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/* w_wrap.c */
/*
** This is an attempt at a useful word-wrap function. It is given an array
** of characters ( a string ) and it modifies the string, replacing any
** new-lines found with spaces and placing new-lines where needed to make
** lines of the width specified, placing them only where there was previously
** white-space. ( ie. Words are not split across lines. ) At the present
** time it is rather stupid. 1) It doesn't know enough to split a line at an
** existing hyphen. 2) It has no clue about how to hyphenate words. 3) It
** makes no attempt at dealing intelligently with a singly word longer than
** the specified line length 4) It does not deal intelligently with multiple
** spaces new-lines, etc. ( eg. has no clue of paragraph seperation, etc. )
** OTOH, it does deal well with unformatted, left justified text.
**
** Tabs will be considered the size specified. Note that word_wrap() does
** not actually expand tabs. This is only to inform it of the number of
** spaces the output device will expand them to, so it will know how much
** they expand a line. The only time word_wrap does anything with tabs, is
** if the tab size is set to zero, in which case each tab is replaced with a
** single space character. This often provides the most useful output, since
** tabs will often be in the wrong places after re-formatting, and is
** therfore the default.
**
**
** Publicly available contents:
**
** char *word_wrap(char *string,long line_len);
** Does the actual word-wrapping, as described above;
** Parameters:
** string: actual string to work with
** line_len: length of lines for output
** Returns: pointer to justified string.
**
** void set_tab_size(int size);
** Set the number of spaces that tabs will be expanded to on output
** default tab size is zero. (each tab replaced with a space char )
** word_wrap does not actually expand tabs. This only lets it keep
** track of how many spaces they take up. If this is set to
** zero, each tab will be replaced with a single space.
**
** Other procedures:
** int get_word(char *string);
** returns the number of characters in the next word in string,
** including leading white-space characters.
**
** This compiles without warnings and runs with the following compilers:
** MS Quick C 2.51:
** Borland C++ 2.0: either as C or C++
** GNU C++ 1.39, DOS port: either as C or C++
** As far as I know, it uses only portable, standard C constructs. It should
** compile and run with little or no modification under nearly any C compiler
** and environment.
**
**
** This code was written Nov 16, 1991 by Jerry Coffin.
** It is hereby placed in the public domain, for free use by any and
** all who wish to do so, for any use, public, private, or commercial.
*/
#include <stddef.h>
#include <ctype.h>
enum {FALSE,TRUE};
static int tab_size = 0; /* size to consider tabs as */
static size_t get_word(char *string); /* returns size of next word*/
void set_tab_size(size_t size)
{
tab_size = size;
}
char *word_wrap(char *string, size_t line_len)
{
size_t len, /* length of current word */
current_len = 0; /* current length of line */
size_t start_line = 0; /* index of beginning if line */
while (0 != (len = get_word(&string[current_len + start_line])))
{
if (current_len + len < line_len)
current_len += len;
else
{
string[start_line+current_len] = '\n';
start_line += current_len + 1;
current_len = 0;
}
}
return string;
}
static size_t get_word(char *string)
{
register int i = 0, word_len = 0;
if (!string[0])
return 0;
while (isspace(string[i]))
{
if ('\t' == string[i])
{
if (0 == tab_size)
string[i] = ' ';
else word_len += tab_size-1;
}
else if ('\n' == string[i])
string[i]=' ';
word_len++;
i++;
}
while (string[i] && !isspace(string[i++]))
word_len++;
return word_len;
}
#ifdef TEST
#include <stdio.h>
#include "w_wrap.h"
void main(void)
{
char *string =
"This is a long line\nto be wrapped by the w_wrap function. "
"Hopefully, things will work correctly and it will be wrapped "
"between words. On the other hand, maybe I should hope that it "
"doesn't work well so I will have an opportunity\nto learn more "
"about what I'm doing";
printf("Here's a string wrapped to 40 columns:\n\n%s\n\n",
word_wrap(string, 40));
printf("And here it's wrapped to 72:\n\n%s\n\n",
word_wrap(string,72));
}
#endif
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