Obsolete since JSAPI 33
This feature is obsolete. Although it may still work in some browsers, its use is discouraged since it could be removed at any time. Try to avoid using it.
Retrieve a pointer to the 16-bit values that make up a given string.
Syntax
jschar * JS_GetStringChars(JSString *str); // Obsolete since JSAPI 1.8.5 const jschar * JS_GetStringCharsZ(JSContext *cx, JSString *str); // Added in SpiderMonkey 1.8.2, Obsolete since JSAPI 33
Name | Type | Description |
---|---|---|
cx |
JSContext * |
(in JS_GetStringCharsZ only) A context. |
str |
JSString * |
The string to obtain characters from. |
Description
JS_GetStringChars
Obsolete since JavaScript 1.8.5 returns a pointer to the first element of an array of jschar
s. Warnings:
- The array is not necessarily null-terminated. To get the length of the string, use
JS_GetStringLength
. - The program must not modify the array. If it does, the behavior is undefined.
- The content of a JS string is not guaranteed to be valid UTF-16. It may contain surrogate code units that aren't properly paired. It may also contain zeroes.
The array returned by this function remains valid as long as str
is valid. (Eventually, str
becomes unreachable, the garbage collector collects it, and the array is freed by the system.)
JS_GetStringCharsZ
is the same except that it always returns either a null-terminated string or NULL
, indicating out-of-memory.
See Also
- bug 609440 - removed
JS_GetStringChars
- bug 1037869 - removed
JS_GetStringCharsZ