module type S = Base__.Buffer_intf.S
Buffers using strings as underlying storage medium
include S with type S.t = Caml.Buffer.t
val sexp_of_t : t ‑> Base__.Sexplib.Sexp.t
val create : int ‑> t
create n
returns a fresh buffer, initially empty. The n
parameter is the
initial size of the internal storage medium that holds the buffer contents. That
storage is automatically reallocated when more than n
characters are stored in the
buffer, but shrinks back to n
characters when reset
is called. For best
performance, n
should be of the same order of magnitude as the number of
characters that are expected to be stored in the buffer (for instance, 80 for a
buffer that holds one output line). Nothing bad will happen if the buffer grows
beyond that limit, however. In doubt, take n = 16
for instance.
val contents : t ‑> string
Return a copy of the current contents of the buffer. The buffer itself is unchanged.
val blit : (t, string) Blit_intf.blit
val blito : (t, string) Blit_intf.blito
val unsafe_blit : (t, string) Blit_intf.blit
val sub : (t, string) Blit_intf.sub
val subo : (t, string) Blit_intf.subo
val nth : t ‑> int ‑> char
get the (zero-based) n-th character of the buffer. Raise Invalid_argument
if index
out of bounds
val reset : t ‑> unit
Empty the buffer and deallocate the internal storage holding the buffer contents,
replacing it with the initial internal storage of length n
that was allocated by
create n
. For long-lived buffers that may have grown a lot, reset
allows faster
reclamation of the space used by the buffer.
val add_substring : t ‑> string ‑> pos:int ‑> len:int ‑> unit
add_substring b s pos len
takes len
characters from offset pos
in string s
and appends them at the end of the buffer b
.