, else not. C<sv_catpvn> and C<sv_catpvn_nomg> are implemented
3193in terms of this function.
3194
3195 void sv_catpvn_flags(SV* sv, const char* ptr, STRLEN len, I32 flags)
3196
3197=for hackers
3198Found in file sv.c
3199
954c1994
GS
3200=item sv_catpvn_mg
3201
3202Like C<sv_catpvn>, but also handles 'set' magic.
3203
3204 void sv_catpvn_mg(SV *sv, const char *ptr, STRLEN len)
3205
497711e7
GS
3206=for hackers
3207Found in file sv.c
3208
954c1994
GS
3209=item sv_catpv_mg
3210
3211Like C<sv_catpv>, but also handles 'set' magic.
3212
3213 void sv_catpv_mg(SV *sv, const char *ptr)
3214
497711e7
GS
3215=for hackers
3216Found in file sv.c
3217
954c1994
GS
3218=item sv_catsv
3219
1aa99e6b
IH
3220Concatenates the string from SV C<ssv> onto the end of the string in
3221SV C<dsv>. Modifies C<dsv> but not C<ssv>. Handles 'get' magic, but
3222not 'set' magic. See C<sv_catsv_mg>.
954c1994
GS
3223
3224 void sv_catsv(SV* dsv, SV* ssv)
3225
497711e7
GS
3226=for hackers
3227Found in file sv.c
3228
8d6d96c1
HS
3229=item sv_catsv_flags
3230
3231Concatenates the string from SV C<ssv> onto the end of the string in
3232SV C<dsv>. Modifies C<dsv> but not C<ssv>. If C<flags> has C<SV_GMAGIC>
3233bit set, will C<mg_get> on the SVs if appropriate, else not. C<sv_catsv>
3234and C<sv_catsv_nomg> are implemented in terms of this function.
3235
3236 void sv_catsv_flags(SV* dsv, SV* ssv, I32 flags)
3237
3238=for hackers
3239Found in file sv.c
3240
954c1994
GS
3241=item sv_catsv_mg
3242
3243Like C<sv_catsv>, but also handles 'set' magic.
3244
3245 void sv_catsv_mg(SV *dstr, SV *sstr)
3246
497711e7
GS
3247=for hackers
3248Found in file sv.c
3249
954c1994
GS
3250=item sv_chop
3251
1c846c1f 3252Efficient removal of characters from the beginning of the string buffer.
954c1994
GS
3253SvPOK(sv) must be true and the C<ptr> must be a pointer to somewhere inside
3254the string buffer. The C<ptr> becomes the first character of the adjusted
645c22ef 3255string. Uses the "OOK hack".
954c1994
GS
3256
3257 void sv_chop(SV* sv, char* ptr)
3258
497711e7
GS
3259=for hackers
3260Found in file sv.c
3261
c461cf8f
JH
3262=item sv_clear
3263
645c22ef
DM
3264Clear an SV: call any destructors, free up any memory used by the body,
3265and free the body itself. The SV's head is I<not> freed, although
3266its type is set to all 1's so that it won't inadvertently be assumed
3267to be live during global destruction etc.
3268This function should only be called when REFCNT is zero. Most of the time
3269you'll want to call C<sv_free()> (or its macro wrapper C<SvREFCNT_dec>)
3270instead.
c461cf8f
JH
3271
3272 void sv_clear(SV* sv)
3273
3274=for hackers
3275Found in file sv.c
3276
954c1994
GS
3277=item sv_cmp
3278
3279Compares the strings in two SVs. Returns -1, 0, or 1 indicating whether the
3280string in C<sv1> is less than, equal to, or greater than the string in
645c22ef
DM
3281C<sv2>. Is UTF-8 and 'use bytes' aware, handles get magic, and will
3282coerce its args to strings if necessary. See also C<sv_cmp_locale>.
954c1994
GS
3283
3284 I32 sv_cmp(SV* sv1, SV* sv2)
3285
497711e7
GS
3286=for hackers
3287Found in file sv.c
3288
c461cf8f
JH
3289=item sv_cmp_locale
3290
645c22ef
DM
3291Compares the strings in two SVs in a locale-aware manner. Is UTF-8 and
3292'use bytes' aware, handles get magic, and will coerce its args to strings
3293if necessary. See also C<sv_cmp_locale>. See also C<sv_cmp>.
c461cf8f
JH
3294
3295 I32 sv_cmp_locale(SV* sv1, SV* sv2)
3296
3297=for hackers
3298Found in file sv.c
3299
645c22ef
DM
3300=item sv_collxfrm
3301
3302Add Collate Transform magic to an SV if it doesn't already have it.
3303
3304Any scalar variable may carry PERL_MAGIC_collxfrm magic that contains the
3305scalar data of the variable, but transformed to such a format that a normal
3306memory comparison can be used to compare the data according to the locale
3307settings.
3308
3309 char* sv_collxfrm(SV* sv, STRLEN* nxp)
3310
3311=for hackers
3312Found in file sv.c
3313
954c1994
GS
3314=item sv_dec
3315
645c22ef
DM
3316Auto-decrement of the value in the SV, doing string to numeric conversion
3317if necessary. Handles 'get' magic.
954c1994
GS
3318
3319 void sv_dec(SV* sv)
3320
497711e7
GS
3321=for hackers
3322Found in file sv.c
3323
954c1994
GS
3324=item sv_derived_from
3325
3326Returns a boolean indicating whether the SV is derived from the specified
3327class. This is the function that implements C<UNIVERSAL::isa>. It works
3328for class names as well as for objects.
3329
3330 bool sv_derived_from(SV* sv, const char* name)
3331
497711e7
GS
3332=for hackers
3333Found in file universal.c
3334
954c1994
GS
3335=item sv_eq
3336
3337Returns a boolean indicating whether the strings in the two SVs are
645c22ef
DM
3338identical. Is UTF-8 and 'use bytes' aware, handles get magic, and will
3339coerce its args to strings if necessary.
954c1994
GS
3340
3341 I32 sv_eq(SV* sv1, SV* sv2)
3342
497711e7
GS
3343=for hackers
3344Found in file sv.c
3345
645c22ef
DM
3346=item sv_force_normal
3347
3348Undo various types of fakery on an SV: if the PV is a shared string, make
3349a private copy; if we're a ref, stop refing; if we're a glob, downgrade to
3350an xpvmg. See also C<sv_force_normal_flags>.
3351
3352 void sv_force_normal(SV *sv)
3353
3354=for hackers
3355Found in file sv.c
3356
3357=item sv_force_normal_flags
3358
3359Undo various types of fakery on an SV: if the PV is a shared string, make
3360a private copy; if we're a ref, stop refing; if we're a glob, downgrade to
3361an xpvmg. The C<flags> parameter gets passed to C<sv_unref_flags()>
3362when unrefing. C<sv_force_normal> calls this function with flags set to 0.
3363
3364 void sv_force_normal_flags(SV *sv, U32 flags)
3365
3366=for hackers
3367Found in file sv.c
3368
c461cf8f
JH
3369=item sv_free
3370
645c22ef
DM
3371Decrement an SV's reference count, and if it drops to zero, call
3372C<sv_clear> to invoke destructors and free up any memory used by
3373the body; finally, deallocate the SV's head itself.
3374Normally called via a wrapper macro C<SvREFCNT_dec>.
c461cf8f
JH
3375
3376 void sv_free(SV* sv)
3377
3378=for hackers
3379Found in file sv.c
3380
3381=item sv_gets
3382
3383Get a line from the filehandle and store it into the SV, optionally
3384appending to the currently-stored string.
3385
3386 char* sv_gets(SV* sv, PerlIO* fp, I32 append)
3387
3388=for hackers
3389Found in file sv.c
3390
954c1994
GS
3391=item sv_grow
3392
645c22ef
DM
3393Expands the character buffer in the SV. If necessary, uses C<sv_unref> and
3394upgrades the SV to C<SVt_PV>. Returns a pointer to the character buffer.
3395Use the C<SvGROW> wrapper instead.
954c1994
GS
3396
3397 char* sv_grow(SV* sv, STRLEN newlen)
3398
497711e7
GS
3399=for hackers
3400Found in file sv.c
3401
954c1994
GS
3402=item sv_inc
3403
645c22ef
DM
3404Auto-increment of the value in the SV, doing string to numeric conversion
3405if necessary. Handles 'get' magic.
954c1994
GS
3406
3407 void sv_inc(SV* sv)
3408
497711e7
GS
3409=for hackers
3410Found in file sv.c
3411
954c1994
GS
3412=item sv_insert
3413
3414Inserts a string at the specified offset/length within the SV. Similar to
3415the Perl substr() function.
3416
3417 void sv_insert(SV* bigsv, STRLEN offset, STRLEN len, char* little, STRLEN littlelen)
3418
497711e7
GS
3419=for hackers
3420Found in file sv.c
3421
954c1994
GS
3422=item sv_isa
3423
3424Returns a boolean indicating whether the SV is blessed into the specified
3425class. This does not check for subtypes; use C<sv_derived_from> to verify
3426an inheritance relationship.
3427
3428 int sv_isa(SV* sv, const char* name)
3429
497711e7
GS
3430=for hackers
3431Found in file sv.c
3432
954c1994
GS
3433=item sv_isobject
3434
3435Returns a boolean indicating whether the SV is an RV pointing to a blessed
3436object. If the SV is not an RV, or if the object is not blessed, then this
3437will return false.
3438
3439 int sv_isobject(SV* sv)
3440
497711e7
GS
3441=for hackers
3442Found in file sv.c
3443
645c22ef
DM
3444=item sv_iv
3445
3446A private implementation of the C<SvIVx> macro for compilers which can't
3447cope with complex macro expressions. Always use the macro instead.
3448
3449 IV sv_iv(SV* sv)
3450
3451=for hackers
3452Found in file sv.c
3453
954c1994
GS
3454=item sv_len
3455
645c22ef
DM
3456Returns the length of the string in the SV. Handles magic and type
3457coercion. See also C<SvCUR>, which gives raw access to the xpv_cur slot.
954c1994
GS
3458
3459 STRLEN sv_len(SV* sv)
3460
497711e7
GS
3461=for hackers
3462Found in file sv.c
3463
c461cf8f
JH
3464=item sv_len_utf8
3465
3466Returns the number of characters in the string in an SV, counting wide
645c22ef 3467UTF8 bytes as a single character. Handles magic and type coercion.
c461cf8f
JH
3468
3469 STRLEN sv_len_utf8(SV* sv)
3470
3471=for hackers
3472Found in file sv.c
3473
954c1994
GS
3474=item sv_magic
3475
645c22ef
DM
3476Adds magic to an SV. First upgrades C<sv> to type C<SVt_PVMG> if necessary,
3477then adds a new magic item of type C<how> to the head of the magic list.
3478
3479C<name> is assumed to contain an C<SV*> if C<(name && namelen == HEf_SVKEY)>
954c1994
GS
3480
3481 void sv_magic(SV* sv, SV* obj, int how, const char* name, I32 namlen)
3482
497711e7
GS
3483=for hackers
3484Found in file sv.c
3485
954c1994
GS
3486=item sv_mortalcopy
3487
645c22ef 3488Creates a new SV which is a copy of the original SV (using C<sv_setsv>).
793edb8a
JH
3489The new SV is marked as mortal. It will be destroyed "soon", either by an
3490explicit call to FREETMPS, or by an implicit call at places such as
3491statement boundaries. See also C<sv_newmortal> and C<sv_2mortal>.
954c1994
GS
3492
3493 SV* sv_mortalcopy(SV* oldsv)
3494
497711e7
GS
3495=for hackers
3496Found in file sv.c
3497
954c1994
GS
3498=item sv_newmortal
3499
645c22ef 3500Creates a new null SV which is mortal. The reference count of the SV is
793edb8a
JH
3501set to 1. It will be destroyed "soon", either by an explicit call to
3502FREETMPS, or by an implicit call at places such as statement boundaries.
3503See also C<sv_mortalcopy> and C<sv_2mortal>.
954c1994
GS
3504
3505 SV* sv_newmortal()
3506
497711e7
GS
3507=for hackers
3508Found in file sv.c
3509
645c22ef
DM
3510=item sv_newref
3511
3512Increment an SV's reference count. Use the C<SvREFCNT_inc()> wrapper
3513instead.
3514
3515 SV* sv_newref(SV* sv)
3516
3517=for hackers
3518Found in file sv.c
3519
3520=item sv_nv
3521
3522A private implementation of the C<SvNVx> macro for compilers which can't
3523cope with complex macro expressions. Always use the macro instead.
3524
3525 NV sv_nv(SV* sv)
3526
3527=for hackers
3528Found in file sv.c
3529
3530=item sv_pos_b2u
3531
3532Converts the value pointed to by offsetp from a count of bytes from the
3533start of the string, to a count of the equivalent number of UTF8 chars.
3534Handles magic and type coercion.
3535
3536 void sv_pos_b2u(SV* sv, I32* offsetp)
3537
3538=for hackers
3539Found in file sv.c
3540
3541=item sv_pos_u2b
3542
3543Converts the value pointed to by offsetp from a count of UTF8 chars from
3544the start of the string, to a count of the equivalent number of bytes; if
3545lenp is non-zero, it does the same to lenp, but this time starting from
3546the offset, rather than from the start of the string. Handles magic and
3547type coercion.
3548
3549 void sv_pos_u2b(SV* sv, I32* offsetp, I32* lenp)
3550
3551=for hackers
3552Found in file sv.c
3553
451be7b1
DM
3554=item sv_pv
3555
3556A private implementation of the C<SvPV_nolen> macro for compilers which can't
3557cope with complex macro expressions. Always use the macro instead.
3558
3559 char* sv_pv(SV *sv)
3560
3561=for hackers
3562Found in file sv.c
3563
645c22ef
DM
3564=item sv_pvbyte
3565
3566A private implementation of the C<SvPVbyte_nolen> macro for compilers
3567which can't cope with complex macro expressions. Always use the macro
3568instead.
3569
3570 char* sv_pvbyte(SV *sv)
3571
3572=for hackers
3573Found in file sv.c
3574
3575=item sv_pvbyten
3576
3577A private implementation of the C<SvPVbyte> macro for compilers
3578which can't cope with complex macro expressions. Always use the macro
3579instead.
3580
3581 char* sv_pvbyten(SV *sv, STRLEN *len)
3582
3583=for hackers
3584Found in file sv.c
3585
3586=item sv_pvbyten_force
3587
3588A private implementation of the C<SvPVbytex_force> macro for compilers
3589which can't cope with complex macro expressions. Always use the macro
3590instead.
3591
3592 char* sv_pvbyten_force(SV* sv, STRLEN* lp)
3593
3594=for hackers
3595Found in file sv.c
3596
451be7b1
DM
3597=item sv_pvn
3598
3599A private implementation of the C<SvPV> macro for compilers which can't
3600cope with complex macro expressions. Always use the macro instead.
3601
3602 char* sv_pvn(SV *sv, STRLEN *len)
3603
3604=for hackers
3605Found in file sv.c
3606
c461cf8f
JH
3607=item sv_pvn_force
3608
3609Get a sensible string out of the SV somehow.
645c22ef
DM
3610A private implementation of the C<SvPV_force> macro for compilers which
3611can't cope with complex macro expressions. Always use the macro instead.
c461cf8f
JH
3612
3613 char* sv_pvn_force(SV* sv, STRLEN* lp)
3614
3615=for hackers
3616Found in file sv.c
3617
8d6d96c1
HS
3618=item sv_pvn_force_flags
3619
3620Get a sensible string out of the SV somehow.
3621If C<flags> has C<SV_GMAGIC> bit set, will C<mg_get> on C<sv> if
3622appropriate, else not. C<sv_pvn_force> and C<sv_pvn_force_nomg> are
3623implemented in terms of this function.
645c22ef
DM
3624You normally want to use the various wrapper macros instead: see
3625C<SvPV_force> and C<SvPV_force_nomg>
8d6d96c1
HS
3626
3627 char* sv_pvn_force_flags(SV* sv, STRLEN* lp, I32 flags)
3628
3629=for hackers
3630Found in file sv.c
3631
645c22ef
DM
3632=item sv_pvutf8
3633
3634A private implementation of the C<SvPVutf8_nolen> macro for compilers
3635which can't cope with complex macro expressions. Always use the macro
3636instead.
3637
3638 char* sv_pvutf8(SV *sv)
3639
3640=for hackers
3641Found in file sv.c
3642
3643=item sv_pvutf8n
3644
3645A private implementation of the C<SvPVutf8> macro for compilers
3646which can't cope with complex macro expressions. Always use the macro
3647instead.
3648
3649 char* sv_pvutf8n(SV *sv, STRLEN *len)
3650
3651=for hackers
3652Found in file sv.c
3653
c461cf8f
JH
3654=item sv_pvutf8n_force
3655
645c22ef
DM
3656A private implementation of the C<SvPVutf8_force> macro for compilers
3657which can't cope with complex macro expressions. Always use the macro
3658instead.
c461cf8f
JH
3659
3660 char* sv_pvutf8n_force(SV* sv, STRLEN* lp)
3661
3662=for hackers
3663Found in file sv.c
3664
3665=item sv_reftype
3666
3667Returns a string describing what the SV is a reference to.
3668
3669 char* sv_reftype(SV* sv, int ob)
3670
3671=for hackers
3672Found in file sv.c
3673
3674=item sv_replace
3675
3676Make the first argument a copy of the second, then delete the original.
645c22ef
DM
3677The target SV physically takes over ownership of the body of the source SV
3678and inherits its flags; however, the target keeps any magic it owns,
3679and any magic in the source is discarded.
ff276b08 3680Note that this is a rather specialist SV copying operation; most of the
645c22ef 3681time you'll want to use C<sv_setsv> or one of its many macro front-ends.
c461cf8f
JH
3682
3683 void sv_replace(SV* sv, SV* nsv)
3684
3685=for hackers
3686Found in file sv.c
3687
645c22ef
DM
3688=item sv_report_used
3689
3690Dump the contents of all SVs not yet freed. (Debugging aid).
3691
3692 void sv_report_used()
3693
3694=for hackers
3695Found in file sv.c
3696
451be7b1
DM
3697=item sv_reset
3698
3699Underlying implementation for the C<reset> Perl function.
3700Note that the perl-level function is vaguely deprecated.
3701
3702 void sv_reset(char* s, HV* stash)
3703
3704=for hackers
3705Found in file sv.c
3706
c461cf8f
JH
3707=item sv_rvweaken
3708
645c22ef
DM
3709Weaken a reference: set the C<SvWEAKREF> flag on this RV; give the
3710referred-to SV C<PERL_MAGIC_backref> magic if it hasn't already; and
3711push a back-reference to this RV onto the array of backreferences
3712associated with that magic.
c461cf8f
JH
3713
3714 SV* sv_rvweaken(SV *sv)
3715
3716=for hackers
3717Found in file sv.c
3718
954c1994
GS
3719=item sv_setiv
3720
645c22ef
DM
3721Copies an integer into the given SV, upgrading first if necessary.
3722Does not handle 'set' magic. See also C<sv_setiv_mg>.
954c1994
GS
3723
3724 void sv_setiv(SV* sv, IV num)
3725
497711e7
GS
3726=for hackers
3727Found in file sv.c
3728
954c1994
GS
3729=item sv_setiv_mg
3730
3731Like C<sv_setiv>, but also handles 'set' magic.
3732
3733 void sv_setiv_mg(SV *sv, IV i)
3734
497711e7
GS
3735=for hackers
3736Found in file sv.c
3737
954c1994
GS
3738=item sv_setnv
3739
645c22ef
DM
3740Copies a double into the given SV, upgrading first if necessary.
3741Does not handle 'set' magic. See also C<sv_setnv_mg>.
954c1994
GS
3742
3743 void sv_setnv(SV* sv, NV num)
3744
497711e7
GS
3745=for hackers
3746Found in file sv.c
3747
954c1994
GS
3748=item sv_setnv_mg
3749
3750Like C<sv_setnv>, but also handles 'set' magic.
3751
3752 void sv_setnv_mg(SV *sv, NV num)
3753
497711e7
GS
3754=for hackers
3755Found in file sv.c
3756
954c1994
GS
3757=item sv_setpv
3758
3759Copies a string into an SV. The string must be null-terminated. Does not
3760handle 'set' magic. See C<sv_setpv_mg>.
3761
3762 void sv_setpv(SV* sv, const char* ptr)
3763
497711e7
GS
3764=for hackers
3765Found in file sv.c
3766
954c1994
GS
3767=item sv_setpvf
3768
3769Processes its arguments like C<sprintf> and sets an SV to the formatted
3770output. Does not handle 'set' magic. See C<sv_setpvf_mg>.
3771
3772 void sv_setpvf(SV* sv, const char* pat, ...)
3773
497711e7
GS
3774=for hackers
3775Found in file sv.c
3776
954c1994
GS
3777=item sv_setpvf_mg
3778
3779Like C<sv_setpvf>, but also handles 'set' magic.
3780
3781 void sv_setpvf_mg(SV *sv, const char* pat, ...)
3782
497711e7
GS
3783=for hackers
3784Found in file sv.c
3785
954c1994
GS
3786=item sv_setpviv
3787
3788Copies an integer into the given SV, also updating its string value.
3789Does not handle 'set' magic. See C<sv_setpviv_mg>.
3790
3791 void sv_setpviv(SV* sv, IV num)
3792
497711e7
GS
3793=for hackers
3794Found in file sv.c
3795
954c1994
GS
3796=item sv_setpviv_mg
3797
3798Like C<sv_setpviv>, but also handles 'set' magic.
3799
3800 void sv_setpviv_mg(SV *sv, IV iv)
3801
497711e7
GS
3802=for hackers
3803Found in file sv.c
3804
954c1994
GS
3805=item sv_setpvn
3806
3807Copies a string into an SV. The C<len> parameter indicates the number of
3808bytes to be copied. Does not handle 'set' magic. See C<sv_setpvn_mg>.
3809
3810 void sv_setpvn(SV* sv, const char* ptr, STRLEN len)
3811
497711e7
GS
3812=for hackers
3813Found in file sv.c
3814
954c1994
GS
3815=item sv_setpvn_mg
3816
3817Like C<sv_setpvn>, but also handles 'set' magic.
3818
3819 void sv_setpvn_mg(SV *sv, const char *ptr, STRLEN len)
3820
497711e7
GS
3821=for hackers
3822Found in file sv.c
3823
954c1994
GS
3824=item sv_setpv_mg
3825
3826Like C<sv_setpv>, but also handles 'set' magic.
3827
3828 void sv_setpv_mg(SV *sv, const char *ptr)
3829
497711e7
GS
3830=for hackers
3831Found in file sv.c
3832
954c1994
GS
3833=item sv_setref_iv
3834
3835Copies an integer into a new SV, optionally blessing the SV. The C<rv>
3836argument will be upgraded to an RV. That RV will be modified to point to
3837the new SV. The C<classname> argument indicates the package for the
3838blessing. Set C<classname> to C<Nullch> to avoid the blessing. The new SV
3839will be returned and will have a reference count of 1.
3840
3841 SV* sv_setref_iv(SV* rv, const char* classname, IV iv)
3842
497711e7
GS
3843=for hackers
3844Found in file sv.c
3845
954c1994
GS
3846=item sv_setref_nv
3847
3848Copies a double into a new SV, optionally blessing the SV. The C<rv>
3849argument will be upgraded to an RV. That RV will be modified to point to
3850the new SV. The C<classname> argument indicates the package for the
3851blessing. Set C<classname> to C<Nullch> to avoid the blessing. The new SV
3852will be returned and will have a reference count of 1.
3853
3854 SV* sv_setref_nv(SV* rv, const char* classname, NV nv)
3855
497711e7
GS
3856=for hackers
3857Found in file sv.c
3858
954c1994
GS
3859=item sv_setref_pv
3860
3861Copies a pointer into a new SV, optionally blessing the SV. The C<rv>
3862argument will be upgraded to an RV. That RV will be modified to point to
3863the new SV. If the C<pv> argument is NULL then C<PL_sv_undef> will be placed
3864into the SV. The C<classname> argument indicates the package for the
3865blessing. Set C<classname> to C<Nullch> to avoid the blessing. The new SV
3866will be returned and will have a reference count of 1.
3867
3868Do not use with other Perl types such as HV, AV, SV, CV, because those
3869objects will become corrupted by the pointer copy process.
3870
3871Note that C<sv_setref_pvn> copies the string while this copies the pointer.
3872
3873 SV* sv_setref_pv(SV* rv, const char* classname, void* pv)
3874
497711e7
GS
3875=for hackers
3876Found in file sv.c
3877
954c1994
GS
3878=item sv_setref_pvn
3879
3880Copies a string into a new SV, optionally blessing the SV. The length of the
3881string must be specified with C<n>. The C<rv> argument will be upgraded to
3882an RV. That RV will be modified to point to the new SV. The C<classname>
3883argument indicates the package for the blessing. Set C<classname> to
3884C<Nullch> to avoid the blessing. The new SV will be returned and will have
3885a reference count of 1.
3886
3887Note that C<sv_setref_pv> copies the pointer while this copies the string.
3888
3889 SV* sv_setref_pvn(SV* rv, const char* classname, char* pv, STRLEN n)
3890
497711e7
GS
3891=for hackers
3892Found in file sv.c
3893
e1c57cef
JH
3894=item sv_setref_uv
3895
3896Copies an unsigned integer into a new SV, optionally blessing the SV. The C<rv>
3897argument will be upgraded to an RV. That RV will be modified to point to
3898the new SV. The C<classname> argument indicates the package for the
3899blessing. Set C<classname> to C<Nullch> to avoid the blessing. The new SV
3900will be returned and will have a reference count of 1.
3901
3902 SV* sv_setref_uv(SV* rv, const char* classname, UV uv)
3903
3904=for hackers
3905Found in file sv.c
3906
954c1994
GS
3907=item sv_setsv
3908
645c22ef
DM
3909Copies the contents of the source SV C<ssv> into the destination SV
3910C<dsv>. The source SV may be destroyed if it is mortal, so don't use this
3911function if the source SV needs to be reused. Does not handle 'set' magic.
3912Loosely speaking, it performs a copy-by-value, obliterating any previous
3913content of the destination.
3914
3915You probably want to use one of the assortment of wrappers, such as
3916C<SvSetSV>, C<SvSetSV_nosteal>, C<SvSetMagicSV> and
3917C<SvSetMagicSV_nosteal>.
3918
954c1994
GS
3919
3920 void sv_setsv(SV* dsv, SV* ssv)
3921
497711e7
GS
3922=for hackers
3923Found in file sv.c
3924
8d6d96c1
HS
3925=item sv_setsv_flags
3926
645c22ef
DM
3927Copies the contents of the source SV C<ssv> into the destination SV
3928C<dsv>. The source SV may be destroyed if it is mortal, so don't use this
3929function if the source SV needs to be reused. Does not handle 'set' magic.
3930Loosely speaking, it performs a copy-by-value, obliterating any previous
3931content of the destination.
3932If the C<flags> parameter has the C<SV_GMAGIC> bit set, will C<mg_get> on
3933C<ssv> if appropriate, else not. C<sv_setsv> and C<sv_setsv_nomg> are
3934implemented in terms of this function.
3935
3936You probably want to use one of the assortment of wrappers, such as
3937C<SvSetSV>, C<SvSetSV_nosteal>, C<SvSetMagicSV> and
3938C<SvSetMagicSV_nosteal>.
3939
3940This is the primary function for copying scalars, and most other
3941copy-ish functions and macros use this underneath.
8d6d96c1
HS
3942
3943 void sv_setsv_flags(SV* dsv, SV* ssv, I32 flags)
3944
3945=for hackers
3946Found in file sv.c
3947
954c1994
GS
3948=item sv_setsv_mg
3949
3950Like C<sv_setsv>, but also handles 'set' magic.
3951
3952 void sv_setsv_mg(SV *dstr, SV *sstr)
3953
497711e7
GS
3954=for hackers
3955Found in file sv.c
3956
954c1994
GS
3957=item sv_setuv
3958
645c22ef
DM
3959Copies an unsigned integer into the given SV, upgrading first if necessary.
3960Does not handle 'set' magic. See also C<sv_setuv_mg>.
954c1994
GS
3961
3962 void sv_setuv(SV* sv, UV num)
3963
497711e7
GS
3964=for hackers
3965Found in file sv.c
3966
954c1994
GS
3967=item sv_setuv_mg
3968
3969Like C<sv_setuv>, but also handles 'set' magic.
3970
3971 void sv_setuv_mg(SV *sv, UV u)
3972
497711e7
GS
3973=for hackers
3974Found in file sv.c
3975
645c22ef
DM
3976=item sv_taint
3977
3978Taint an SV. Use C<SvTAINTED_on> instead.
3979 void sv_taint(SV* sv)
3980
3981=for hackers
3982Found in file sv.c
3983
451be7b1
DM
3984=item sv_tainted
3985
3986Test an SV for taintedness. Use C<SvTAINTED> instead.
3987 bool sv_tainted(SV* sv)
3988
3989=for hackers
3990Found in file sv.c
3991
c461cf8f
JH
3992=item sv_true
3993
3994Returns true if the SV has a true value by Perl's rules.
645c22ef
DM
3995Use the C<SvTRUE> macro instead, which may call C<sv_true()> or may
3996instead use an in-line version.
c461cf8f
JH
3997
3998 I32 sv_true(SV *sv)
3999
4000=for hackers
4001Found in file sv.c
4002
4003=item sv_unmagic
4004
645c22ef 4005Removes all magic of type C<type> from an SV.
c461cf8f
JH
4006
4007 int sv_unmagic(SV* sv, int type)
4008
4009=for hackers
4010Found in file sv.c
4011
954c1994
GS
4012=item sv_unref
4013
4014Unsets the RV status of the SV, and decrements the reference count of
4015whatever was being referenced by the RV. This can almost be thought of
b06226ff 4016as a reversal of C<newSVrv>. This is C<sv_unref_flags> with the C<flag>
ae154d6d 4017being zero. See C<SvROK_off>.
954c1994
GS
4018
4019 void sv_unref(SV* sv)
4020
497711e7
GS
4021=for hackers
4022Found in file sv.c
4023
840a7b70
IZ
4024=item sv_unref_flags
4025
4026Unsets the RV status of the SV, and decrements the reference count of
4027whatever was being referenced by the RV. This can almost be thought of
4028as a reversal of C<newSVrv>. The C<cflags> argument can contain
4029C<SV_IMMEDIATE_UNREF> to force the reference count to be decremented
4030(otherwise the decrementing is conditional on the reference count being
4031different from one or the reference being a readonly SV).
ae154d6d 4032See C<SvROK_off>.
840a7b70
IZ
4033
4034 void sv_unref_flags(SV* sv, U32 flags)
4035
4036=for hackers
4037Found in file sv.c
4038
451be7b1
DM
4039=item sv_untaint
4040
4041Untaint an SV. Use C<SvTAINTED_off> instead.
4042 void sv_untaint(SV* sv)
4043
4044=for hackers
4045Found in file sv.c
4046
954c1994
GS
4047=item sv_upgrade
4048
ff276b08 4049Upgrade an SV to a more complex form. Generally adds a new body type to the
645c22ef 4050SV, then copies across as much information as possible from the old body.
ff276b08 4051You generally want to use the C<SvUPGRADE> macro wrapper. See also C<svtype>.
954c1994
GS
4052
4053 bool sv_upgrade(SV* sv, U32 mt)
4054
497711e7
GS
4055=for hackers
4056Found in file sv.c
4057
954c1994
GS
4058=item sv_usepvn
4059
4060Tells an SV to use C<ptr> to find its string value. Normally the string is
1c846c1f 4061stored inside the SV but sv_usepvn allows the SV to use an outside string.
954c1994
GS
4062The C<ptr> should point to memory that was allocated by C<malloc>. The
4063string length, C<len>, must be supplied. This function will realloc the
4064memory pointed to by C<ptr>, so that pointer should not be freed or used by
4065the programmer after giving it to sv_usepvn. Does not handle 'set' magic.
4066See C<sv_usepvn_mg>.
4067
4068 void sv_usepvn(SV* sv, char* ptr, STRLEN len)
4069
497711e7
GS
4070=for hackers
4071Found in file sv.c
4072
954c1994
GS
4073=item sv_usepvn_mg
4074
4075Like C<sv_usepvn>, but also handles 'set' magic.
4076
4077 void sv_usepvn_mg(SV *sv, char *ptr, STRLEN len)
4078
497711e7
GS
4079=for hackers
4080Found in file sv.c
4081
2457d041
JH
4082=item sv_utf8_decode
4083
4084Convert the octets in the PV from UTF-8 to chars. Scan for validity and then
645c22ef 4085turn off SvUTF8 if needed so that we see characters. Used as a building block
2457d041
JH
4086for decode_utf8 in Encode.xs
4087
4088NOTE: this function is experimental and may change or be
4089removed without notice.
4090
4091 bool sv_utf8_decode(SV *sv)
4092
4093=for hackers
4094Found in file sv.c
4095
c461cf8f
JH
4096=item sv_utf8_downgrade
4097
4098Attempt to convert the PV of an SV from UTF8-encoded to byte encoding.
4099This may not be possible if the PV contains non-byte encoding characters;
4100if this is the case, either returns false or, if C<fail_ok> is not
4101true, croaks.
4102
4103NOTE: this function is experimental and may change or be
4104removed without notice.
4105
4106 bool sv_utf8_downgrade(SV *sv, bool fail_ok)
4107
4108=for hackers
4109Found in file sv.c
4110
4111=item sv_utf8_encode
4112
4113Convert the PV of an SV to UTF8-encoded, but then turn off the C<SvUTF8>
2457d041
JH
4114flag so that it looks like octets again. Used as a building block
4115for encode_utf8 in Encode.xs
c461cf8f
JH
4116
4117 void sv_utf8_encode(SV *sv)
4118
4119=for hackers
4120Found in file sv.c
4121
4122=item sv_utf8_upgrade
4123
4124Convert the PV of an SV to its UTF8-encoded form.
645c22ef 4125Forces the SV to string form if it is not already.
2457d041
JH
4126Always sets the SvUTF8 flag to avoid future validity checks even
4127if all the bytes have hibit clear.
c461cf8f 4128
2457d041 4129 STRLEN sv_utf8_upgrade(SV *sv)
c461cf8f
JH
4130
4131=for hackers
4132Found in file sv.c
4133
8d6d96c1
HS
4134=item sv_utf8_upgrade_flags
4135
4136Convert the PV of an SV to its UTF8-encoded form.
645c22ef 4137Forces the SV to string form if it is not already.
8d6d96c1
HS
4138Always sets the SvUTF8 flag to avoid future validity checks even
4139if all the bytes have hibit clear. If C<flags> has C<SV_GMAGIC> bit set,
4140will C<mg_get> on C<sv> if appropriate, else not. C<sv_utf8_upgrade> and
4141C<sv_utf8_upgrade_nomg> are implemented in terms of this function.
4142
4143 STRLEN sv_utf8_upgrade_flags(SV *sv, I32 flags)
4144
4145=for hackers
4146Found in file sv.c
4147
645c22ef
DM
4148=item sv_uv
4149
4150A private implementation of the C<SvUVx> macro for compilers which can't
4151cope with complex macro expressions. Always use the macro instead.
4152
4153 UV sv_uv(SV* sv)
4154
4155=for hackers
4156Found in file sv.c
4157
954c1994
GS
4158=item sv_vcatpvfn
4159
4160Processes its arguments like C<vsprintf> and appends the formatted output
4161to an SV. Uses an array of SVs if the C style variable argument list is
4162missing (NULL). When running with taint checks enabled, indicates via
4163C<maybe_tainted> if results are untrustworthy (often due to the use of
4164locales).
4165
645c22ef
DM
4166Usually used via one of its frontends C<sv_catpvf> and C<sv_catpvf_mg>.
4167
954c1994
GS
4168 void sv_vcatpvfn(SV* sv, const char* pat, STRLEN patlen, va_list* args, SV** svargs, I32 svmax, bool *maybe_tainted)
4169
497711e7
GS
4170=for hackers
4171Found in file sv.c
4172
954c1994
GS
4173=item sv_vsetpvfn
4174
4175Works like C<vcatpvfn> but copies the text into the SV instead of
4176appending it.
4177
645c22ef
DM
4178Usually used via one of its frontends C<sv_setpvf> and C<sv_setpvf_mg>.
4179
954c1994
GS
4180 void sv_vsetpvfn(SV* sv, const char* pat, STRLEN patlen, va_list* args, SV** svargs, I32 svmax, bool *maybe_tainted)
4181
497711e7
GS
4182=for hackers
4183Found in file sv.c
4184
954c1994
GS
4185=item THIS
4186
4187Variable which is setup by C<xsubpp> to designate the object in a C++
4188XSUB. This is always the proper type for the C++ object. See C<CLASS> and
4189L<perlxs/"Using XS With C++">.
4190
4191 (whatever) THIS
4192
497711e7
GS
4193=for hackers
4194Found in file XSUB.h
4195
954c1994
GS
4196=item toLOWER
4197
4198Converts the specified character to lowercase.
4199
4200 char toLOWER(char ch)
4201
497711e7
GS
4202=for hackers
4203Found in file handy.h
4204
954c1994
GS
4205=item toUPPER
4206
4207Converts the specified character to uppercase.
4208
4209 char toUPPER(char ch)
4210
497711e7
GS
4211=for hackers
4212Found in file handy.h
4213
282f25c9
JH
4214=item utf8n_to_uvchr
4215
4216Returns the native character value of the first character in the string C<s>
4217which is assumed to be in UTF8 encoding; C<retlen> will be set to the
4218length, in bytes, of that character.
4219
4220Allows length and flags to be passed to low level routine.
4221
4222 UV utf8n_to_uvchr(U8 *s, STRLEN curlen, STRLEN* retlen, U32 flags)
4223
4224=for hackers
4225Found in file utf8.c
4226
4227=item utf8n_to_uvuni
4228
4229Bottom level UTF-8 decode routine.
4230Returns the unicode code point value of the first character in the string C<s>
4231which is assumed to be in UTF8 encoding and no longer than C<curlen>;
4232C<retlen> will be set to the length, in bytes, of that character.
4233
4234If C<s> does not point to a well-formed UTF8 character, the behaviour
4235is dependent on the value of C<flags>: if it contains UTF8_CHECK_ONLY,
4236it is assumed that the caller will raise a warning, and this function
4237will silently just set C<retlen> to C<-1> and return zero. If the
4238C<flags> does not contain UTF8_CHECK_ONLY, warnings about
4239malformations will be given, C<retlen> will be set to the expected
4240length of the UTF-8 character in bytes, and zero will be returned.
4241
4242The C<flags> can also contain various flags to allow deviations from
4243the strict UTF-8 encoding (see F<utf8.h>).
4244
4245Most code should use utf8_to_uvchr() rather than call this directly.
4246
4247 UV utf8n_to_uvuni(U8 *s, STRLEN curlen, STRLEN* retlen, U32 flags)
4248
4249=for hackers
4250Found in file utf8.c
4251
b06226ff
JH
4252=item utf8_distance
4253
4254Returns the number of UTF8 characters between the UTF-8 pointers C<a>
4255and C<b>.
4256
4257WARNING: use only if you *know* that the pointers point inside the
4258same UTF-8 buffer.
4259
4260 IV utf8_distance(U8 *a, U8 *b)
4261
4262=for hackers
4263Found in file utf8.c
4264
4265=item utf8_hop
4266
8850bf83
JH
4267Return the UTF-8 pointer C<s> displaced by C<off> characters, either
4268forward or backward.
b06226ff
JH
4269
4270WARNING: do not use the following unless you *know* C<off> is within
8850bf83
JH
4271the UTF-8 data pointed to by C<s> *and* that on entry C<s> is aligned
4272on the first byte of character or just after the last byte of a character.
b06226ff
JH
4273
4274 U8* utf8_hop(U8 *s, I32 off)
4275
4276=for hackers
4277Found in file utf8.c
4278
4279=item utf8_length
4280
4281Return the length of the UTF-8 char encoded string C<s> in characters.
4282Stops at C<e> (inclusive). If C<e E<lt> s> or if the scan would end
4283up past C<e>, croaks.
4284
4285 STRLEN utf8_length(U8* s, U8 *e)
4286
4287=for hackers
4288Found in file utf8.c
4289
497711e7
GS
4290=item utf8_to_bytes
4291
246fae53
MG
4292Converts a string C<s> of length C<len> from UTF8 into byte encoding.
4293Unlike C<bytes_to_utf8>, this over-writes the original string, and
4294updates len to contain the new length.
67e989fb 4295Returns zero on failure, setting C<len> to -1.
497711e7 4296
eebe1485
SC
4297NOTE: this function is experimental and may change or be
4298removed without notice.
4299
4300 U8* utf8_to_bytes(U8 *s, STRLEN *len)
497711e7
GS
4301
4302=for hackers
4303Found in file utf8.c
4304
282f25c9 4305=item utf8_to_uvchr
b6b716fe 4306
282f25c9
JH
4307Returns the native character value of the first character in the string C<s>
4308which is assumed to be in UTF8 encoding; C<retlen> will be set to the
4309length, in bytes, of that character.
28d3d195 4310
282f25c9
JH
4311If C<s> does not point to a well-formed UTF8 character, zero is
4312returned and retlen is set, if possible, to -1.
444155da 4313
282f25c9 4314 UV utf8_to_uvchr(U8 *s, STRLEN* retlen)
444155da
JH
4315
4316=for hackers
4317Found in file utf8.c
4318
282f25c9 4319=item utf8_to_uvuni
444155da 4320
282f25c9 4321Returns the Unicode code point of the first character in the string C<s>
dcad2880 4322which is assumed to be in UTF8 encoding; C<retlen> will be set to the
1aa99e6b 4323length, in bytes, of that character.
444155da 4324
282f25c9
JH
4325This function should only be used when returned UV is considered
4326an index into the Unicode semantic tables (e.g. swashes).
4327
dcad2880
JH
4328If C<s> does not point to a well-formed UTF8 character, zero is
4329returned and retlen is set, if possible, to -1.
b6b716fe 4330
282f25c9
JH
4331 UV utf8_to_uvuni(U8 *s, STRLEN* retlen)
4332
4333=for hackers
4334Found in file utf8.c
4335
4336=item uvchr_to_utf8
4337
4338Adds the UTF8 representation of the Native codepoint C<uv> to the end
4339of the string C<d>; C<d> should be have at least C<UTF8_MAXLEN+1> free
4340bytes available. The return value is the pointer to the byte after the
4341end of the new character. In other words,
4342
4343 d = uvchr_to_utf8(d, uv);
4344
4345is the recommended wide native character-aware way of saying
4346
4347 *(d++) = uv;
4348
4349 U8* uvchr_to_utf8(U8 *d, UV uv)
eebe1485
SC
4350
4351=for hackers
4352Found in file utf8.c
4353
282f25c9 4354=item uvuni_to_utf8
eebe1485
SC
4355
4356Adds the UTF8 representation of the Unicode codepoint C<uv> to the end
4357of the string C<d>; C<d> should be have at least C<UTF8_MAXLEN+1> free
4358bytes available. The return value is the pointer to the byte after the
282f25c9 4359end of the new character. In other words,
eebe1485 4360
282f25c9 4361 d = uvuni_to_utf8(d, uv);
eebe1485
SC
4362
4363is the recommended Unicode-aware way of saying
4364
4365 *(d++) = uv;
4366
282f25c9 4367 U8* uvuni_to_utf8(U8 *d, UV uv)
b6b716fe
SC
4368
4369=for hackers
4370Found in file utf8.c
4371
954c1994
GS
4372=item warn
4373
4374This is the XSUB-writer's interface to Perl's C<warn> function. Use this
4375function the same way you use the C C<printf> function. See
4376C<croak>.
4377
4378 void warn(const char* pat, ...)
4379
497711e7
GS
4380=for hackers
4381Found in file util.c
4382
954c1994
GS
4383=item XPUSHi
4384
4385Push an integer onto the stack, extending the stack if necessary. Handles
4386'set' magic. See C<PUSHi>.
4387
4388 void XPUSHi(IV iv)
4389
497711e7
GS
4390=for hackers
4391Found in file pp.h
4392
954c1994
GS
4393=item XPUSHn
4394
4395Push a double onto the stack, extending the stack if necessary. Handles
4396'set' magic. See C<PUSHn>.
4397
4398 void XPUSHn(NV nv)
4399
497711e7
GS
4400=for hackers
4401Found in file pp.h
4402
954c1994
GS
4403=item XPUSHp
4404
4405Push a string onto the stack, extending the stack if necessary. The C<len>
4406indicates the length of the string. Handles 'set' magic. See
4407C<PUSHp>.
4408
4409 void XPUSHp(char* str, STRLEN len)
4410
497711e7
GS
4411=for hackers
4412Found in file pp.h
4413
954c1994
GS
4414=item XPUSHs
4415
4416Push an SV onto the stack, extending the stack if necessary. Does not
4417handle 'set' magic. See C<PUSHs>.
4418
4419 void XPUSHs(SV* sv)
4420
497711e7
GS
4421=for hackers
4422Found in file pp.h
4423
954c1994
GS
4424=item XPUSHu
4425
1c846c1f 4426Push an unsigned integer onto the stack, extending the stack if necessary.
954c1994
GS
4427See C<PUSHu>.
4428
4429 void XPUSHu(UV uv)
4430
497711e7
GS
4431=for hackers
4432Found in file pp.h
4433
954c1994
GS
4434=item XS
4435
4436Macro to declare an XSUB and its C parameter list. This is handled by
4437C<xsubpp>.
4438
497711e7
GS
4439=for hackers
4440Found in file XSUB.h
4441
954c1994
GS
4442=item XSRETURN
4443
4444Return from XSUB, indicating number of items on the stack. This is usually
4445handled by C<xsubpp>.
4446
4447 void XSRETURN(int nitems)
4448
497711e7
GS
4449=for hackers
4450Found in file XSUB.h
4451
954c1994
GS
4452=item XSRETURN_EMPTY
4453
4454Return an empty list from an XSUB immediately.
4455
4456 XSRETURN_EMPTY;
4457
497711e7
GS
4458=for hackers
4459Found in file XSUB.h
4460
954c1994
GS
4461=item XSRETURN_IV
4462
4463Return an integer from an XSUB immediately. Uses C<XST_mIV>.
4464
4465 void XSRETURN_IV(IV iv)
4466
497711e7
GS
4467=for hackers
4468Found in file XSUB.h
4469
954c1994
GS
4470=item XSRETURN_NO
4471
4472Return C<&PL_sv_no> from an XSUB immediately. Uses C<XST_mNO>.
4473
4474 XSRETURN_NO;
4475
497711e7
GS
4476=for hackers
4477Found in file XSUB.h
4478
954c1994
GS
4479=item XSRETURN_NV
4480
4481Return an double from an XSUB immediately. Uses C<XST_mNV>.
4482
4483 void XSRETURN_NV(NV nv)
4484
497711e7
GS
4485=for hackers
4486Found in file XSUB.h
4487
954c1994
GS
4488=item XSRETURN_PV
4489
4490Return a copy of a string from an XSUB immediately. Uses C<XST_mPV>.
4491
4492 void XSRETURN_PV(char* str)
4493
497711e7
GS
4494=for hackers
4495Found in file XSUB.h
4496
954c1994
GS
4497=item XSRETURN_UNDEF
4498
4499Return C<&PL_sv_undef> from an XSUB immediately. Uses C<XST_mUNDEF>.
4500
4501 XSRETURN_UNDEF;
4502
497711e7
GS
4503=for hackers
4504Found in file XSUB.h
4505
954c1994
GS
4506=item XSRETURN_YES
4507
4508Return C<&PL_sv_yes> from an XSUB immediately. Uses C<XST_mYES>.
4509
4510 XSRETURN_YES;
4511
497711e7
GS
4512=for hackers
4513Found in file XSUB.h
4514
954c1994
GS
4515=item XST_mIV
4516
4517Place an integer into the specified position C<pos> on the stack. The
4518value is stored in a new mortal SV.
4519
4520 void XST_mIV(int pos, IV iv)
4521
497711e7
GS
4522=for hackers
4523Found in file XSUB.h
4524
954c1994
GS
4525=item XST_mNO
4526
4527Place C<&PL_sv_no> into the specified position C<pos> on the
4528stack.
4529
4530 void XST_mNO(int pos)
4531
497711e7
GS
4532=for hackers
4533Found in file XSUB.h
4534
954c1994
GS
4535=item XST_mNV
4536
4537Place a double into the specified position C<pos> on the stack. The value
4538is stored in a new mortal SV.
4539
4540 void XST_mNV(int pos, NV nv)
4541
497711e7
GS
4542=for hackers
4543Found in file XSUB.h
4544
954c1994
GS
4545=item XST_mPV
4546
4547Place a copy of a string into the specified position C<pos> on the stack.
4548The value is stored in a new mortal SV.
4549
4550 void XST_mPV(int pos, char* str)
4551
497711e7
GS
4552=for hackers
4553Found in file XSUB.h
4554
954c1994
GS
4555=item XST_mUNDEF
4556
4557Place C<&PL_sv_undef> into the specified position C<pos> on the
4558stack.
4559
4560 void XST_mUNDEF(int pos)
4561
497711e7
GS
4562=for hackers
4563Found in file XSUB.h
4564
954c1994
GS
4565=item XST_mYES
4566
4567Place C<&PL_sv_yes> into the specified position C<pos> on the
4568stack.
4569
4570 void XST_mYES(int pos)
4571
497711e7
GS
4572=for hackers
4573Found in file XSUB.h
4574
954c1994
GS
4575=item XS_VERSION
4576
4577The version identifier for an XS module. This is usually
4578handled automatically by C<ExtUtils::MakeMaker>. See C<XS_VERSION_BOOTCHECK>.
4579
497711e7
GS
4580=for hackers
4581Found in file XSUB.h
4582
954c1994
GS
4583=item XS_VERSION_BOOTCHECK
4584
4585Macro to verify that a PM module's $VERSION variable matches the XS
4586module's C<XS_VERSION> variable. This is usually handled automatically by
4587C<xsubpp>. See L<perlxs/"The VERSIONCHECK: Keyword">.
4588
4589 XS_VERSION_BOOTCHECK;
4590
497711e7
GS
4591=for hackers
4592Found in file XSUB.h
4593
954c1994
GS
4594=item Zero
4595
4596The XSUB-writer's interface to the C C<memzero> function. The C<dest> is the
4597destination, C<nitems> is the number of items, and C<type> is the type.
4598
4599 void Zero(void* dest, int nitems, type)
4600
497711e7
GS
4601=for hackers
4602Found in file handy.h
4603
954c1994
GS
4604=back
4605
4606=head1 AUTHORS
4607
4608Until May 1997, this document was maintained by Jeff Okamoto
4609<okamoto@corp.hp.com>. It is now maintained as part of Perl itself.
4610
4611With lots of help and suggestions from Dean Roehrich, Malcolm Beattie,
4612Andreas Koenig, Paul Hudson, Ilya Zakharevich, Paul Marquess, Neil
4613Bowers, Matthew Green, Tim Bunce, Spider Boardman, Ulrich Pfeifer,
4614Stephen McCamant, and Gurusamy Sarathy.
4615
4616API Listing originally by Dean Roehrich <roehrich@cray.com>.
4617
4618Updated to be autogenerated from comments in the source by Benjamin Stuhl.
4619
4620=head1 SEE ALSO
4621
4622perlguts(1), perlxs(1), perlxstut(1), perlintern(1)
4623