1 /* 2 * This file is part of gtkD. 3 * 4 * gtkD is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify 5 * it under the terms of the GNU Lesser General Public License 6 * as published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 3 7 * of the License, or (at your option) any later version, with 8 * some exceptions, please read the COPYING file. 9 * 10 * gtkD is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, 11 * but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of 12 * MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the 13 * GNU Lesser General Public License for more details. 14 * 15 * You should have received a copy of the GNU Lesser General Public License 16 * along with gtkD; if not, write to the Free Software 17 * Foundation, Inc., 51 Franklin St, Fifth Floor, Boston, MA 02110, USA 18 */ 19 20 // generated automatically - do not change 21 // find conversion definition on APILookup.txt 22 // implement new conversion functionalities on the wrap.utils pakage 23 24 25 module gio.ConverterIF; 26 27 private import gio.c.functions; 28 public import gio.c.types; 29 private import glib.ErrorG; 30 private import glib.GException; 31 public import gtkc.giotypes; 32 33 34 /** 35 * #GConverter is implemented by objects that convert 36 * binary data in various ways. The conversion can be 37 * stateful and may fail at any place. 38 * 39 * Some example conversions are: character set conversion, 40 * compression, decompression and regular expression 41 * replace. 42 * 43 * Since: 2.24 44 */ 45 public interface ConverterIF{ 46 /** Get the main Gtk struct */ 47 public GConverter* getConverterStruct(bool transferOwnership = false); 48 49 /** the main Gtk struct as a void* */ 50 protected void* getStruct(); 51 52 53 /** */ 54 public static GType getType() 55 { 56 return g_converter_get_type(); 57 } 58 59 /** 60 * This is the main operation used when converting data. It is to be called 61 * multiple times in a loop, and each time it will do some work, i.e. 62 * producing some output (in @outbuf) or consuming some input (from @inbuf) or 63 * both. If its not possible to do any work an error is returned. 64 * 65 * Note that a single call may not consume all input (or any input at all). 66 * Also a call may produce output even if given no input, due to state stored 67 * in the converter producing output. 68 * 69 * If any data was either produced or consumed, and then an error happens, then 70 * only the successful conversion is reported and the error is returned on the 71 * next call. 72 * 73 * A full conversion loop involves calling this method repeatedly, each time 74 * giving it new input and space output space. When there is no more input 75 * data after the data in @inbuf, the flag %G_CONVERTER_INPUT_AT_END must be set. 76 * The loop will be (unless some error happens) returning %G_CONVERTER_CONVERTED 77 * each time until all data is consumed and all output is produced, then 78 * %G_CONVERTER_FINISHED is returned instead. Note, that %G_CONVERTER_FINISHED 79 * may be returned even if %G_CONVERTER_INPUT_AT_END is not set, for instance 80 * in a decompression converter where the end of data is detectable from the 81 * data (and there might even be other data after the end of the compressed data). 82 * 83 * When some data has successfully been converted @bytes_read and is set to 84 * the number of bytes read from @inbuf, and @bytes_written is set to indicate 85 * how many bytes was written to @outbuf. If there are more data to output 86 * or consume (i.e. unless the %G_CONVERTER_INPUT_AT_END is specified) then 87 * %G_CONVERTER_CONVERTED is returned, and if no more data is to be output 88 * then %G_CONVERTER_FINISHED is returned. 89 * 90 * On error %G_CONVERTER_ERROR is returned and @error is set accordingly. 91 * Some errors need special handling: 92 * 93 * %G_IO_ERROR_NO_SPACE is returned if there is not enough space 94 * to write the resulting converted data, the application should 95 * call the function again with a larger @outbuf to continue. 96 * 97 * %G_IO_ERROR_PARTIAL_INPUT is returned if there is not enough 98 * input to fully determine what the conversion should produce, 99 * and the %G_CONVERTER_INPUT_AT_END flag is not set. This happens for 100 * example with an incomplete multibyte sequence when converting text, 101 * or when a regexp matches up to the end of the input (and may match 102 * further input). It may also happen when @inbuf_size is zero and 103 * there is no more data to produce. 104 * 105 * When this happens the application should read more input and then 106 * call the function again. If further input shows that there is no 107 * more data call the function again with the same data but with 108 * the %G_CONVERTER_INPUT_AT_END flag set. This may cause the conversion 109 * to finish as e.g. in the regexp match case (or, to fail again with 110 * %G_IO_ERROR_PARTIAL_INPUT in e.g. a charset conversion where the 111 * input is actually partial). 112 * 113 * After g_converter_convert() has returned %G_CONVERTER_FINISHED the 114 * converter object is in an invalid state where its not allowed 115 * to call g_converter_convert() anymore. At this time you can only 116 * free the object or call g_converter_reset() to reset it to the 117 * initial state. 118 * 119 * If the flag %G_CONVERTER_FLUSH is set then conversion is modified 120 * to try to write out all internal state to the output. The application 121 * has to call the function multiple times with the flag set, and when 122 * the available input has been consumed and all internal state has 123 * been produced then %G_CONVERTER_FLUSHED (or %G_CONVERTER_FINISHED if 124 * really at the end) is returned instead of %G_CONVERTER_CONVERTED. 125 * This is somewhat similar to what happens at the end of the input stream, 126 * but done in the middle of the data. 127 * 128 * This has different meanings for different conversions. For instance 129 * in a compression converter it would mean that we flush all the 130 * compression state into output such that if you uncompress the 131 * compressed data you get back all the input data. Doing this may 132 * make the final file larger due to padding though. Another example 133 * is a regexp conversion, where if you at the end of the flushed data 134 * have a match, but there is also a potential longer match. In the 135 * non-flushed case we would ask for more input, but when flushing we 136 * treat this as the end of input and do the match. 137 * 138 * Flushing is not always possible (like if a charset converter flushes 139 * at a partial multibyte sequence). Converters are supposed to try 140 * to produce as much output as possible and then return an error 141 * (typically %G_IO_ERROR_PARTIAL_INPUT). 142 * 143 * Params: 144 * inbuf = the buffer 145 * containing the data to convert. 146 * outbuf = a buffer to write 147 * converted data in. 148 * flags = a #GConverterFlags controlling the conversion details 149 * bytesRead = will be set to the number of bytes read from @inbuf on success 150 * bytesWritten = will be set to the number of bytes written to @outbuf on success 151 * 152 * Returns: a #GConverterResult, %G_CONVERTER_ERROR on error. 153 * 154 * Since: 2.24 155 * 156 * Throws: GException on failure. 157 */ 158 public GConverterResult convert(ubyte[] inbuf, ubyte[] outbuf, GConverterFlags flags, out size_t bytesRead, out size_t bytesWritten); 159 160 /** 161 * Resets all internal state in the converter, making it behave 162 * as if it was just created. If the converter has any internal 163 * state that would produce output then that output is lost. 164 * 165 * Since: 2.24 166 */ 167 public void reset(); 168 }