/* FUNCTION <>---transform string INDEX strxfrm SYNOPSIS #include size_t strxfrm(char *restrict <[s1]>, const char *restrict <[s2]>, size_t <[n]>); DESCRIPTION This function transforms the string pointed to by <[s2]> and places the resulting string into the array pointed to by <[s1]>. The transformation is such that if the <> function is applied to the two transformed strings, it returns a value greater than, equal to, or less than zero, correspoinding to the result of a <> function applied to the same two original strings. No more than <[n]> characters are placed into the resulting array pointed to by <[s1]>, including the terminating null character. If <[n]> is zero, <[s1]> may be a null pointer. If copying takes place between objects that overlap, the behavior is undefined. (NOT Cygwin:) The current implementation of <> simply copies the input and does not support any language-specific transformations. RETURNS The <> function returns the length of the transformed string (not including the terminating null character). If the value returned is <[n]> or more, the contents of the array pointed to by <[s1]> are indeterminate. PORTABILITY <> is ANSI C. <> requires no supporting OS subroutines. QUICKREF strxfrm ansi pure */ #include size_t _DEFUN (strxfrm, (s1, s2, n), char *__restrict s1, _CONST char *__restrict s2, size_t n) { size_t res; res = 0; while (n-- > 0) { if ((*s1++ = *s2++) != '\0') ++res; else return res; } while (*s2) { ++s2; ++res; } return res; }