table of contents
| STRSTR(3) | Library Functions Manual | STRSTR(3) |
NAME¶
strnstr — locate a
substring in a string
LIBRARY¶
library “libbsd”
SYNOPSIS¶
#include
<bsd/string.h>
char *
strnstr(const
char *big, const char
*little, size_t
len);
DESCRIPTION¶
The
strnstr()
function locates the first occurrence of the null-terminated string
little in the string big, where
not more than len characters are searched. Characters
that appear after a ‘\0’ character are
not searched. Since the strnstr() function is a
FreeBSD specific API, it should only be used when
portability is not a concern.
RETURN VALUES¶
If little is an empty string,
big is returned; if little
occurs nowhere in big, NULL is
returned; otherwise a pointer to the first character of the first occurrence
of little is returned.
EXAMPLES¶
The following sets the pointer ptr to
NULL, because only the first 4 characters of
largestring are searched:
const char *largestring = "Foo Bar Baz"; const char *smallstring = "Bar"; char *ptr; ptr = strnstr(largestring, smallstring, 4);
SEE ALSO¶
strstr(3), strcasestr(3), memchr(3), memmem(3), strchr(3), strcspn(3), strpbrk(3), strrchr(3), strsep(3), strspn(3), strtok(3), wcsstr(3)
| October 11, 2001 | Debian |