An BidirectionalDevice is a Device whose mode refines bidirectional.
An BidirectionalDevice provides read-access to a sequence of characters of a given type and write-access to a separate sequence of characters of the same type. An BidirectionalDevice may expose these sequences in three ways:[1]
read
and write
, invoked indirectly by the Iostreams Library through the functions boost::iostreams::read
and boost::iostreams::write
;
boost::iostreams::read
and boost::iostreams::write
; or
input_sequence
and output_sequence
returning pairs of pointers delimiting the two sequences in their entirety.
The i/o mode of a BidirectionalDevice is bidirectional or bidirectional-seekable.
A model of BidirectionalDevice can be defined as follows:
struct BidirectionalDevice { typedef char char_type; typedef bidirectional_device_tag category; std::streamsize read(char* s, std::streamsize n) { // Reads up to n characters from the input // sequence into the buffer s, returning the number // of characters read. Returning a value less than n // indicates end-of-sequence. } std::streamsize write(const char* s, std::streamsize n) { // Write up to n characters from the buffer // s to the output sequence, returning the // number of characters written } };
Here category
is a tag struct
identifying the containing type as a model of BidirectionalDevice. When defining a new BidirectionalDevice, it suffices to use the tag bidirectional_device_tag
. One can also derive from the helper classes device<bidirectional>
or wdevice<bidirectional>
.
Same as Device, with the following additional requirements:
Category | A type convertible to device_tag and to bidirectional |
D | - A type which is a model of BidirectionalDevice |
Ch | - The character type of D |
dev | - Object of type D |
s1 | - Object of type Ch* |
s2 | - Object of type const Ch* |
n | - Object of type std::streamsize |
Same as Device, with the following additional requirements:
Expression | Expression Type | Category Precondition | Semantics |
---|---|---|---|
|
std::streamsize |
Not convertible to direct_tag |
Reads up to n characters from the input sequence controlled by dev into s1 , returning the number of characters read; returning a value less than n indicates end-of-sequence
|
|
std::streamsize |
Writes up to n characters from the sequence beginning at s2 to the sequence controlled by dev , returning the number of characters written
|
|
|
|
Convertible to direct_tag |
Returns a pair of pointers delimiting the input sequence controlled by dev |
|
|
Returns a pair of pointers delimiting the output sequence controlled by dev |
Errors which occur during the execution of member functions read
, write
, input_sequence
or output_sequence
are indicated by throwing exceptions. Reaching the end of the input sequence is not an error, but attempting to write past the end of the output sequence is.
After an exception is thrown, an BidirectionalDevice must be in a consistent state; further i/o operations may throw exceptions but must have well-defined behaviour.
[1]Strictly speaking, (i) and (ii) can be varied independently for input and output, so there are actually five possibilities.
© Copyright 2008 CodeRage, LLC
© Copyright 2004-2007 Jonathan Turkanis
Distributed under the Boost Software License, Version 1.0. (See accompanying file LICENSE_1_0.txt or copy at http://www.boost.org/LICENSE_1_0.txt)