Documentation ¶
Overview ¶
Package transform provides reader and writer wrappers that transform the bytes passing through as well as various transformations. Example transformations provided by other packages include normalization and conversion between character sets.
Index ¶
- Variables
- func Append(t Transformer, dst, src []byte) (result []byte, n int, err error)
- func Bytes(t Transformer, b []byte) (result []byte, n int, err error)
- func String(t Transformer, s string) (result string, n int, err error)
- type NopResetter
- type Reader
- type SpanningTransformer
- type Transformer
- type Writer
Constants ¶
This section is empty.
Variables ¶
var ( // ErrShortDst means that the destination buffer was too short to // receive all of the transformed bytes. ErrShortDst = errors.New("transform: short destination buffer") // ErrShortSrc means that the source buffer has insufficient data to // complete the transformation. ErrShortSrc = errors.New("transform: short source buffer") // ErrEndOfSpan means that the input and output (the transformed input) // are not identical. ErrEndOfSpan = errors.New("transform: input and output are not identical") )
var ( // Discard is a Transformer for which all Transform calls succeed // by consuming all bytes and writing nothing. Discard Transformer = discard{} // Nop is a SpanningTransformer that copies src to dst. Nop SpanningTransformer = nop{} )
Functions ¶
func Append ¶
func Append(t Transformer, dst, src []byte) (result []byte, n int, err error)
Append appends the result of converting src[:n] using t to dst, where n <= len(src), If err == nil, n will be len(src). It calls Reset on t.
Types ¶
type NopResetter ¶
type NopResetter struct{}
NopResetter can be embedded by implementations of Transformer to add a nop Reset method.
func (NopResetter) Reset ¶
func (NopResetter) Reset()
Reset implements the Reset method of the Transformer interface.
type Reader ¶
type Reader struct {
// contains filtered or unexported fields
}
Reader wraps another io.Reader by transforming the bytes read.
type SpanningTransformer ¶
type SpanningTransformer interface { Transformer // Span returns a position in src such that transforming src[:n] results in // identical output src[:n] for these bytes. It does not necessarily return // the largest such n. The atEOF argument tells whether src represents the // last bytes of the input. // // Callers should always account for the n bytes consumed before // considering the error err. // // A nil error means that all input bytes are known to be identical to the // output produced by the Transformer. A nil error can be be returned // regardless of whether atEOF is true. If err is nil, then then n must // equal len(src); the converse is not necessarily true. // // ErrEndOfSpan means that the Transformer output may differ from the // input after n bytes. Note that n may be len(src), meaning that the output // would contain additional bytes after otherwise identical output. // ErrShortSrc means that src had insufficient data to determine whether the // remaining bytes would change. Other than the error conditions listed // here, implementations are free to report other errors that arise. // // Calling Span can modify the Transformer state as a side effect. In // effect, it does the transformation just as calling Transform would, only // without copying to a destination buffer and only up to a point it can // determine the input and output bytes are the same. This is obviously more // limited than calling Transform, but can be more efficient in terms of // copying and allocating buffers. Calls to Span and Transform may be // interleaved. Span(src []byte, atEOF bool) (n int, err error) }
SpanningTransformer extends the Transformer interface with a Span method that determines how much of the input already conforms to the Transformer.
type Transformer ¶
type Transformer interface { // Transform writes to dst the transformed bytes read from src, and // returns the number of dst bytes written and src bytes read. The // atEOF argument tells whether src represents the last bytes of the // input. // // Callers should always process the nDst bytes produced and account // for the nSrc bytes consumed before considering the error err. // // A nil error means that all of the transformed bytes (whether freshly // transformed from src or left over from previous Transform calls) // were written to dst. A nil error can be returned regardless of // whether atEOF is true. If err is nil then nSrc must equal len(src); // the converse is not necessarily true. // // ErrShortDst means that dst was too short to receive all of the // transformed bytes. ErrShortSrc means that src had insufficient data // to complete the transformation. If both conditions apply, then // either error may be returned. Other than the error conditions listed // here, implementations are free to report other errors that arise. Transform(dst, src []byte, atEOF bool) (nDst, nSrc int, err error) // Reset resets the state and allows a Transformer to be reused. Reset() }
Transformer transforms bytes.
func Chain ¶
func Chain(t ...Transformer) Transformer
Chain returns a Transformer that applies t in sequence.
func RemoveFunc
deprecated
func RemoveFunc(f func(r rune) bool) Transformer
Deprecated: use runes.Remove instead.
type Writer ¶
type Writer struct {
// contains filtered or unexported fields
}
Writer wraps another io.Writer by transforming the bytes read. The user needs to call Close to flush unwritten bytes that may be buffered.