std::collate<CharT>::transform, do_transform

From cppreference.com
< cpp‎ | locale‎ | collate
 
 
 
 
Defined in header <locale>
public:
string_type transform( const CharT* low, const CharT* high ) const;
(1)
protected:
virtual string_type do_transform( const CharT* low, const CharT* high ) const;
(2)
1) Public member function, calls the protected virtual member function do_transform of the most derived class.
2) Converts the character sequence [low, high) to a string that, compared lexicographically (e.g. with operator< for strings) with the result of calling transform() on another string, produces the same result as calling do_compare() on the same two strings.

Parameters

low - pointer to the first character in the sequence to transform
high - one past the end pointer for the sequence to transform

Return value

The string transformed so that lexicographic comparison of the transformed strings may be used instead of collating of the originals. In the "C" locale, the returned string is the exact copy of [low, high). In other locales, the contents of the returned string are implementation-defined, and the size may be considerably longer.

Notes

In addition to the use in collation, the implementation-specific format of the transformed string is known to std::regex_traits<>::transform_primary, which is able to extract the equivalence class information.

Example

#include <iostream>
#include <iomanip>
#include <locale>
 
int main()
{
    std::locale::global(std::locale("sv_SE.utf8"));
    auto& f = std::use_facet<std::collate<wchar_t>>(std::locale());
 
    std::wstring in1 = L"\u00e4ngel";
    std::wstring in2 = L"\u00e5r";
 
    std::wstring out1 = f.transform(&in1[0], &in1[0] + in1.size());
    std::wstring out2 = f.transform(&in2[0], &in2[0] + in2.size());
 
    std::wcout << "In the Swedish locale: ";
    if(out1 < out2)
         std::wcout << in1 << " before " << in2 << '\n';
    else
         std::wcout << in2 << " before " << in1 << '\n';
 
    std::wcout << "In lexicographic comparison: ";
    if(in1 < in2)
         std::wcout << in1 << " before " << in2 << '\n';
    else
         std::wcout << in2 << " before " << in1 << '\n';
 
}

Output:

In the Swedish locale: år before ängel
In lexicographic comparison: ängel before år

See also

transform a string so that strcmp would produce the same result as strcoll
(function)
transform a wide string so that wcscmp would produce the same result as wcscoll
(function)