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| author | arseny.kapoulkine <arseny.kapoulkine@99668b35-9821-0410-8761-19e4c4f06640> | 2010-09-24 05:44:13 +0000 | 
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| committer | arseny.kapoulkine <arseny.kapoulkine@99668b35-9821-0410-8761-19e4c4f06640> | 2010-09-24 05:44:13 +0000 | 
| commit | 2894cc4eb253859479a13b709faab1e95b7a924c (patch) | |
| tree | cabacef1f6c103ea44ff285b6250b9733553b8b1 /docs/manual/dom.html | |
| parent | ca3f051fbf42b9abf7c22e3f58215cf5010f9727 (diff) | |
docs: Reverted accidentally committed HTML documentation
git-svn-id: http://pugixml.googlecode.com/svn/trunk@753 99668b35-9821-0410-8761-19e4c4f06640
Diffstat (limited to 'docs/manual/dom.html')
| -rw-r--r-- | docs/manual/dom.html | 48 | 
1 files changed, 25 insertions, 23 deletions
| diff --git a/docs/manual/dom.html b/docs/manual/dom.html index def86a5..2d65070 100644 --- a/docs/manual/dom.html +++ b/docs/manual/dom.html @@ -371,10 +371,9 @@          </p></td></tr>  </table></div>  <p> -        $$ wording - one may think that child() has a string overload All tree functions -        that work with strings work with either C-style null terminated strings or -        STL strings of the selected character type. For example, node name accessors -        look like this in char mode: +        All tree functions that work with strings work with either C-style null terminated +        strings or STL strings of the selected character type. For example, node +        name accessors look like this in char mode:        </p>  <pre class="programlisting"><span class="keyword">const</span> <span class="keyword">char</span><span class="special">*</span> <span class="identifier">xml_node</span><span class="special">::</span><span class="identifier">name</span><span class="special">()</span> <span class="keyword">const</span><span class="special">;</span>  <span class="keyword">bool</span> <span class="identifier">xml_node</span><span class="special">::</span><span class="identifier">set_name</span><span class="special">(</span><span class="keyword">const</span> <span class="keyword">char</span><span class="special">*</span> <span class="identifier">value</span><span class="special">);</span> @@ -417,12 +416,7 @@          performs conversion from UTF-8 to UTF-16/32. Invalid UTF sequences are silently          discarded upon conversion. <code class="computeroutput"><span class="identifier">str</span></code>          has to be a valid string; passing null pointer results in undefined behavior. -        There are also two overloads with the same semantics which accept a string -        as an argument:        </p> -<pre class="programlisting"><span class="identifier">std</span><span class="special">::</span><span class="identifier">string</span> <span class="identifier">as_utf8</span><span class="special">(</span><span class="keyword">const</span> <span class="identifier">std</span><span class="special">::</span><span class="identifier">wstring</span><span class="special">&</span> <span class="identifier">str</span><span class="special">);</span> -<span class="identifier">std</span><span class="special">::</span><span class="identifier">wstring</span> <span class="identifier">as_wide</span><span class="special">(</span><span class="keyword">const</span> <span class="identifier">std</span><span class="special">::</span><span class="identifier">string</span><span class="special">&</span> <span class="identifier">str</span><span class="special">);</span> -</pre>  <div class="note"><table border="0" summary="Note">  <tr>  <td rowspan="2" align="center" valign="top" width="25"><img alt="[Note]" src="../images/note.png"></td> @@ -499,7 +493,7 @@          guarantees beyond the ones provided by callback.        </p>  <p> -        $$ XPath functions may throw <code class="computeroutput"><span class="identifier">xpath_exception</span></code> +        XPath functions may throw <code class="computeroutput"><span class="identifier">xpath_exception</span></code>          on parsing error; also, XPath implementation uses STL, and thus may throw          i.e. <code class="computeroutput"><span class="identifier">std</span><span class="special">::</span><span class="identifier">bad_alloc</span></code> in low memory conditions. Still,          XPath functions provide strong exception guarantee. @@ -520,10 +514,10 @@          functions</a>  </h4></div></div></div>  <a name="allocation_function"></a><a name="deallocation_function"></a><p> -          All memory for tree structure, tree data and XPath objects is allocated -          via globally specified functions, which default to malloc/free. You can -          set your own allocation functions with set_memory_management functions. -          The function interfaces are the same as that of malloc/free: +          All memory for tree structure/data is allocated via globally specified +          functions, which default to malloc/free. You can set your own allocation +          functions with set_memory_management functions. The function interfaces +          are the same as that of malloc/free:          </p>  <pre class="programlisting"><span class="keyword">typedef</span> <span class="keyword">void</span><span class="special">*</span> <span class="special">(*</span><span class="identifier">allocation_function</span><span class="special">)(</span><span class="identifier">size_t</span> <span class="identifier">size</span><span class="special">);</span>  <span class="keyword">typedef</span> <span class="keyword">void</span> <span class="special">(*</span><span class="identifier">deallocation_function</span><span class="special">)(</span><span class="keyword">void</span><span class="special">*</span> <span class="identifier">ptr</span><span class="special">);</span> @@ -539,15 +533,13 @@  <p>            Allocation function is called with the size (in bytes) as an argument and            should return a pointer to memory block with alignment that is suitable -          for storage of primitive types (usually a maximum of pointer and <code class="computeroutput"><span class="keyword">double</span></code> types alignment is sufficient) and -          size that is greater or equal to the requested one. If the allocation fails, -          the function has to return null pointer (throwing an exception from allocation -          function results in undefined behavior). -        </p> -<p> -          Deallocation function is called with the pointer that was returned by the -          previous call; it is never called with a null pointer. If memory management -          functions are not thread-safe, library thread safety is not guaranteed. +          for pointer storage and size that is greater or equal to the requested +          one. If the allocation fails, the function has to return null pointer (throwing +          an exception from allocation function results in undefined behavior). Deallocation +          function is called with the pointer that was returned by the previous call +          or with a null pointer; null pointer deallocation should be handled as +          a no-op. If memory management functions are not thread-safe, library thread +          safety is not guaranteed.          </p>  <p>            This is a simple example of custom memory management (<a href="../samples/custom_memory_management.cpp" target="_top">samples/custom_memory_management.cpp</a>): @@ -580,6 +572,16 @@            are destroyed, the new deallocation function will be called with the memory            obtained by the old allocation function, resulting in undefined behavior.          </p> +<div class="note"><table border="0" summary="Note"> +<tr> +<td rowspan="2" align="center" valign="top" width="25"><img alt="[Note]" src="../images/note.png"></td> +<th align="left">Note</th> +</tr> +<tr><td align="left" valign="top"><p> +            Currently memory for XPath objects is allocated using default operators +            new/delete; this will change in the next version. +          </p></td></tr> +</table></div>  </div>  <div class="section">  <div class="titlepage"><div><div><h4 class="title"> | 
