diff options
Diffstat (limited to 'manual/string.texi')
-rw-r--r-- | manual/string.texi | 14 |
1 files changed, 7 insertions, 7 deletions
diff --git a/manual/string.texi b/manual/string.texi index 2844bc61e5..246be84457 100644 --- a/manual/string.texi +++ b/manual/string.texi @@ -479,7 +479,7 @@ The value returned by @code{memmove} is the value of @var{to}. @comment wchar.h @comment ISO -@deftypefun {wchar_t *} wmemmove (wchar *@var{wto}, const wchar_t *@var{wfrom}, size_t @var{size}) +@deftypefun {wchar_t *} wmemmove (wchar_t *@var{wto}, const wchar_t *@var{wfrom}, size_t @var{size}) @code{wmemmove} copies the @var{size} wide characters at @var{wfrom} into the @var{size} wide characters at @var{wto}, even if those two blocks of space overlap. In the case of overlap, @code{memmove} is @@ -1065,7 +1065,7 @@ If the contents of the two blocks are equal, @code{memcmp} returns @code{0}. @end deftypefun -@comment wcjar.h +@comment wchar.h @comment ISO @deftypefun int wmemcmp (const wchar_t *@var{a1}, const wchar_t *@var{a2}, size_t @var{size}) The function @code{wmemcmp} compares the @var{size} wide characters @@ -1171,7 +1171,7 @@ regards these characters as parts of the alphabet they do match. @comment wchar.h @comment GNU -@deftypefun int wcscasecmp (const wchar_t *@var{ws1}, const wchar_T *@var{ws2}) +@deftypefun int wcscasecmp (const wchar_t *@var{ws1}, const wchar_t *@var{ws2}) This function is like @code{wcscmp}, except that differences in case are ignored. How uppercase and lowercase characters are related is determined by the currently selected locale. In the standard @code{"C"} @@ -1978,7 +1978,7 @@ separately. The function is not locale-dependent. @comment wchar.h @comment ISO -@deftypefun {wchar_t *} wcstok (wchar_t *@var{newstring}, const char *@var{delimiters}) +@deftypefun {wchar_t *} wcstok (wchar_t *@var{newstring}, const wchar_t *@var{delimiters}) A string can be split into tokens by making a series of calls to the function @code{wcstok}. @@ -2175,7 +2175,7 @@ on different systems. @comment libgen.h @comment XPG -@deftypefun {char *} basename (char *@var{path}) +@deftypefun {char *} basename (const char *@var{path}) This is the standard XPG defined @code{basename}. It is similar in spirit to the GNU version, but may modify the @var{path} by removing trailing '/' characters. If the @var{path} is made up entirely of '/' @@ -2483,7 +2483,7 @@ Returns the number of elements in the argz vector @var{argz} and @comment argz.h @comment GNU -@deftypefun {void} argz_extract (char *@var{argz}, size_t @var{argz_len}, char **@var{argv}) +@deftypefun {void} argz_extract (const char *@var{argz}, size_t @var{argz_len}, char **@var{argv}) The @code{argz_extract} function converts the argz vector @var{argz} and @var{argz_len} into a Unix-style argument vector stored in @var{argv}, by putting pointers to every element in @var{argz} into successive @@ -2561,7 +2561,7 @@ is @code{0}, @var{entry} is added to the end instead (as if by @comment argz.h @comment GNU -@deftypefun {char *} argz_next (char *@var{argz}, size_t @var{argz_len}, const char *@var{entry}) +@deftypefun {char *} argz_next (const char *@var{argz}, size_t @var{argz_len}, const char *@var{entry}) The @code{argz_next} function provides a convenient way of iterating over the elements in the argz vector @var{argz}. It returns a pointer to the next element in @var{argz} after the element @var{entry}, or |