【无标题】AttributeError: ‘Document‘ object has no attribute ‘convertToPDF‘

将convertToPDF改为

convert_to_pdf()

最好的还是更换老版本

pip install PyMuPDF==1.19.0 -i https://pypi.tuna.tsinghua.edu.cn/simple

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Overview Package Class Tree Deprecated Index Help PREV NEXT FRAMES NO FRAMES A B C D E F G H I J L P R S U V -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- A addCookie(Cookie) - Method in class javax.servlet.http.HttpServletResponseWrapper The default behavior of this method is to call addCookie(Cookie cookie) on the wrapped response object. addCookie(Cookie) - Method in interface javax.servlet.http.HttpServletResponse Adds the specified cookie to the response. addDateHeader(String, long) - Method in class javax.servlet.http.HttpServletResponseWrapper The default behavior of this method is to call addDateHeader(String name, long date) on the wrapped response object. addDateHeader(String, long) - Method in interface javax.servlet.http.HttpServletResponse Adds a response header with the given name and date-value. addHeader(String, String) - Method in class javax.servlet.http.HttpServletResponseWrapper The default behavior of this method is to return addHeader(String name, String value) on the wrapped response object. addHeader(String, String) - Method in interface javax.servlet.http.HttpServletResponse Adds a response header with the given name and value. addIntHeader(String, int) - Method in class javax.servlet.http.HttpServletResponseWrapper The default behavior of this method is to call addIntHeader(String name, int value) on the wrapped response object. addIntHeader(String, int) - Method in interface javax.servlet.http.HttpServletResponse Adds a response header with the given name and integer value. attributeAdded(HttpSessionBindingEvent) - Method in interface javax.servlet.http.HttpSessionAttributeListener Notification that an attribute has been added to a session. attributeAdded(ServletContextAttributeEvent) - Method in interface javax.servlet.ServletContextAttributeListener Notification that a new attribute was added to the servlet context. attributeAdded(ServletRequestAttributeEvent) - Method in interface javax.servlet.ServletRequestAttributeListener Notification that a new attribute was added to the servlet request. attributeRemoved(HttpSessionBindingEvent) - Method in interface javax.servlet.http.HttpSessionAttributeListener Notification that an attribute has been removed from a session. attributeRemoved(ServletContextAttributeEvent) - Method in interface javax.servlet.ServletContextAttributeListener Notification that an existing attribute has been removed from the servlet context. attributeRemoved(ServletRequestAttributeEvent) - Method in interface javax.servlet.ServletRequestAttributeListener Notification that a new attribute was removed from the servlet request. attributeReplaced(HttpSessionBindingEvent) - Method in interface javax.servlet.http.HttpSessionAttributeListener Notification that an attribute has been replaced in a session. attributeReplaced(ServletContextAttributeEvent) - Method in interface javax.servlet.ServletContextAttributeListener Notification that an attribute on the servlet context has been replaced. attributeReplaced(ServletRequestAttributeEvent) - Method in interface javax.servlet.ServletRequestAttributeListener Notification that an attribute was replaced on the servlet request. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- B BASIC_AUTH - Static variable in interface javax.servlet.http.HttpServletRequest String identifier for Basic authentication. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- C CLIENT_CERT_AUTH - Static variable in interface javax.servlet.http.HttpServletRequest String identifier for Client Certificate authentication. clone() - Method in class javax.servlet.http.Cookie Overrides the standard java.lang.Object.clone method to return a copy of this cookie. containsHeader(String) - Method in class javax.servlet.http.HttpServletResponseWrapper The default behavior of this method is to call containsHeader(String name) on the wrapped response object. containsHeader(String) - Method in interface javax.servlet.http.HttpServletResponse Returns a boolean indicating whether the named response header has already been set. contextDestroyed(ServletContextEvent) - Method in interface javax.servlet.ServletContextListener Notification that the servlet context is about to be shut down. contextInitialized(ServletContextEvent) - Method in interface javax.servlet.ServletContextListener Notification that the web application initialization process is starting. Cookie - class javax.servlet.http.Cookie. Creates a cookie, a small amount of information sent by a servlet to a Web browser, saved by the browser, and later sent back to the server. Cookie(String, String) - Constructor for class javax.servlet.http.Cookie Constructs a cookie with a specified name and value. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- D destroy() - Method in interface javax.servlet.Filter Called by the web container to indicate to a filter that it is being taken out of service. destroy() - Method in interface javax.servlet.Servlet Called by the servlet container to indicate to a servlet that the servlet is being taken out of service. destroy() - Method in class javax.servlet.GenericServlet Called by the servlet container to indicate to a servlet that the servlet is being taken out of service. DIGEST_AUTH - Static variable in interface javax.servlet.http.HttpServletRequest String identifier for Digest authentication. doDelete(HttpServletRequest, HttpServletResponse) - Method in class javax.servlet.http.HttpServlet Called by the server (via the service method) to allow a servlet to handle a DELETE request. doFilter(ServletRequest, ServletResponse) - Method in interface javax.servlet.FilterChain Causes the next filter in the chain to be invoked, or if the calling filter is the last filter in the chain, causes the resource at the end of the chain to be invoked. doFilter(ServletRequest, ServletResponse, FilterChain) - Method in interface javax.servlet.Filter The doFilter method of the Filter is called by the container each time a request/response pair is passed through the chain due to a client request for a resource at the end of the chain. doGet(HttpServletRequest, HttpServletResponse) - Method in class javax.servlet.http.HttpServlet Called by the server (via the service method) to allow a servlet to handle a GET request. doHead(HttpServletRequest, HttpServletResponse) - Method in class javax.servlet.http.HttpServlet Receives an HTTP HEAD request from the protected service method and handles the request. doOptions(HttpServletRequest, HttpServletResponse) - Method in class javax.servlet.http.HttpServlet Called by the server (via the service method) to allow a servlet to handle a OPTIONS request. doPost(HttpServletRequest, HttpServletResponse) - Method in class javax.servlet.http.HttpServlet Called by the server (via the service method) to allow a servlet to handle a POST request. doPut(HttpServletRequest, HttpServletResponse) - Method in class javax.servlet.http.HttpServlet Called by the server (via the service method) to allow a servlet to handle a PUT request. doTrace(HttpServletRequest, HttpServletResponse) - Method in class javax.servlet.http.HttpServlet Called by the server (via the service method) to allow a servlet to handle a TRACE request. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- E encodeRedirectUrl(String) - Method in class javax.servlet.http.HttpServletResponseWrapper The default behavior of this method is to return encodeRedirectUrl(String url) on the wrapped response object. encodeRedirectUrl(String) - Method in interface javax.servlet.http.HttpServletResponse Deprecated. As of version 2.1, use encodeRedirectURL(String url) instead encodeRedirectURL(String) - Method in class javax.servlet.http.HttpServletResponseWrapper The default behavior of this method is to return encodeRedirectURL(String url) on the wrapped response object. encodeRedirectURL(String) - Method in interface javax.servlet.http.HttpServletResponse Encodes the specified URL for use in the sendRedirect method or, if encoding is not needed, returns the URL unchanged. encodeUrl(String) - Method in class javax.servlet.http.HttpServletResponseWrapper The default behavior of this method is to call encodeUrl(String url) on the wrapped response object. encodeUrl(String) - Method in interface javax.servlet.http.HttpServletResponse Deprecated. As of version 2.1, use encodeURL(String url) instead encodeURL(String) - Method in class javax.servlet.http.HttpServletResponseWrapper The default behavior of this method is to call encodeURL(String url) on the wrapped response object. encodeURL(String) - Method in interface javax.servlet.http.HttpServletResponse Encodes the specified URL by including the session ID in it, or, if encoding is not needed, returns the URL unchanged. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- F Filter - interface javax.servlet.Filter. A filter is an object that performs filtering tasks on either the request to a resource (a servlet or static content), or on the response from a resource, or both. Filters perform filtering in the doFilter method. FilterChain - interface javax.servlet.FilterChain. A FilterChain is an object provided by the servlet container to the developer giving a view into the invocation chain of a filtered request for a resource. FilterConfig - interface javax.servlet.FilterConfig. A filter configuration object used by a servlet container to pass information to a filter during initialization. flushBuffer() - Method in interface javax.servlet.ServletResponse Forces any content in the buffer to be written to the client. flushBuffer() - Method in class javax.servlet.ServletResponseWrapper The default behavior of this method is to call flushBuffer() on the wrapped response object. FORM_AUTH - Static variable in interface javax.servlet.http.HttpServletRequest String identifier for Form authentication. forward(ServletRequest, ServletResponse) - Method in interface javax.servlet.RequestDispatcher Forwards a request from a servlet to another resource (servlet, JSP file, or HTML file) on the server. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- G GenericServlet - class javax.servlet.GenericServlet. Defines a generic, protocol-independent servlet. GenericServlet() - Constructor for class javax.servlet.GenericServlet Does nothing. getAttribute(String) - Method in interface javax.servlet.ServletContext Returns the servlet container attribute with the given name, or null if there is no attribute by that name. getAttribute(String) - Method in class javax.servlet.ServletRequestWrapper The default behavior of this method is to call getAttribute(String name) on the wrapped request object. getAttribute(String) - Method in interface javax.servlet.ServletRequest Returns the value of the named attribute as an Object, or null if no attribute of the given name exists. getAttribute(String) - Method in interface javax.servlet.http.HttpSession Returns the object bound with the specified name in this session, or null if no object is bound under the name. getAttributeNames() - Method in interface javax.servlet.ServletContext Returns an Enumeration containing the attribute names available within this servlet context. getAttributeNames() - Method in class javax.servlet.ServletRequestWrapper The default behavior of this method is to return getAttributeNames() on the wrapped request object. getAttributeNames() - Method in interface javax.servlet.ServletRequest Returns an Enumeration containing the names of the attributes available to this request. getAttributeNames() - Method in interface javax.servlet.http.HttpSession Returns an Enumeration of String objects containing the names of all the objects bound to this session. getAuthType() - Method in interface javax.servlet.http.HttpServletRequest Returns the name of the authentication scheme used to protect the servlet. getAuthType() - Method in class javax.servlet.http.HttpServletRequestWrapper The default behavior of this method is to return getAuthType() on the wrapped request object. getBufferSize() - Method in interface javax.servlet.ServletResponse Returns the actual buffer size used for the response. getBufferSize() - Method in class javax.servlet.ServletResponseWrapper The default behavior of this method is to return getBufferSize() on the wrapped response object. getCharacterEncoding() - Method in interface javax.servlet.ServletResponse Returns the name of the character encoding (MIME charset) used for the body sent in this response. getCharacterEncoding() - Method in class javax.servlet.ServletRequestWrapper The default behavior of this method is to return getCharacterEncoding() on the wrapped request object. getCharacterEncoding() - Method in interface javax.servlet.ServletRequest Returns the name of the character encoding used in the body of this request. getCharacterEncoding() - Method in class javax.servlet.ServletResponseWrapper The default behavior of this method is to return getCharacterEncoding() on the wrapped response object. getComment() - Method in class javax.servlet.http.Cookie Returns the comment describing the purpose of this cookie, or null if the cookie has no comment. getContentLength() - Method in class javax.servlet.ServletRequestWrapper The default behavior of this method is to return getContentLength() on the wrapped request object. getContentLength() - Method in interface javax.servlet.ServletRequest Returns the length, in bytes, of the request body and made available by the input stream, or -1 if the length is not known. getContentType() - Method in interface javax.servlet.ServletResponse Returns the content type used for the MIME body sent in this response. getContentType() - Method in class javax.servlet.ServletRequestWrapper The default behavior of this method is to return getContentType() on the wrapped request object. getContentType() - Method in interface javax.servlet.ServletRequest Returns the MIME type of the body of the request, or null if the type is not known. getContentType() - Method in class javax.servlet.ServletResponseWrapper The default behavior of this method is to return getContentType() on the wrapped response object. getContext(String) - Method in interface javax.servlet.ServletContext Returns a ServletContext object that corresponds to a specified URL on the server. getContextPath() - Method in interface javax.servlet.http.HttpServletRequest Returns the portion of the request URI that indicates the context of the request. getContextPath() - Method in class javax.servlet.http.HttpServletRequestWrapper The default behavior of this method is to return getContextPath() on the wrapped request object. getCookies() - Method in interface javax.servlet.http.HttpServletRequest Returns an array containing all of the Cookie objects the client sent with this request. getCookies() - Method in class javax.servlet.http.HttpServletRequestWrapper The default behavior of this method is to return getCookies() on the wrapped request object. getCreationTime() - Method in interface javax.servlet.http.HttpSession Returns the time when this session was created, measured in milliseconds since midnight January 1, 1970 GMT. getDateHeader(String) - Method in interface javax.servlet.http.HttpServletRequest Returns the value of the specified request header as a long value that represents a Date object. getDateHeader(String) - Method in class javax.servlet.http.HttpServletRequestWrapper The default behavior of this method is to return getDateHeader(String name) on the wrapped request object. getDomain() - Method in class javax.servlet.http.Cookie Returns the domain name set for this cookie. getFilterName() - Method in interface javax.servlet.FilterConfig Returns the filter-name of this filter as defined in the deployment descriptor. getHeader(String) - Method in interface javax.servlet.http.HttpServletRequest Returns the value of the specified request header as a String. getHeader(String) - Method in class javax.servlet.http.HttpServletRequestWrapper The default behavior of this method is to return getHeader(String name) on the wrapped request object. getHeaderNames() - Method in interface javax.servlet.http.HttpServletRequest Returns an enumeration of all the header names this request contains. getHeaderNames() - Method in class javax.servlet.http.HttpServletRequestWrapper The default behavior of this method is to return getHeaderNames() on the wrapped request object. getHeaders(String) - Method in interface javax.servlet.http.HttpServletRequest Returns all the values of the specified request header as an Enumeration of String objects. getHeaders(String) - Method in class javax.servlet.http.HttpServletRequestWrapper The default behavior of this method is to return getHeaders(String name) on the wrapped request object. getId() - Method in interface javax.servlet.http.HttpSession Returns a string containing the unique identifier assigned to this session. getIds() - Method in interface javax.servlet.http.HttpSessionContext Deprecated. As of Java Servlet API 2.1 with no replacement. This method must return an empty Enumeration and will be removed in a future version of this API. getInitParameter(String) - Method in interface javax.servlet.FilterConfig Returns a String containing the value of the named initialization parameter, or null if the parameter does not exist. getInitParameter(String) - Method in interface javax.servlet.ServletConfig Returns a String containing the value of the named initialization parameter, or null if the parameter does not exist. getInitParameter(String) - Method in interface javax.servlet.ServletContext Returns a String containing the value of the named context-wide initialization parameter, or null if the parameter does not exist. getInitParameter(String) - Method in class javax.servlet.GenericServlet Returns a String containing the value of the named initialization parameter, or null if the parameter does not exist. getInitParameterNames() - Method in interface javax.servlet.FilterConfig Returns the names of the filter's initialization parameters as an Enumeration of String objects, or an empty Enumeration if the filter has no initialization parameters. getInitParameterNames() - Method in interface javax.servlet.ServletConfig Returns the names of the servlet's initialization parameters as an Enumeration of String objects, or an empty Enumeration if the servlet has no initialization parameters. getInitParameterNames() - Method in interface javax.servlet.ServletContext Returns the names of the context's initialization parameters as an Enumeration of String objects, or an empty Enumeration if the context has no initialization parameters. getInitParameterNames() - Method in class javax.servlet.GenericServlet Returns the names of the servlet's initialization parameters as an Enumeration of String objects, or an empty Enumeration if the servlet has no initialization parameters. getInputStream() - Method in class javax.servlet.ServletRequestWrapper The default behavior of this method is to return getInputStream() on the wrapped request object. getInputStream() - Method in interface javax.servlet.ServletRequest Retrieves the body of the request as binary data using a ServletInputStream. getIntHeader(String) - Method in interface javax.servlet.http.HttpServletRequest Returns the value of the specified request header as an int. getIntHeader(String) - Method in class javax.servlet.http.HttpServletRequestWrapper The default behavior of this method is to return getIntHeader(String name) on the wrapped request object. getLastAccessedTime() - Method in interface javax.servlet.http.HttpSession Returns the last time the client sent a request associated with this session, as the number of milliseconds since midnight January 1, 1970 GMT, and marked by the time the container received the request. getLastModified(HttpServletRequest) - Method in class javax.servlet.http.HttpServlet Returns the time the HttpServletRequest object was last modified, in milliseconds since midnight January 1, 1970 GMT. getLocalAddr() - Method in class javax.servlet.ServletRequestWrapper The default behavior of this method is to return getLocalAddr() on the wrapped request object. getLocalAddr() - Method in interface javax.servlet.ServletRequest Returns the Internet Protocol (IP) address of the interface on which the request was received. getLocale() - Method in interface javax.servlet.ServletResponse Returns the locale specified for this response using the ServletResponse.setLocale(java.util.Locale) method. getLocale() - Method in class javax.servlet.ServletRequestWrapper The default behavior of this method is to return getLocale() on the wrapped request object. getLocale() - Method in interface javax.servlet.ServletRequest Returns the preferred Locale that the client will accept content in, based on the Accept-Language header. getLocale() - Method in class javax.servlet.ServletResponseWrapper The default behavior of this method is to return getLocale() on the wrapped response object. getLocales() - Method in class javax.servlet.ServletRequestWrapper The default behavior of this method is to return getLocales() on the wrapped request object. getLocales() - Method in interface javax.servlet.ServletRequest Returns an Enumeration of Locale objects indicating, in decreasing order starting with the preferred locale, the locales that are acceptable to the client based on the Accept-Language header. getLocalName() - Method in class javax.servlet.ServletRequestWrapper The default behavior of this method is to return getLocalName() on the wrapped request object. getLocalName() - Method in interface javax.servlet.ServletRequest Returns the host name of the Internet Protocol (IP) interface on which the request was received. getLocalPort() - Method in class javax.servlet.ServletRequestWrapper The default behavior of this method is to return getLocalPort() on the wrapped request object. getLocalPort() - Method in interface javax.servlet.ServletRequest Returns the Internet Protocol (IP) port number of the interface on which the request was received. getMajorVersion() - Method in interface javax.servlet.ServletContext Returns the major version of the Java Servlet API that this servlet container supports. getMaxAge() - Method in class javax.servlet.http.Cookie Returns the maximum age of the cookie, specified in seconds, By default, -1 indicating the cookie will persist until browser shutdown. getMaxInactiveInterval() - Method in interface javax.servlet.http.HttpSession Returns the maximum time interval, in seconds, that the servlet container will keep this session open between client accesses. getMethod() - Method in interface javax.servlet.http.HttpServletRequest Returns the name of the HTTP method with which this request was made, for example, GET, POST, or PUT. getMethod() - Method in class javax.servlet.http.HttpServletRequestWrapper The default behavior of this method is to return getMethod() on the wrapped request object. getMimeType(String) - Method in interface javax.servlet.ServletContext Returns the MIME type of the specified file, or null if the MIME type is not known. getMinorVersion() - Method in interface javax.servlet.ServletContext Returns the minor version of the Servlet API that this servlet container supports. getName() - Method in class javax.servlet.ServletContextAttributeEvent Return the name of the attribute that changed on the ServletContext. getName() - Method in class javax.servlet.ServletRequestAttributeEvent Return the name of the attribute that changed on the ServletRequest getName() - Method in class javax.servlet.http.HttpSessionBindingEvent Returns the name with which the attribute is bound to or unbound from the session. getName() - Method in class javax.servlet.http.Cookie Returns the name of the cookie. getNamedDispatcher(String) - Method in interface javax.servlet.ServletContext Returns a RequestDispatcher object that acts as a wrapper for the named servlet. getOutputStream() - Method in interface javax.servlet.ServletResponse Returns a ServletOutputStream suitable for writing binary data in the response. getOutputStream() - Method in class javax.servlet.ServletResponseWrapper The default behavior of this method is to return getOutputStream() on the wrapped response object. getParameter(String) - Method in class javax.servlet.ServletRequestWrapper The default behavior of this method is to return getParameter(String name) on the wrapped request object. getParameter(String) - Method in interface javax.servlet.ServletRequest Returns the value of a request parameter as a String, or null if the parameter does not exist. getParameterMap() - Method in class javax.servlet.ServletRequestWrapper The default behavior of this method is to return getParameterMap() on the wrapped request object. getParameterMap() - Method in interface javax.servlet.ServletRequest Returns a java.util.Map of the parameters of this request. getParameterNames() - Method in class javax.servlet.ServletRequestWrapper The default behavior of this method is to return getParameterNames() on the wrapped request object. getParameterNames() - Method in interface javax.servlet.ServletRequest Returns an Enumeration of String objects containing the names of the parameters contained in this request. getParameterValues(String) - Method in class javax.servlet.ServletRequestWrapper The default behavior of this method is to return getParameterValues(String name) on the wrapped request object. getParameterValues(String) - Method in interface javax.servlet.ServletRequest Returns an array of String objects containing all of the values the given request parameter has, or null if the parameter does not exist. getPath() - Method in class javax.servlet.http.Cookie Returns the path on the server to which the browser returns this cookie. getPathInfo() - Method in interface javax.servlet.http.HttpServletRequest Returns any extra path information associated with the URL the client sent when it made this request. getPathInfo() - Method in class javax.servlet.http.HttpServletRequestWrapper The default behavior of this method is to return getPathInfo() on the wrapped request object. getPathTranslated() - Method in interface javax.servlet.http.HttpServletRequest Returns any extra path information after the servlet name but before the query string, and translates it to a real path. getPathTranslated() - Method in class javax.servlet.http.HttpServletRequestWrapper The default behavior of this method is to return getPathTranslated() on the wrapped request object. getProtocol() - Method in class javax.servlet.ServletRequestWrapper The default behavior of this method is to return getProtocol() on the wrapped request object. getProtocol() - Method in interface javax.servlet.ServletRequest Returns the name and version of the protocol the request uses in the form protocol/majorVersion.minorVersion, for example, HTTP/1.1. getQueryString() - Method in interface javax.servlet.http.HttpServletRequest Returns the query string that is contained in the request URL after the path. getQueryString() - Method in class javax.servlet.http.HttpServletRequestWrapper The default behavior of this method is to return getQueryString() on the wrapped request object. getReader() - Method in class javax.servlet.ServletRequestWrapper The default behavior of this method is to return getReader() on the wrapped request object. getReader() - Method in interface javax.servlet.ServletRequest Retrieves the body of the request as character data using a BufferedReader. getRealPath(String) - Method in interface javax.servlet.ServletContext Returns a String containing the real path for a given virtual path. getRealPath(String) - Method in class javax.servlet.ServletRequestWrapper The default behavior of this method is to return getRealPath(String path) on the wrapped request object. getRealPath(String) - Method in interface javax.servlet.ServletRequest Deprecated. As of Version 2.1 of the Java Servlet API, use ServletContext.getRealPath(java.lang.String) instead. getRemoteAddr() - Method in class javax.servlet.ServletRequestWrapper The default behavior of this method is to return getRemoteAddr() on the wrapped request object. getRemoteAddr() - Method in interface javax.servlet.ServletRequest Returns the Internet Protocol (IP) address of the client or last proxy that sent the request. getRemoteHost() - Method in class javax.servlet.ServletRequestWrapper The default behavior of this method is to return getRemoteHost() on the wrapped request object. getRemoteHost() - Method in interface javax.servlet.ServletRequest Returns the fully qualified name of the client or the last proxy that sent the request. getRemotePort() - Method in class javax.servlet.ServletRequestWrapper The default behavior of this method is to return getRemotePort() on the wrapped request object. getRemotePort() - Method in interface javax.servlet.ServletRequest Returns the Internet Protocol (IP) source port of the client or last proxy that sent the request. getRemoteUser() - Method in interface javax.servlet.http.HttpServletRequest Returns the login of the user making this request, if the user has been authenticated, or null if the user has not been authenticated. getRemoteUser() - Method in class javax.servlet.http.HttpServletRequestWrapper The default behavior of this method is to return getRemoteUser() on the wrapped request object. getRequest() - Method in class javax.servlet.ServletRequestWrapper Return the wrapped request object. getRequestDispatcher(String) - Method in interface javax.servlet.ServletContext Returns a RequestDispatcher object that acts as a wrapper for the resource located at the given path. getRequestDispatcher(String) - Method in class javax.servlet.ServletRequestWrapper The default behavior of this method is to return getRequestDispatcher(String path) on the wrapped request object. getRequestDispatcher(String) - Method in interface javax.servlet.ServletRequest Returns a RequestDispatcher object that acts as a wrapper for the resource located at the given path. getRequestedSessionId() - Method in interface javax.servlet.http.HttpServletRequest Returns the session ID specified by the client. getRequestedSessionId() - Method in class javax.servlet.http.HttpServletRequestWrapper The default behavior of this method is to return getRequestedSessionId() on the wrapped request object. getRequestURI() - Method in interface javax.servlet.http.HttpServletRequest Returns the part of this request's URL from the protocol name up to the query string in the first line of the HTTP request. getRequestURI() - Method in class javax.servlet.http.HttpServletRequestWrapper The default behavior of this method is to return getRequestURI() on the wrapped request object. getRequestURL() - Method in interface javax.servlet.http.HttpServletRequest Reconstructs the URL the client used to make the request. getRequestURL() - Method in class javax.servlet.http.HttpServletRequestWrapper The default behavior of this method is to return getRequestURL() on the wrapped request object. getRequestURL(HttpServletRequest) - Static method in class javax.servlet.http.HttpUtils Deprecated. Reconstructs the URL the client used to make the request, using information in the HttpServletRequest object. getResource(String) - Method in interface javax.servlet.ServletContext Returns a URL to the resource that is mapped to a specified path. getResourceAsStream(String) - Method in interface javax.servlet.ServletContext Returns the resource located at the named path as an InputStream object. getResourcePaths(String) - Method in interface javax.servlet.ServletContext Returns a directory-like listing of all the paths to resources within the web application whose longest sub-path matches the supplied path argument. getResponse() - Method in class javax.servlet.ServletResponseWrapper Return the wrapped ServletResponse object. getRootCause() - Method in class javax.servlet.ServletException Returns the exception that caused this servlet exception. getScheme() - Method in class javax.servlet.ServletRequestWrapper The default behavior of this method is to return getScheme() on the wrapped request object. getScheme() - Method in interface javax.servlet.ServletRequest Returns the name of the scheme used to make this request, for example, http, https, or ftp. getSecure() - Method in class javax.servlet.http.Cookie Returns true if the browser is sending cookies only over a secure protocol, or false if the browser can send cookies using any protocol. getServerInfo() - Method in interface javax.servlet.ServletContext Returns the name and version of the servlet container on which the servlet is running. getServerName() - Method in class javax.servlet.ServletRequestWrapper The default behavior of this method is to return getServerName() on the wrapped request object. getServerName() - Method in interface javax.servlet.ServletRequest Returns the host name of the server to which the request was sent. getServerPort() - Method in class javax.servlet.ServletRequestWrapper The default behavior of this method is to return getServerPort() on the wrapped request object. getServerPort() - Method in interface javax.servlet.ServletRequest Returns the port number to which the request was sent. getServlet() - Method in class javax.servlet.UnavailableException Deprecated. As of Java Servlet API 2.2, with no replacement. Returns the servlet that is reporting its unavailability. getServlet(String) - Method in interface javax.servlet.ServletContext Deprecated. As of Java Servlet API 2.1, with no direct replacement. This method was originally defined to retrieve a servlet from a ServletContext. In this version, this method always returns null and remains only to preserve binary compatibility. This method will be permanently removed in a future version of the Java Servlet API. In lieu of this method, servlets can share information using the ServletContext class and can perform shared business logic by invoking methods on common non-servlet classes. getServletConfig() - Method in interface javax.servlet.Servlet Returns a ServletConfig object, which contains initialization and startup parameters for this servlet. getServletConfig() - Method in class javax.servlet.GenericServlet Returns this servlet's ServletConfig object. getServletContext() - Method in class javax.servlet.ServletRequestEvent Returns the ServletContext of this web application. getServletContext() - Method in interface javax.servlet.FilterConfig Returns a reference to the ServletContext in which the caller is executing. getServletContext() - Method in interface javax.servlet.ServletConfig Returns a reference to the ServletContext in which the caller is executing. getServletContext() - Method in class javax.servlet.ServletContextEvent Return the ServletContext that changed. getServletContext() - Method in class javax.servlet.GenericServlet Returns a reference to the ServletContext in which this servlet is running. getServletContext() - Method in interface javax.servlet.http.HttpSession Returns the ServletContext to which this session belongs. getServletContextName() - Method in interface javax.servlet.ServletContext Returns the name of this web application corresponding to this ServletContext as specified in the deployment descriptor for this web application by the display-name element. getServletInfo() - Method in interface javax.servlet.Servlet Returns information about the servlet, such as author, version, and copyright. getServletInfo() - Method in class javax.servlet.GenericServlet Returns information about the servlet, such as author, version, and copyright. getServletName() - Method in interface javax.servlet.ServletConfig Returns the name of this servlet instance. getServletName() - Method in class javax.servlet.GenericServlet Returns the name of this servlet instance. getServletNames() - Method in interface javax.servlet.ServletContext Deprecated. As of Java Servlet API 2.1, with no replacement. This method was originally defined to return an Enumeration of all the servlet names known to this context. In this version, this method always returns an empty Enumeration and remains only to preserve binary compatibility. This method will be permanently removed in a future version of the Java Servlet API. getServletPath() - Method in interface javax.servlet.http.HttpServletRequest Returns the part of this request's URL that calls the servlet. getServletPath() - Method in class javax.servlet.http.HttpServletRequestWrapper The default behavior of this method is to return getServletPath() on the wrapped request object. getServletRequest() - Method in class javax.servlet.ServletRequestEvent Returns the ServletRequest that is changing. getServlets() - Method in interface javax.servlet.ServletContext Deprecated. As of Java Servlet API 2.0, with no replacement. This method was originally defined to return an Enumeration of all the servlets known to this servlet context. In this version, this method always returns an empty enumeration and remains only to preserve binary compatibility. This method will be permanently removed in a future version of the Java Servlet API. getSession() - Method in class javax.servlet.http.HttpSessionEvent Return the session that changed. getSession() - Method in class javax.servlet.http.HttpSessionBindingEvent Return the session that changed. getSession() - Method in interface javax.servlet.http.HttpServletRequest Returns the current session associated with this request, or if the request does not have a session, creates one. getSession() - Method in class javax.servlet.http.HttpServletRequestWrapper The default behavior of this method is to return getSession() on the wrapped request object. getSession(boolean) - Method in interface javax.servlet.http.HttpServletRequest Returns the current HttpSession associated with this request or, if there is no current session and create is true, returns a new session. getSession(boolean) - Method in class javax.servlet.http.HttpServletRequestWrapper The default behavior of this method is to return getSession(boolean create) on the wrapped request object. getSession(String) - Method in interface javax.servlet.http.HttpSessionContext Deprecated. As of Java Servlet API 2.1 with no replacement. This method must return null and will be removed in a future version of this API. getSessionContext() - Method in interface javax.servlet.http.HttpSession Deprecated. As of Version 2.1, this method is deprecated and has no replacement. It will be removed in a future version of the Java Servlet API. getUnavailableSeconds() - Method in class javax.servlet.UnavailableException Returns the number of seconds the servlet expects to be temporarily unavailable. getUserPrincipal() - Method in interface javax.servlet.http.HttpServletRequest Returns a java.security.Principal object containing the name of the current authenticated user. getUserPrincipal() - Method in class javax.servlet.http.HttpServletRequestWrapper The default behavior of this method is to return getUserPrincipal() on the wrapped request object. getValue() - Method in class javax.servlet.ServletContextAttributeEvent Returns the value of the attribute that has been added, removed, or replaced. getValue() - Method in class javax.servlet.ServletRequestAttributeEvent Returns the value of the attribute that has been added, removed or replaced. getValue() - Method in class javax.servlet.http.HttpSessionBindingEvent Returns the value of the attribute that has been added, removed or replaced. getValue() - Method in class javax.servlet.http.Cookie Returns the value of the cookie. getValue(String) - Method in interface javax.servlet.http.HttpSession Deprecated. As of Version 2.2, this method is replaced by HttpSession.getAttribute(java.lang.String). getValueNames() - Method in interface javax.servlet.http.HttpSession Deprecated. As of Version 2.2, this method is replaced by HttpSession.getAttributeNames() getVersion() - Method in class javax.servlet.http.Cookie Returns the version of the protocol this cookie complies with. getWriter() - Method in interface javax.servlet.ServletResponse Returns a PrintWriter object that can send character text to the client. getWriter() - Method in class javax.servlet.ServletResponseWrapper The default behavior of this method is to return getWriter() on the wrapped response object. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- H HttpServlet - class javax.servlet.http.HttpServlet. Provides an abstract class to be subclassed to create an HTTP servlet suitable for a Web site. HttpServlet() - Constructor for class javax.servlet.http.HttpServlet Does nothing, because this is an abstract class. HttpServletRequest - interface javax.servlet.http.HttpServletRequest. Extends the ServletRequest interface to provide request information for HTTP servlets. HttpServletRequestWrapper - class javax.servlet.http.HttpServletRequestWrapper. Provides a convenient implementation of the HttpServletRequest interface that can be subclassed by developers wishing to adapt the request to a Servlet. HttpServletRequestWrapper(HttpServletRequest) - Constructor for class javax.servlet.http.HttpServletRequestWrapper Constructs a request object wrapping the given request. HttpServletResponse - interface javax.servlet.http.HttpServletResponse. Extends the ServletResponse interface to provide HTTP-specific functionality in sending a response. HttpServletResponseWrapper - class javax.servlet.http.HttpServletResponseWrapper. Provides a convenient implementation of the HttpServletResponse interface that can be subclassed by developers wishing to adapt the response from a Servlet. HttpServletResponseWrapper(HttpServletResponse) - Constructor for class javax.servlet.http.HttpServletResponseWrapper Constructs a response adaptor wrapping the given response. HttpSession - interface javax.servlet.http.HttpSession. Provides a way to identify a user across more than one page request or visit to a Web site and to store information about that user. HttpSessionActivationListener - interface javax.servlet.http.HttpSessionActivationListener. Objects that are bound to a session may listen to container events notifying them that sessions will be passivated and that session will be activated. HttpSessionAttributeListener - interface javax.servlet.http.HttpSessionAttributeListener. This listener interface can be implemented in order to get notifications of changes to the attribute lists of sessions within this web application. HttpSessionBindingEvent - class javax.servlet.http.HttpSessionBindingEvent. Events of this type are either sent to an object that implements HttpSessionBindingListener when it is bound or unbound from a session, or to a HttpSessionAttributeListener that has been configured in the deployment descriptor when any attribute is bound, unbound or replaced in a session. HttpSessionBindingEvent(HttpSession, String) - Constructor for class javax.servlet.http.HttpSessionBindingEvent Constructs an event that notifies an object that it has been bound to or unbound from a session. HttpSessionBindingEvent(HttpSession, String, Object) - Constructor for class javax.servlet.http.HttpSessionBindingEvent Constructs an event that notifies an object that it has been bound to or unbound from a session. HttpSessionBindingListener - interface javax.servlet.http.HttpSessionBindingListener. Causes an object to be notified when it is bound to or unbound from a session. HttpSessionContext - interface javax.servlet.http.HttpSessionContext. Deprecated. As of Java(tm) Servlet API 2.1 for security reasons, with no replacement. This interface will be removed in a future version of this API. HttpSessionEvent - class javax.servlet.http.HttpSessionEvent. This is the class representing event notifications for changes to sessions within a web application. HttpSessionEvent(HttpSession) - Constructor for class javax.servlet.http.HttpSessionEvent Construct a session event from the given source. HttpSessionListener - interface javax.servlet.http.HttpSessionListener. Implementations of this interface are notified of changes to the list of active sessions in a web application. HttpUtils - class javax.servlet.http.HttpUtils. Deprecated. As of Java(tm) Servlet API 2.3. These methods were only useful with the default encoding and have been moved to the request interfaces. HttpUtils() - Constructor for class javax.servlet.http.HttpUtils Deprecated. Constructs an empty HttpUtils object. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- I include(ServletRequest, ServletResponse) - Method in interface javax.servlet.RequestDispatcher Includes the content of a resource (servlet, JSP page, HTML file) in the response. init() - Method in class javax.servlet.GenericServlet A convenience method which can be overridden so that there's no need to call super.init(config). init(FilterConfig) - Method in interface javax.servlet.Filter Called by the web container to indicate to a filter that it is being placed into service. init(ServletConfig) - Method in interface javax.servlet.Servlet Called by the servlet container to indicate to a servlet that the servlet is being placed into service. init(ServletConfig) - Method in class javax.servlet.GenericServlet Called by the servlet container to indicate to a servlet that the servlet is being placed into service. invalidate() - Method in interface javax.servlet.http.HttpSession Invalidates this session then unbinds any objects bound to it. isCommitted() - Method in interface javax.servlet.ServletResponse Returns a boolean indicating if the response has been committed. isCommitted() - Method in class javax.servlet.ServletResponseWrapper The default behavior of this method is to return isCommitted() on the wrapped response object. isNew() - Method in interface javax.servlet.http.HttpSession Returns true if the client does not yet know about the session or if the client chooses not to join the session. isPermanent() - Method in class javax.servlet.UnavailableException Returns a boolean indicating whether the servlet is permanently unavailable. isRequestedSessionIdFromCookie() - Method in interface javax.servlet.http.HttpServletRequest Checks whether the requested session ID came in as a cookie. isRequestedSessionIdFromCookie() - Method in class javax.servlet.http.HttpServletRequestWrapper The default behavior of this method is to return isRequestedSessionIdFromCookie() on the wrapped request object. isRequestedSessionIdFromUrl() - Method in interface javax.servlet.http.HttpServletRequest Deprecated. As of Version 2.1 of the Java Servlet API, use HttpServletRequest.isRequestedSessionIdFromURL() instead. isRequestedSessionIdFromUrl() - Method in class javax.servlet.http.HttpServletRequestWrapper The default behavior of this method is to return isRequestedSessionIdFromUrl() on the wrapped request object. isRequestedSessionIdFromURL() - Method in interface javax.servlet.http.HttpServletRequest Checks whether the requested session ID came in as part of the request URL. isRequestedSessionIdFromURL() - Method in class javax.servlet.http.HttpServletRequestWrapper The default behavior of this method is to return isRequestedSessionIdFromURL() on the wrapped request object. isRequestedSessionIdValid() - Method in interface javax.servlet.http.HttpServletRequest Checks whether the requested session ID is still valid. isRequestedSessionIdValid() - Method in class javax.servlet.http.HttpServletRequestWrapper The default behavior of this method is to return isRequestedSessionIdValid() on the wrapped request object. isSecure() - Method in class javax.servlet.ServletRequestWrapper The default behavior of this method is to return isSecure() on the wrapped request object. isSecure() - Method in interface javax.servlet.ServletRequest Returns a boolean indicating whether this request was made using a secure channel, such as HTTPS. isUserInRole(String) - Method in interface javax.servlet.http.HttpServletRequest Returns a boolean indicating whether the authenticated user is included in the specified logical "role". isUserInRole(String) - Method in class javax.servlet.http.HttpServletRequestWrapper The default behavior of this method is to return isUserInRole(String role) on the wrapped request object. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- J javax.servlet - package javax.servlet This chapter describes the javax.servlet package. javax.servlet.http - package javax.servlet.http This chapter describes the javax.servlet.http package. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- L log(Exception, String) - Method in interface javax.servlet.ServletContext Deprecated. As of Java Servlet API 2.1, use ServletContext.log(String message, Throwable throwable) instead. This method was originally defined to write an exception's stack trace and an explanatory error message to the servlet log file. log(String) - Method in interface javax.servlet.ServletContext Writes the specified message to a servlet log file, usually an event log. log(String) - Method in class javax.servlet.GenericServlet Writes the specified message to a servlet log file, prepended by the servlet's name. log(String, Throwable) - Method in interface javax.servlet.ServletContext Writes an explanatory message and a stack trace for a given Throwable exception to the servlet log file. log(String, Throwable) - Method in class javax.servlet.GenericServlet Writes an explanatory message and a stack trace for a given Throwable exception to the servlet log file, prepended by the servlet's name. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- P parsePostData(int, ServletInputStream) - Static method in class javax.servlet.http.HttpUtils Deprecated. Parses data from an HTML form that the client sends to the server using the HTTP POST method and the application/x-www-form-urlencoded MIME type. parseQueryString(String) - Static method in class javax.servlet.http.HttpUtils Deprecated. Parses a query string passed from the client to the server and builds a HashTable object with key-value pairs. print(boolean) - Method in class javax.servlet.ServletOutputStream Writes a boolean value to the client, with no carriage return-line feed (CRLF) character at the end. print(char) - Method in class javax.servlet.ServletOutputStream Writes a character to the client, with no carriage return-line feed (CRLF) at the end. print(double) - Method in class javax.servlet.ServletOutputStream Writes a double value to the client, with no carriage return-line feed (CRLF) at the end. print(float) - Method in class javax.servlet.ServletOutputStream Writes a float value to the client, with no carriage return-line feed (CRLF) at the end. print(int) - Method in class javax.servlet.ServletOutputStream Writes an int to the client, with no carriage return-line feed (CRLF) at the end. print(long) - Method in class javax.servlet.ServletOutputStream Writes a long value to the client, with no carriage return-line feed (CRLF) at the end. print(String) - Method in class javax.servlet.ServletOutputStream Writes a String to the client, without a carriage return-line feed (CRLF) character at the end. println() - Method in class javax.servlet.ServletOutputStream Writes a carriage return-line feed (CRLF) to the client. println(boolean) - Method in class javax.servlet.ServletOutputStream Writes a boolean value to the client, followed by a carriage return-line feed (CRLF). println(char) - Method in class javax.servlet.ServletOutputStream Writes a character to the client, followed by a carriage return-line feed (CRLF). println(double) - Method in class javax.servlet.ServletOutputStream Writes a double value to the client, followed by a carriage return-line feed (CRLF). println(float) - Method in class javax.servlet.ServletOutputStream Writes a float value to the client, followed by a carriage return-line feed (CRLF). println(int) - Method in class javax.servlet.ServletOutputStream Writes an int to the client, followed by a carriage return-line feed (CRLF) character. println(long) - Method in class javax.servlet.ServletOutputStream Writes a long value to the client, followed by a carriage return-line feed (CRLF). println(String) - Method in class javax.servlet.ServletOutputStream Writes a String to the client, followed by a carriage return-line feed (CRLF). putValue(String, Object) - Method in interface javax.servlet.http.HttpSession Deprecated. As of Version 2.2, this method is replaced by HttpSession.setAttribute(java.lang.String, java.lang.Object) -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- R readLine(byte[], int, int) - Method in class javax.servlet.ServletInputStream Reads the input stream, one line at a time. removeAttribute(String) - Method in interface javax.servlet.ServletContext Removes the attribute with the given name from the servlet context. removeAttribute(String) - Method in class javax.servlet.ServletRequestWrapper The default behavior of this method is to call removeAttribute(String name) on the wrapped request object. removeAttribute(String) - Method in interface javax.servlet.ServletRequest Removes an attribute from this request. removeAttribute(String) - Method in interface javax.servlet.http.HttpSession Removes the object bound with the specified name from this session. removeValue(String) - Method in interface javax.servlet.http.HttpSession Deprecated. As of Version 2.2, this method is replaced by HttpSession.removeAttribute(java.lang.String) requestDestroyed(ServletRequestEvent) - Method in interface javax.servlet.ServletRequestListener The request is about to go out of scope of the web application. RequestDispatcher - interface javax.servlet.RequestDispatcher. Defines an object that receives requests from the client and sends them to any resource (such as a servlet, HTML file, or JSP file) on the server. requestInitialized(ServletRequestEvent) - Method in interface javax.servlet.ServletRequestListener The request is about to come into scope of the web application. reset() - Method in interface javax.servlet.ServletResponse Clears any data that exists in the buffer as well as the status code and headers. reset() - Method in class javax.servlet.ServletResponseWrapper The default behavior of this method is to call reset() on the wrapped response object. resetBuffer() - Method in interface javax.servlet.ServletResponse Clears the content of the underlying buffer in the response without clearing headers or status code. resetBuffer() - Method in class javax.servlet.ServletResponseWrapper The default behavior of this method is to call resetBuffer() on the wrapped response object. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- S SC_ACCEPTED - Static variable in interface javax.servlet.http.HttpServletResponse Status code (202) indicating that a request was accepted for processing, but was not completed. SC_BAD_GATEWAY - Static variable in interface javax.servlet.http.HttpServletResponse Status code (502) indicating that the HTTP server received an invalid response from a server it consulted when acting as a proxy or gateway. SC_BAD_REQUEST - Static variable in interface javax.servlet.http.HttpServletResponse Status code (400) indicating the request sent by the client was syntactically incorrect. SC_CONFLICT - Static variable in interface javax.servlet.http.HttpServletResponse Status code (409) indicating that the request could not be completed due to a conflict with the current state of the resource. SC_CONTINUE - Static variable in interface javax.servlet.http.HttpServletResponse Status code (100) indicating the client can continue. SC_CREATED - Static variable in interface javax.servlet.http.HttpServletResponse Status code (201) indicating the request succeeded and created a new resource on the server. SC_EXPECTATION_FAILED - Static variable in interface javax.servlet.http.HttpServletResponse Status code (417) indicating that the server could not meet the expectation given in the Expect request header. SC_FORBIDDEN - Static variable in interface javax.servlet.http.HttpServletResponse Status code (403) indicating the server understood the request but refused to fulfill it. SC_FOUND - Static variable in interface javax.servlet.http.HttpServletResponse Status code (302) indicating that the resource reside temporarily under a different URI. SC_GATEWAY_TIMEOUT - Static variable in interface javax.servlet.http.HttpServletResponse Status code (504) indicating that the server did not receive a timely response from the upstream server while acting as a gateway or proxy. SC_GONE - Static variable in interface javax.servlet.http.HttpServletResponse Status code (410) indicating that the resource is no longer available at the server and no forwarding address is known. SC_HTTP_VERSION_NOT_SUPPORTED - Static variable in interface javax.servlet.http.HttpServletResponse Status code (505) indicating that the server does not support or refuses to support the HTTP protocol version that was used in the request message. SC_INTERNAL_SERVER_ERROR - Static variable in interface javax.servlet.http.HttpServletResponse Status code (500) indicating an error inside the HTTP server which prevented it from fulfilling the request. SC_LENGTH_REQUIRED - Static variable in interface javax.servlet.http.HttpServletResponse Status code (411) indicating that the request cannot be handled without a defined Content-Length. SC_METHOD_NOT_ALLOWED - Static variable in interface javax.servlet.http.HttpServletResponse Status code (405) indicating that the method specified in the Request-Line is not allowed for the resource identified by the Request-URI. SC_MOVED_PERMANENTLY - Static variable in interface javax.servlet.http.HttpServletResponse Status code (301) indicating that the resource has permanently moved to a new location, and that future references should use a new URI with their requests. SC_MOVED_TEMPORARILY - Static variable in interface javax.servlet.http.HttpServletResponse Status code (302) indicating that the resource has temporarily moved to another location, but that future references should still use the original URI to access the resource. SC_MULTIPLE_CHOICES - Static variable in interface javax.servlet.http.HttpServletResponse Status code (300) indicating that the requested resource corresponds to any one of a set of representations, each with its own specific location. SC_NO_CONTENT - Static variable in interface javax.servlet.http.HttpServletResponse Status code (204) indicating that the request succeeded but that there was no new information to return. SC_NON_AUTHORITATIVE_INFORMATION - Static variable in interface javax.servlet.http.HttpServletResponse Status code (203) indicating that the meta information presented by the client did not originate from the server. SC_NOT_ACCEPTABLE - Static variable in interface javax.servlet.http.HttpServletResponse Status code (406) indicating that the resource identified by the request is only capable of generating response entities which have content characteristics not acceptable according to the accept headers sent in the request. SC_NOT_FOUND - Static variable in interface javax.servlet.http.HttpServletResponse Status code (404) indicating that the requested resource is not available. SC_NOT_IMPLEMENTED - Static variable in interface javax.servlet.http.HttpServletResponse Status code (501) indicating the HTTP server does not support the functionality needed to fulfill the request. SC_NOT_MODIFIED - Static variable in interface javax.servlet.http.HttpServletResponse Status code (304) indicating that a conditional GET operation found that the resource was available and not modified. SC_OK - Static variable in interface javax.servlet.http.HttpServletResponse Status code (200) indicating the request succeeded normally. SC_PARTIAL_CONTENT - Static variable in interface javax.servlet.http.HttpServletResponse Status code (206) indicating that the server has fulfilled the partial GET request for the resource. SC_PAYMENT_REQUIRED - Static variable in interface javax.servlet.http.HttpServletResponse Status code (402) reserved for future use. SC_PRECONDITION_FAILED - Static variable in interface javax.servlet.http.HttpServletResponse Status code (412) indicating that the precondition given in one or more of the request-header fields evaluated to false when it was tested on the server. SC_PROXY_AUTHENTICATION_REQUIRED - Static variable in interface javax.servlet.http.HttpServletResponse Status code (407) indicating that the client MUST first authenticate itself with the proxy. SC_REQUEST_ENTITY_TOO_LARGE - Static variable in interface javax.servlet.http.HttpServletResponse Status code (413) indicating that the server is refusing to process the request because the request entity is larger than the server is willing or able to process. SC_REQUEST_TIMEOUT - Static variable in interface javax.servlet.http.HttpServletResponse Status code (408) indicating that the client did not produce a request within the time that the server was prepared to wait. SC_REQUEST_URI_TOO_LONG - Static variable in interface javax.servlet.http.HttpServletResponse Status code (414) indicating that the server is refusing to service the request because the Request-URI is longer than the server is willing to interpret. SC_REQUESTED_RANGE_NOT_SATISFIABLE - Static variable in interface javax.servlet.http.HttpServletResponse Status code (416) indicating that the server cannot serve the requested byte range. SC_RESET_CONTENT - Static variable in interface javax.servlet.http.HttpServletResponse Status code (205) indicating that the agent SHOULD reset the document view which caused the request to be sent. SC_SEE_OTHER - Static variable in interface javax.servlet.http.HttpServletResponse Status code (303) indicating that the response to the request can be found under a different URI. SC_SERVICE_UNAVAILABLE - Static variable in interface javax.servlet.http.HttpServletResponse Status code (503) indicating that the HTTP server is temporarily overloaded, and unable to handle the request. SC_SWITCHING_PROTOCOLS - Static variable in interface javax.servlet.http.HttpServletResponse Status code (101) indicating the server is switching protocols according to Upgrade header. SC_TEMPORARY_REDIRECT - Static variable in interface javax.servlet.http.HttpServletResponse Status code (307) indicating that the requested resource resides temporarily under a different URI. SC_UNAUTHORIZED - Static variable in interface javax.servlet.http.HttpServletResponse Status code (401) indicating that the request requires HTTP authentication. SC_UNSUPPORTED_MEDIA_TYPE - Static variable in interface javax.servlet.http.HttpServletResponse Status code (415) indicating that the server is refusing to service the request because the entity of the request is in a format not supported by the requested resource for the requested method. SC_USE_PROXY - Static variable in interface javax.servlet.http.HttpServletResponse Status code (305) indicating that the requested resource MUST be accessed through the proxy given by the Location field. sendError(int) - Method in class javax.servlet.http.HttpServletResponseWrapper The default behavior of this method is to call sendError(int sc) on the wrapped response object. sendError(int) - Method in interface javax.servlet.http.HttpServletResponse Sends an error response to the client using the specified status code and clearing the buffer. sendError(int, String) - Method in class javax.servlet.http.HttpServletResponseWrapper The default behavior of this method is to call sendError(int sc, String msg) on the wrapped response object. sendError(int, String) - Method in interface javax.servlet.http.HttpServletResponse Sends an error response to the client using the specified status. sendRedirect(String) - Method in class javax.servlet.http.HttpServletResponseWrapper The default behavior of this method is to return sendRedirect(String location) on the wrapped response object. sendRedirect(String) - Method in interface javax.servlet.http.HttpServletResponse Sends a temporary redirect response to the client using the specified redirect location URL. service(HttpServletRequest, HttpServletResponse) - Method in class javax.servlet.http.HttpServlet Receives standard HTTP requests from the public service method and dispatches them to the doXXX methods defined in this class. service(ServletRequest, ServletResponse) - Method in interfac
Table of Contents Header Files The #define Guard Header File Dependencies Inline Functions The -inl.h Files Function Parameter Ordering Names and Order of Includes Scoping Namespaces Nested Classes Nonmember, Static Member, and Global Functions Local Variables Static and Global Variables Classes Doing Work in Constructors Default Constructors Explicit Constructors Copy Constructors Structs vs. Classes Inheritance Multiple Inheritance Interfaces Operator Overloading Access Control Declaration Order Write Short Functions Google-Specific Magic Smart Pointers cpplint Other C++ Features Reference Arguments Function Overloading Default Arguments Variable-Length Arrays and alloca() Friends Exceptions Run-Time Type Information (RTTI) Casting Streams Preincrement and Predecrement Use of const Integer Types 64-bit Portability Preprocessor Macros 0 and NULL sizeof Boost C++0x Naming General Naming Rules File Names Type Names Variable Names Constant Names Function Names Namespace Names Enumerator Names Macro Names Exceptions to Naming Rules Comments Comment Style File Comments Class Comments Function Comments Variable Comments Implementation Comments Punctuation, Spelling and Grammar TODO Comments Deprecation Comments Formatting Line Length Non-ASCII Characters Spaces vs. Tabs Function Declarations and Definitions Function Calls Conditionals Loops and Switch Statements Pointer and Reference Expressions Boolean Expressions Return Values Variable and Array Initialization Preprocessor Directives Class Format Constructor Initializer Lists Namespace Formatting Horizontal Whitespace Vertical Whitespace Exceptions to the Rules Existing Non-conformant Code Windows Code Important Note Displaying Hidden Details in this Guide link ▶This style guide contains many details that are initially hidden from view. They are marked by the triangle icon, which you see here on your left. Click it now. You should see "Hooray" appear below. Hooray! Now you know you can expand points to get more details. Alternatively, there's an "expand all" at the top of this document. Background C++ is the main development language used by many of Google's open-source projects. As every C++ programmer knows, the language has many powerful features, but this power brings with it complexity, which in turn can make code more bug-prone and harder to read and maintain. The goal of this guide is to manage this complexity by describing in detail the dos and don'ts of writing C++ code. These rules exist to keep the code base manageable while still allowing coders to use C++ language features productively. Style, also known as readability, is what we call the conventions that govern our C++ code. The term Style is a bit of a misnomer, since these conventions cover far more than just source file formatting. One way in which we keep the code base manageable is by enforcing consistency. It is very important that any programmer be able to look at another's code and quickly understand it. Maintaining a uniform style and following conventions means that we can more easily use "pattern-matching" to infer what various symbols are and what invariants are true about them. Creating common, required idioms and patterns makes code much easier to understand. In some cases there might be good arguments for changing certain style rules, but we nonetheless keep things as they are in order to preserve consistency. Another issue this guide addresses is that of C++ feature bloat. C++ is a huge language with many advanced features. In some cases we constrain, or even ban, use of certain features. We do this to keep code simple and to avoid the various common errors and problems that these features can cause. This guide lists these features and explains why their use is restricted. Open-source projects developed by Google conform to the requirements in this guide. Note that this guide is not a C++ tutorial: we assume that the reader is familiar with the language. Header Files In general, every .cc file should have an associated .h file. There are some common exceptions, such as unittests and small .cc files containing just a main() function. Correct use of header files can make a huge difference to the readability, size and performance of your code. The following rules will guide you through the various pitfalls of using header files. The #define Guard link ▶All header files should have #define guards to prevent multiple inclusion. The format of the symbol name should be ___H_. To guarantee uniqueness, they should be based on the full path in a project's source tree. For example, the file foo/src/bar/baz.h in project foo should have the following guard: #ifndef FOO_BAR_BAZ_H_ #define FOO_BAR_BAZ_H_ ... #endif // FOO_BAR_BAZ_H_ Header File Dependencies link ▶Don't use an #include when a forward declaration would suffice. When you include a header file you introduce a dependency that will cause your code to be recompiled whenever the header file changes. If your header file includes other header files, any change to those files will cause any code that includes your header to be recompiled. Therefore, we prefer to minimize includes, particularly includes of header files in other header files. You can significantly minimize the number of header files you need to include in your own header files by using forward declarations. For example, if your header file uses the File class in ways that do not require access to the declaration of the File class, your header file can just forward declare class File; instead of having to #include "file/base/file.h". How can we use a class Foo in a header file without access to its definition? We can declare data members of type Foo* or Foo&. We can declare (but not define) functions with arguments, and/or return values, of type Foo. (One exception is if an argument Foo or const Foo& has a non-explicit, one-argument constructor, in which case we need the full definition to support automatic type conversion.) We can declare static data members of type Foo. This is because static data members are defined outside the class definition. On the other hand, you must include the header file for Foo if your class subclasses Foo or has a data member of type Foo. Sometimes it makes sense to have pointer (or better, scoped_ptr) members instead of object members. However, this complicates code readability and imposes a performance penalty, so avoid doing this transformation if the only purpose is to minimize includes in header files. Of course, .cc files typically do require the definitions of the classes they use, and usually have to include several header files. Note: If you use a symbol Foo in your source file, you should bring in a definition for Foo yourself, either via an #include or via a forward declaration. Do not depend on the symbol being brought in transitively via headers not directly included. One exception is if Foo is used in myfile.cc, it's ok to #include (or forward-declare) Foo in myfile.h, instead of myfile.cc. Inline Functions link ▶Define functions inline only when they are small, say, 10 lines or less. Definition: You can declare functions in a way that allows the compiler to expand them inline rather than calling them through the usual function call mechanism. Pros: Inlining a function can generate more efficient object code, as long as the inlined function is small. Feel free to inline accessors and mutators, and other short, performance-critical functions. Cons: Overuse of inlining can actually make programs slower. Depending on a function's size, inlining it can cause the code size to increase or decrease. Inlining a very small accessor function will usually decrease code size while inlining a very large function can dramatically increase code size. On modern processors smaller code usually runs faster due to better use of the instruction cache. Decision: A decent rule of thumb is to not inline a function if it is more than 10 lines long. Beware of destructors, which are often longer than they appear because of implicit member- and base-destructor calls! Another useful rule of thumb: it's typically not cost effective to inline functions with loops or switch statements (unless, in the common case, the loop or switch statement is never executed). It is important to know that functions are not always inlined even if they are declared as such; for example, virtual and recursive functions are not normally inlined. Usually recursive functions should not be inline. The main reason for making a virtual function inline is to place its definition in the class, either for convenience or to document its behavior, e.g., for accessors and mutators. The -inl.h Files link ▶You may use file names with a -inl.h suffix to define complex inline functions when needed. The definition of an inline function needs to be in a header file, so that the compiler has the definition available for inlining at the call sites. However, implementation code properly belongs in .cc files, and we do not like to have much actual code in .h files unless there is a readability or performance advantage. If an inline function definition is short, with very little, if any, logic in it, you should put the code in your .h file. For example, accessors and mutators should certainly be inside a class definition. More complex inline functions may also be put in a .h file for the convenience of the implementer and callers, though if this makes the .h file too unwieldy you can instead put that code in a separate -inl.h file. This separates the implementation from the class definition, while still allowing the implementation to be included where necessary. Another use of -inl.h files is for definitions of function templates. This can be used to keep your template definitions easy to read. Do not forget that a -inl.h file requires a #define guard just like any other header file. Function Parameter Ordering link ▶When defining a function, parameter order is: inputs, then outputs. Parameters to C/C++ functions are either input to the function, output from the function, or both. Input parameters are usually values or const references, while output and input/output parameters will be non-const pointers. When ordering function parameters, put all input-only parameters before any output parameters. In particular, do not add new parameters to the end of the function just because they are new; place new input-only parameters before the output parameters. This is not a hard-and-fast rule. Parameters that are both input and output (often classes/structs) muddy the waters, and, as always, consistency with related functions may require you to bend the rule. Names and Order of Includes link ▶Use standard order for readability and to avoid hidden dependencies: C library, C++ library, other libraries' .h, your project's .h. All of a project's header files should be listed as descentants of the project's source directory without use of UNIX directory shortcuts . (the current directory) or .. (the parent directory). For example, google-awesome-project/src/base/logging.h should be included as #include "base/logging.h" In dir/foo.cc, whose main purpose is to implement or test the stuff in dir2/foo2.h, order your includes as follows: dir2/foo2.h (preferred location — see details below). C system files. C++ system files. Other libraries' .h files. Your project's .h files. The preferred ordering reduces hidden dependencies. We want every header file to be compilable on its own. The easiest way to achieve this is to make sure that every one of them is the first .h file #included in some .cc. dir/foo.cc and dir2/foo2.h are often in the same directory (e.g. base/basictypes_test.cc and base/basictypes.h), but can be in different directories too. Within each section it is nice to order the includes alphabetically. For example, the includes in google-awesome-project/src/foo/internal/fooserver.cc might look like this: #include "foo/public/fooserver.h" // Preferred location. #include #include #include #include #include "base/basictypes.h" #include "base/commandlineflags.h" #include "foo/public/bar.h" Scoping Namespaces link ▶Unnamed namespaces in .cc files are encouraged. With named namespaces, choose the name based on the project, and possibly its path. Do not use a using-directive. Definition: Namespaces subdivide the global scope into distinct, named scopes, and so are useful for preventing name collisions in the global scope. Pros: Namespaces provide a (hierarchical) axis of naming, in addition to the (also hierarchical) name axis provided by classes. For example, if two different projects have a class Foo in the global scope, these symbols may collide at compile time or at runtime. If each project places their code in a namespace, project1::Foo and project2::Foo are now distinct symbols that do not collide. Cons: Namespaces can be confusing, because they provide an additional (hierarchical) axis of naming, in addition to the (also hierarchical) name axis provided by classes. Use of unnamed spaces in header files can easily cause violations of the C++ One Definition Rule (ODR). Decision: Use namespaces according to the policy described below. Unnamed Namespaces Unnamed namespaces are allowed and even encouraged in .cc files, to avoid runtime naming conflicts: namespace { // This is in a .cc file. // The content of a namespace is not indented enum { kUnused, kEOF, kError }; // Commonly used tokens. bool AtEof() { return pos_ == kEOF; } // Uses our namespace's EOF. } // namespace However, file-scope declarations that are associated with a particular class may be declared in that class as types, static data members or static member functions rather than as members of an unnamed namespace. Terminate the unnamed namespace as shown, with a comment // namespace. Do not use unnamed namespaces in .h files. Named Namespaces Named namespaces should be used as follows: Namespaces wrap the entire source file after includes, gflags definitions/declarations, and forward declarations of classes from other namespaces: // In the .h file namespace mynamespace { // All declarations are within the namespace scope. // Notice the lack of indentation. class MyClass { public: ... void Foo(); }; } // namespace mynamespace // In the .cc file namespace mynamespace { // Definition of functions is within scope of the namespace. void MyClass::Foo() { ... } } // namespace mynamespace The typical .cc file might have more complex detail, including the need to reference classes in other namespaces. #include "a.h" DEFINE_bool(someflag, false, "dummy flag"); class C; // Forward declaration of class C in the global namespace. namespace a { class A; } // Forward declaration of a::A. namespace b { ...code for b... // Code goes against the left margin. } // namespace b Do not declare anything in namespace std, not even forward declarations of standard library classes. Declaring entities in namespace std is undefined behavior, i.e., not portable. To declare entities from the standard library, include the appropriate header file. You may not use a using-directive to make all names from a namespace available. // Forbidden -- This pollutes the namespace. using namespace foo; You may use a using-declaration anywhere in a .cc file, and in functions, methods or classes in .h files. // OK in .cc files. // Must be in a function, method or class in .h files. using ::foo::bar; Namespace aliases are allowed anywhere in a .cc file, anywhere inside the named namespace that wraps an entire .h file, and in functions and methods. // Shorten access to some commonly used names in .cc files. namespace fbz = ::foo::bar::baz; // Shorten access to some commonly used names (in a .h file). namespace librarian { // The following alias is available to all files including // this header (in namespace librarian): // alias names should therefore be chosen consistently // within a project. namespace pd_s = ::pipeline_diagnostics::sidetable; inline void my_inline_function() { // namespace alias local to a function (or method). namespace fbz = ::foo::bar::baz; ... } } // namespace librarian Note that an alias in a .h file is visible to everyone #including that file, so public headers (those available outside a project) and headers transitively #included by them, should avoid defining aliases, as part of the general goal of keeping public APIs as small as possible. Nested Classes link ▶Although you may use public nested classes when they are part of an interface, consider a namespace to keep declarations out of the global scope. Definition: A class can define another class within it; this is also called a member class. class Foo { private: // Bar is a member class, nested within Foo. class Bar { ... }; }; Pros: This is useful when the nested (or member) class is only used by the enclosing class; making it a member puts it in the enclosing class scope rather than polluting the outer scope with the class name. Nested classes can be forward declared within the enclosing class and then defined in the .cc file to avoid including the nested class definition in the enclosing class declaration, since the nested class definition is usually only relevant to the implementation. Cons: Nested classes can be forward-declared only within the definition of the enclosing class. Thus, any header file manipulating a Foo::Bar* pointer will have to include the full class declaration for Foo. Decision: Do not make nested classes public unless they are actually part of the interface, e.g., a class that holds a set of options for some method. Nonmember, Static Member, and Global Functions link ▶Prefer nonmember functions within a namespace or static member functions to global functions; use completely global functions rarely. Pros: Nonmember and static member functions can be useful in some situations. Putting nonmember functions in a namespace avoids polluting the global namespace. Cons: Nonmember and static member functions may make more sense as members of a new class, especially if they access external resources or have significant dependencies. Decision: Sometimes it is useful, or even necessary, to define a function not bound to a class instance. Such a function can be either a static member or a nonmember function. Nonmember functions should not depend on external variables, and should nearly always exist in a namespace. Rather than creating classes only to group static member functions which do not share static data, use namespaces instead. Functions defined in the same compilation unit as production classes may introduce unnecessary coupling and link-time dependencies when directly called from other compilation units; static member functions are particularly susceptible to this. Consider extracting a new class, or placing the functions in a namespace possibly in a separate library. If you must define a nonmember function and it is only needed in its .cc file, use an unnamed namespace or static linkage (eg static int Foo() {...}) to limit its scope. Local Variables link ▶Place a function's variables in the narrowest scope possible, and initialize variables in the declaration. C++ allows you to declare variables anywhere in a function. We encourage you to declare them in as local a scope as possible, and as close to the first use as possible. This makes it easier for the reader to find the declaration and see what type the variable is and what it was initialized to. In particular, initialization should be used instead of declaration and assignment, e.g. int i; i = f(); // Bad -- initialization separate from declaration. int j = g(); // Good -- declaration has initialization. Note that gcc implements for (int i = 0; i < 10; ++i) correctly (the scope of i is only the scope of the for loop), so you can then reuse i in another for loop in the same scope. It also correctly scopes declarations in if and while statements, e.g. while (const char* p = strchr(str, '/')) str = p + 1; There is one caveat: if the variable is an object, its constructor is invoked every time it enters scope and is created, and its destructor is invoked every time it goes out of scope. // Inefficient implementation: for (int i = 0; i < 1000000; ++i) { Foo f; // My ctor and dtor get called 1000000 times each. f.DoSomething(i); } It may be more efficient to declare such a variable used in a loop outside that loop: Foo f; // My ctor and dtor get called once each. for (int i = 0; i < 1000000; ++i) { f.DoSomething(i); } Static and Global Variables link ▶Static or global variables of class type are forbidden: they cause hard-to-find bugs due to indeterminate order of construction and destruction. Objects with static storage duration, including global variables, static variables, static class member variables, and function static variables, must be Plain Old Data (POD): only ints, chars, floats, or pointers, or arrays/structs of POD. The order in which class constructors and initializers for static variables are called is only partially specified in C++ and can even change from build to build, which can cause bugs that are difficult to find. Therefore in addition to banning globals of class type, we do not allow static POD variables to be initialized with the result of a function, unless that function (such as getenv(), or getpid()) does not itself depend on any other globals. Likewise, the order in which destructors are called is defined to be the reverse of the order in which the constructors were called. Since constructor order is indeterminate, so is destructor order. For example, at program-end time a static variable might have been destroyed, but code still running -- perhaps in another thread -- tries to access it and fails. Or the destructor for a static 'string' variable might be run prior to the destructor for another variable that contains a reference to that string. As a result we only allow static variables to contain POD data. This rule completely disallows vector (use C arrays instead), or string (use const char []). If you need a static or global variable of a class type, consider initializing a pointer (which will never be freed), from either your main() function or from pthread_once(). Note that this must be a raw pointer, not a "smart" pointer, since the smart pointer's destructor will have the order-of-destructor issue that we are trying to avoid. Classes Classes are the fundamental unit of code in C++. Naturally, we use them extensively. This section lists the main dos and don'ts you should follow when writing a class. Doing Work in Constructors link ▶In general, constructors should merely set member variables to their initial values. Any complex initialization should go in an explicit Init() method. Definition: It is possible to perform initialization in the body of the constructor. Pros: Convenience in typing. No need to worry about whether the class has been initialized or not. Cons: The problems with doing work in constructors are: There is no easy way for constructors to signal errors, short of using exceptions (which are forbidden). If the work fails, we now have an object whose initialization code failed, so it may be an indeterminate state. If the work calls virtual functions, these calls will not get dispatched to the subclass implementations. Future modification to your class can quietly introduce this problem even if your class is not currently subclassed, causing much confusion. If someone creates a global variable of this type (which is against the rules, but still), the constructor code will be called before main(), possibly breaking some implicit assumptions in the constructor code. For instance, gflags will not yet have been initialized. Decision: If your object requires non-trivial initialization, consider having an explicit Init() method. In particular, constructors should not call virtual functions, attempt to raise errors, access potentially uninitialized global variables, etc. Default Constructors link ▶You must define a default constructor if your class defines member variables and has no other constructors. Otherwise the compiler will do it for you, badly. Definition: The default constructor is called when we new a class object with no arguments. It is always called when calling new[] (for arrays). Pros: Initializing structures by default, to hold "impossible" values, makes debugging much easier. Cons: Extra work for you, the code writer. Decision: If your class defines member variables and has no other constructors you must define a default constructor (one that takes no arguments). It should preferably initialize the object in such a way that its internal state is consistent and valid. The reason for this is that if you have no other constructors and do not define a default constructor, the compiler will generate one for you. This compiler generated constructor may not initialize your object sensibly. If your class inherits from an existing class but you add no new member variables, you are not required to have a default constructor. Explicit Constructors link ▶Use the C++ keyword explicit for constructors with one argument. Definition: Normally, if a constructor takes one argument, it can be used as a conversion. For instance, if you define Foo::Foo(string name) and then pass a string to a function that expects a Foo, the constructor will be called to convert the string into a Foo and will pass the Foo to your function for you. This can be convenient but is also a source of trouble when things get converted and new objects created without you meaning them to. Declaring a constructor explicit prevents it from being invoked implicitly as a conversion. Pros: Avoids undesirable conversions. Cons: None. Decision: We require all single argument constructors to be explicit. Always put explicit in front of one-argument constructors in the class definition: explicit Foo(string name); The exception is copy constructors, which, in the rare cases when we allow them, should probably not be explicit. Classes that are intended to be transparent wrappers around other classes are also exceptions. Such exceptions should be clearly marked with comments. Copy Constructors link ▶Provide a copy constructor and assignment operator only when necessary. Otherwise, disable them with DISALLOW_COPY_AND_ASSIGN. Definition: The copy constructor and assignment operator are used to create copies of objects. The copy constructor is implicitly invoked by the compiler in some situations, e.g. passing objects by value. Pros: Copy constructors make it easy to copy objects. STL containers require that all contents be copyable and assignable. Copy constructors can be more efficient than CopyFrom()-style workarounds because they combine construction with copying, the compiler can elide them in some contexts, and they make it easier to avoid heap allocation. Cons: Implicit copying of objects in C++ is a rich source of bugs and of performance problems. It also reduces readability, as it becomes hard to track which objects are being passed around by value as opposed to by reference, and therefore where changes to an object are reflected. Decision: Few classes need to be copyable. Most should have neither a copy constructor nor an assignment operator. In many situations, a pointer or reference will work just as well as a copied value, with better performance. For example, you can pass function parameters by reference or pointer instead of by value, and you can store pointers rather than objects in an STL container. If your class needs to be copyable, prefer providing a copy method, such as CopyFrom() or Clone(), rather than a copy constructor, because such methods cannot be invoked implicitly. If a copy method is insufficient in your situation (e.g. for performance reasons, or because your class needs to be stored by value in an STL container), provide both a copy constructor and assignment operator. If your class does not need a copy constructor or assignment operator, you must explicitly disable them. To do so, add dummy declarations for the copy constructor and assignment operator in the private: section of your class, but do not provide any corresponding definition (so that any attempt to use them results in a link error). For convenience, a DISALLOW_COPY_AND_ASSIGN macro can be used: // A macro to disallow the copy constructor and operator= functions // This should be used in the private: declarations for a class #define DISALLOW_COPY_AND_ASSIGN(TypeName) \ TypeName(const TypeName&); \ void operator=(const TypeName&) Then, in class Foo: class Foo { public: Foo(int f); ~Foo(); private: DISALLOW_COPY_AND_ASSIGN(Foo); }; Structs vs. Classes link ▶Use a struct only for passive objects that carry data; everything else is a class. The struct and class keywords behave almost identically in C++. We add our own semantic meanings to each keyword, so you should use the appropriate keyword for the data-type you're defining. structs should be used for passive objects that carry data, and may have associated constants, but lack any functionality other than access/setting the data members. The accessing/setting of fields is done by directly accessing the fields rather than through method invocations. Methods should not provide behavior but should only be used to set up the data members, e.g., constructor, destructor, Initialize(), Reset(), Validate(). If more functionality is required, a class is more appropriate. If in doubt, make it a class. For consistency with STL, you can use struct instead of class for functors and traits. Note that member variables in structs and classes have different naming rules. Inheritance link ▶Composition is often more appropriate than inheritance. When using inheritance, make it public. Definition: When a sub-class inherits from a base class, it includes the definitions of all the data and operations that the parent base class defines. In practice, inheritance is used in two major ways in C++: implementation inheritance, in which actual code is inherited by the child, and interface inheritance, in which only method names are inherited. Pros: Implementation inheritance reduces code size by re-using the base class code as it specializes an existing type. Because inheritance is a compile-time declaration, you and the compiler can understand the operation and detect errors. Interface inheritance can be used to programmatically enforce that a class expose a particular API. Again, the compiler can detect errors, in this case, when a class does not define a necessary method of the API. Cons: For implementation inheritance, because the code implementing a sub-class is spread between the base and the sub-class, it can be more difficult to understand an implementation. The sub-class cannot override functions that are not virtual, so the sub-class cannot change implementation. The base class may also define some data members, so that specifies physical layout of the base class. Decision: All inheritance should be public. If you want to do private inheritance, you should be including an instance of the base class as a member instead. Do not overuse implementation inheritance. Composition is often more appropriate. Try to restrict use of inheritance to the "is-a" case: Bar subclasses Foo if it can reasonably be said that Bar "is a kind of" Foo. Make your destructor virtual if necessary. If your class has virtual methods, its destructor should be virtual. Limit the use of protected to those member functions that might need to be accessed from subclasses. Note that data members should be private. When redefining an inherited virtual function, explicitly declare it virtual in the declaration of the derived class. Rationale: If virtual is omitted, the reader has to check all ancestors of the class in question to determine if the function is virtual or not. Multiple Inheritance link ▶Only very rarely is multiple implementation inheritance actually useful. We allow multiple inheritance only when at most one of the base classes has an implementation; all other base classes must be pure interface classes tagged with the Interface suffix. Definition: Multiple inheritance allows a sub-class to have more than one base class. We distinguish between base classes that are pure interfaces and those that have an implementation. Pros: Multiple implementation inheritance may let you re-use even more code than single inheritance (see Inheritance). Cons: Only very rarely is multiple implementation inheritance actually useful. When multiple implementation inheritance seems like the solution, you can usually find a different, more explicit, and cleaner solution. Decision: Multiple inheritance is allowed only when all superclasses, with the possible exception of the first one, are pure interfaces. In order to ensure that they remain pure interfaces, they must end with the Interface suffix. Note: There is an exception to this rule on Windows. Interfaces link ▶Classes that satisfy certain conditions are allowed, but not required, to end with an Interface suffix. Definition: A class is a pure interface if it meets the following requirements: It has only public pure virtual ("= 0") methods and static methods (but see below for destructor). It may not have non-static data members. It need not have any constructors defined. If a constructor is provided, it must take no arguments and it must be protected. If it is a subclass, it may only be derived from classes that satisfy these conditions and are tagged with the Interface suffix. An interface class can never be directly instantiated because of the pure virtual method(s) it declares. To make sure all implementations of the interface can be destroyed correctly, they must also declare a virtual destructor (in an exception to the first rule, this should not be pure). See Stroustrup, The C++ Programming Language, 3rd edition, section 12.4 for details. Pros: Tagging a class with the Interface suffix lets others know that they must not add implemented methods or non static data members. This is particularly important in the case of multiple inheritance. Additionally, the interface concept is already well-understood by Java programmers. Cons: The Interface suffix lengthens the class name, which can make it harder to read and understand. Also, the interface property may be considered an implementation detail that shouldn't be exposed to clients. Decision: A class may end with Interface only if it meets the above requirements. We do not require the converse, however: classes that meet the above requirements are not required to end with Interface. Operator Overloading link ▶Do not overload operators except in rare, special circumstances. Definition: A class can define that operators such as + and / operate on the class as if it were a built-in type. Pros: Can make code appear more intuitive because a class will behave in the same way as built-in types (such as int). Overloaded operators are more playful names for functions that are less-colorfully named, such as Equals() or Add(). For some template functions to work correctly, you may need to define operators. Cons: While operator overloading can make code more intuitive, it has several drawbacks: It can fool our intuition into thinking that expensive operations are cheap, built-in operations. It is much harder to find the call sites for overloaded operators. Searching for Equals() is much easier than searching for relevant invocations of ==. Some operators work on pointers too, making it easy to introduce bugs. Foo + 4 may do one thing, while &Foo + 4 does something totally different. The compiler does not complain for either of these, making this very hard to debug. Overloading also has surprising ramifications. For instance, if a class overloads unary operator&, it cannot safely be forward-declared. Decision: In general, do not overload operators. The assignment operator (operator=), in particular, is insidious and should be avoided. You can define functions like Equals() and CopyFrom() if you need them. Likewise, avoid the dangerous unary operator& at all costs, if there's any possibility the class might be forward-declared. However, there may be rare cases where you need to overload an operator to interoperate with templates or "standard" C++ classes (such as operator<<(ostream&, const T&) for logging). These are acceptable if fully justified, but you should try to avoid these whenever possible. In particular, do not overload operator== or operator< just so that your class can be used as a key in an STL container; instead, you should create equality and comparison functor types when declaring the container. Some of the STL algorithms do require you to overload operator==, and you may do so in these cases, provided you document why. See also Copy Constructors and Function Overloading. Access Control link ▶Make data members private, and provide access to them through accessor functions as needed (for technical reasons, we allow data members of a test fixture class to be protected when using Google Test). Typically a variable would be called foo_ and the accessor function foo(). You may also want a mutator function set_foo(). Exception: static const data members (typically called kFoo) need not be private. The definitions of accessors are usually inlined in the header file. See also Inheritance and Function Names. Declaration Order link ▶Use the specified order of declarations within a class: public: before private:, methods before data members (variables), etc. Your class definition should start with its public: section, followed by its protected: section and then its private: section. If any of these sections are empty, omit them. Within each section, the declarations generally should be in the following order: Typedefs and Enums Constants (static const data members) Constructors Destructor Methods, including static methods Data Members (except static const data members) Friend declarations should always be in the private section, and the DISALLOW_COPY_AND_ASSIGN macro invocation should be at the end of the private: section. It should be the last thing in the class. See Copy Constructors. Method definitions in the corresponding .cc file should be the same as the declaration order, as much as possible. Do not put large method definitions inline in the class definition. Usually, only trivial or performance-critical, and very short, methods may be defined inline. See Inline Functions for more details. Write Short Functions link ▶Prefer small and focused functions. We recognize that long functions are sometimes appropriate, so no hard limit is placed on functions length. If a function exceeds about 40 lines, think about whether it can be broken up without harming the structure of the program. Even if your long function works perfectly now, someone modifying it in a few months may add new behavior. This could result in bugs that are hard to find. Keeping your functions short and simple makes it easier for other people to read and modify your code. You could find long and complicated functions when working with some code. Do not be intimidated by modifying existing code: if working with such a function proves to be difficult, you find that errors are hard to debug, or you want to use a piece of it in several different contexts, consider breaking up the function into smaller and more manageable pieces. Google-Specific Magic There are various tricks and utilities that we use to make C++ code more robust, and various ways we use C++ that may differ from what you see elsewhere. Smart Pointers link ▶If you actually need pointer semantics, scoped_ptr is great. You should only use std::tr1::shared_ptr under very specific conditions, such as when objects need to be held by STL containers. You should never use auto_ptr. "Smart" pointers are objects that act like pointers but have added semantics. When a scoped_ptr is destroyed, for instance, it deletes the object it's pointing to. shared_ptr is the same way, but implements reference-counting so only the last pointer to an object deletes it. Generally speaking, we prefer that we design code with clear object ownership. The clearest object ownership is obtained by using an object directly as a field or local variable, without using pointers at all. On the other extreme, by their very definition, reference counted pointers are owned by nobody. The problem with this design is that it is easy to create circular references or other strange conditions that cause an object to never be deleted. It is also slow to perform atomic operations every time a value is copied or assigned. Although they are not recommended, reference counted pointers are sometimes the simplest and most elegant way to solve a problem. cpplint link ▶Use cpplint.py to detect style errors. cpplint.py is a tool that reads a source file and identifies many style errors. It is not perfect, and has both false positives and false negatives, but it is still a valuable tool. False positives can be ignored by putting // NOLINT at the end of the line. Some projects have instructions on how to run cpplint.py from their project tools. If the project you are contributing to does not, you can download cpplint.py separately. Other C++ Features Reference Arguments link ▶All parameters passed by reference must be labeled const. Definition: In C, if a function needs to modify a variable, the parameter must use a pointer, eg int foo(int *pval). In C++, the function can alternatively declare a reference parameter: int foo(int &val). Pros: Defining a parameter as reference avoids ugly code like (*pval)++. Necessary for some applications like copy constructors. Makes it clear, unlike with pointers, that NULL is not a possible value. Cons: References can be confusing, as they have value syntax but pointer semantics. Decision: Within function parameter lists all references must be const: void Foo(const string &in, string *out); In fact it is a very strong convention in Google code that input arguments are values or const references while output arguments are pointers. Input parameters may be const pointers, but we never allow non-const reference parameters. One case when you might want an input parameter to be a const pointer is if you want to emphasize that the argument is not copied, so it must exist for the lifetime of the object; it is usually best to document this in comments as well. STL adapters such as bind2nd and mem_fun do not permit reference parameters, so you must declare functions with pointer parameters in these cases, too. Function Overloading link ▶Use overloaded functions (including constructors) only if a reader looking at a call site can get a good idea of what is happening without having to first figure out exactly which overload is being called. Definition: You may write a function that takes a const string& and overload it with another that takes const char*. class MyClass { public: void Analyze(const string &text); void Analyze(const char *text, size_t textlen); }; Pros: Overloading can make code more intuitive by allowing an identically-named function to take different arguments. It may be necessary for templatized code, and it can be convenient for Visitors. Cons: If a function is overloaded by the argument types alone, a reader may have to understand C++'s complex matching rules in order to tell what's going on. Also many people are confused by the semantics of inheritance if a derived class overrides only some of the variants of a function. Decision: If you want to overload a function, consider qualifying the name with some information about the arguments, e.g., AppendString(), AppendInt() rather than just Append(). Default Arguments link ▶We do not allow default function parameters, except in a few uncommon situations explained below. Pros: Often you have a function that uses lots of default values, but occasionally you want to override the defaults. Default parameters allow an easy way to do this without having to define many functions for the rare exceptions. Cons: People often figure out how to use an API by looking at existing code that uses it. Default parameters are more difficult to maintain because copy-and-paste from previous code may not reveal all the parameters. Copy-and-pasting of code segments can cause major problems when the default arguments are not appropriate for the new code. Decision: Except as described below, we require all arguments to be explicitly specified, to force programmers to consider the API and the values they are passing for each argument rather than silently accepting defaults they may not be aware of. One specific exception is when default arguments are used to simulate variable-length argument lists. // Support up to 4 params by using a default empty AlphaNum. string StrCat(const AlphaNum &a, const AlphaNum &b = gEmptyAlphaNum, const AlphaNum &c = gEmptyAlphaNum, const AlphaNum &d = gEmptyAlphaNum); Variable-Length Arrays and alloca() link ▶We do not allow variable-length arrays or alloca(). Pros: Variable-length arrays have natural-looking syntax. Both variable-length arrays and alloca() are very efficient. Cons: Variable-length arrays and alloca are not part of Standard C++. More importantly, they allocate a data-dependent amount of stack space that can trigger difficult-to-find memory overwriting bugs: "It ran fine on my machine, but dies mysteriously in production". Decision: Use a safe allocator instead, such as scoped_ptr/scoped_array. Friends link ▶We allow use of friend classes and functions, within reason. Friends should usually be defined in the same file so that the reader does not have to look in another file to find uses of the private members of a class. A common use of friend is to have a FooBuilder class be a friend of Foo so that it can construct the inner state of Foo correctly, without exposing this state to the world. In some cases it may be useful to make a unittest class a friend of the class it tests. Friends extend, but do not break, the encapsulation boundary of a class. In some cases this is better than making a member public when you want to give only one other class access to it. However, most classes should interact with other classes solely through their public members. Exceptions link ▶We do not use C++ exceptions. Pros: Exceptions allow higher levels of an application to decide how to handle "can't happen" failures in deeply nested functions, without the obscuring and error-prone bookkeeping of error codes. Exceptions are used by most other modern languages. Using them in C++ would make it more consistent with Python, Java, and the C++ that others are familiar with. Some third-party C++ libraries use exceptions, and turning them off internally makes it harder to integrate with those libraries. Exceptions are the only way for a constructor to fail. We can simulate this with a factory function or an Init() method, but these require heap allocation or a new "invalid" state, respectively. Exceptions are really handy in testing frameworks. Cons: When you add a throw statement to an existing function, you must examine all of its transitive callers. Either they must make at least the basic exception safety guarantee, or they must never catch the exception and be happy with the program terminating as a result. For instance, if f() calls g() calls h(), and h throws an exception that f catches, g has to be careful or it may not clean up properly. More generally, exceptions make the control flow of programs difficult to evaluate by looking at code: functions may return in places you don't expect. This causes maintainability and debugging difficulties. You can minimize this cost via some rules on how and where exceptions can be used, but at the cost of more that a developer needs to know and understand. Exception safety requires both RAII and different coding practices. Lots of supporting machinery is needed to make writing correct exception-safe code easy. Further, to avoid requiring readers to understand the entire call graph, exception-safe code must isolate logic that writes to persistent state into a "commit" phase. This will have both benefits and costs (perhaps where you're forced to obfuscate code to isolate the commit). Allowing exceptions would force us to always pay those costs even when they're not worth it. Turning on exceptions adds data to each binary produced, increasing compile time (probably slightly) and possibly increasing address space pressure. The availability of exceptions may encourage developers to throw them when they are not appropriate or recover from them when it's not safe to do so. For example, invalid user input should not cause exceptions to be thrown. We would need to make the style guide even longer to document these restrictions! Decision: On their face, the benefits of using exceptions outweigh the costs, especially in new projects. However, for existing code, the introduction of exceptions has implications on all dependent code. If exceptions can be propagated beyond a new project, it also becomes problematic to integrate the new project into existing exception-free code. Because most existing C++ code at Google is not prepared to deal with exceptions, it is comparatively difficult to adopt new code that generates exceptions. Given that Google's existing code is not exception-tolerant, the costs of using exceptions are somewhat greater than the costs in a new project. The conversion process would be slow and error-prone. We don't believe that the available alternatives to exceptions, such as error codes and assertions, introduce a significant burden. Our advice against using exceptions is not predicated on philosophical or moral grounds, but practical ones. Because we'd like to use our open-source projects at Google and it's difficult to do so if those projects use exceptions, we need to advise against exceptions in Google open-source projects as well. Things would probably be different if we had to do it all over again from scratch. There is an exception to this rule (no pun intended) for Windows code. Run-Time Type Information (RTTI) link ▶We do not use Run Time Type Information (RTTI). Definition: RTTI allows a programmer to query the C++ class of an object at run time. Pros: It is useful in some unittests. For example, it is useful in tests of factory classes where the test has to verify that a newly created object has the expected dynamic type. In rare circumstances, it is useful even outside of tests. Cons: A query of type during run-time typically means a design problem. If you need to know the type of an object at runtime, that is often an indication that you should reconsider the design of your class. Decision: Do not use RTTI, except in unittests. If you find yourself in need of writing code that behaves differently based on the class of an object, consider one of the alternatives to querying the type. Virtual methods are the preferred way of executing different code paths depending on a specific subclass type. This puts the work within the object itself. If the work belongs outside the object and instead in some processing code, consider a double-dispatch solution, such as the Visitor design pattern. This allows a facility outside the object itself to determine the type of class using the built-in type system. If you think you truly cannot use those ideas, you may use RTTI. But think twice about it. :-) Then think twice again. Do not hand-implement an RTTI-like workaround. The arguments against RTTI apply just as much to workarounds like class hierarchies with type tags. Casting link ▶Use C++ casts like static_cast(). Do not use other cast formats like int y = (int)x; or int y = int(x);. Definition: C++ introduced a different cast system from C that distinguishes the types of cast operations. Pros: The problem with C casts is the ambiguity of the operation; sometimes you are doing a conversion (e.g., (int)3.5) and sometimes you are doing a cast (e.g., (int)"hello"); C++ casts avoid this. Additionally C++ casts are more visible when searching for them. Cons: The syntax is nasty. Decision: Do not use C-style casts. Instead, use these C++-style casts. Use static_cast as the equivalent of a C-style cast that does value conversion, or when you need to explicitly up-cast a pointer from a class to its superclass. Use const_cast to remove the const qualifier (see const). Use reinterpret_cast to do unsafe conversions of pointer types to and from integer and other pointer types. Use this only if you know what you are doing and you understand the aliasing issues. Do not use dynamic_cast except in test code. If you need to know type information at runtime in this way outside of a unittest, you probably have a design flaw. Streams link ▶Use streams only for logging. Definition: Streams are a replacement for printf() and scanf(). Pros: With streams, you do not need to know the type of the object you are printing. You do not have problems with format strings not matching the argument list. (Though with gcc, you do not have that problem with printf either.) Streams have automatic constructors and destructors that open and close the relevant files. Cons: Streams make it difficult to do functionality like pread(). Some formatting (particularly the common format string idiom %.*s) is difficult if not impossible to do efficiently using streams without using printf-like hacks. Streams do not support operator reordering (the %1s directive), which is helpful for internationalization. Decision: Do not use streams, except where required by a logging interface. Use printf-like routines instead. There are various pros and cons to using streams, but in this case, as in many other cases, consistency trumps the debate. Do not use streams in your code. Extended Discussion There has been debate on this issue, so this explains the reasoning in greater depth. Recall the Only One Way guiding principle: we want to make sure that whenever we do a certain type of I/O, the code looks the same in all those places. Because of this, we do not want to allow users to decide between using streams or using printf plus Read/Write/etc. Instead, we should settle on one or the other. We made an exception for logging because it is a pretty specialized application, and for historical reasons. Proponents of streams have argued that streams are the obvious choice of the two, but the issue is not actually so clear. For every advantage of streams they point out, there is an equivalent disadvantage. The biggest advantage is that you do not need to know the type of the object to be printing. This is a fair point. But, there is a downside: you can easily use the wrong type, and the compiler will not warn you. It is easy to make this kind of mistake without knowing when using streams. cout << this; // Prints the address cout << *this; // Prints the contents The compiler does not generate an error because << has been overloaded. We discourage overloading for just this reason. Some say printf formatting is ugly and hard to read, but streams are often no better. Consider the following two fragments, both with the same typo. Which is easier to discover? cerr << "Error connecting to '" <bar()->hostname.first << ":" <bar()->hostname.second << ": " <bar()->hostname.first, foo->bar()->hostname.second, strerror(errno)); And so on and so forth for any issue you might bring up. (You could argue, "Things would be better with the right wrappers," but if it is true for one scheme, is it not also true for the other? Also, remember the goal is to make the language smaller, not add yet more machinery that someone has to learn.) Either path would yield different advantages and disadvantages, and there is not a clearly superior solution. The simplicity doctrine mandates we settle on one of them though, and the majority decision was on printf + read/write. Preincrement and Predecrement link ▶Use prefix form (++i) of the increment and decrement operators with iterators and other template objects. Definition: When a variable is incremented (++i or i++) or decremented (--i or i--) and the value of the expression is not used, one must decide whether to preincrement (decrement) or postincrement (decrement). Pros: When the return value is ignored, the "pre" form (++i) is never less efficient than the "post" form (i++), and is often more efficient. This is because post-increment (or decrement) requires a copy of i to be made, which is the value of the expression. If i is an iterator or other non-scalar type, copying i could be expensive. Since the two types of increment behave the same when the value is ignored, why not just always pre-increment? Cons: The tradition developed, in C, of using post-increment when the expression value is not used, especially in for loops. Some find post-increment easier to read, since the "subject" (i) precedes the "verb" (++), just like in English. Decision: For simple scalar (non-object) values there is no reason to prefer one form and we allow either. For iterators and other template types, use pre-increment. Use of const link ▶We strongly recommend that you use const whenever it makes sense to do so. Definition: Declared variables and parameters can be preceded by the keyword const to indicate the variables are not changed (e.g., const int foo). Class functions can have the const qualifier to indicate the function does not change the state of the class member variables (e.g., class Foo { int Bar(char c) const; };). Pros: Easier for people to understand how variables are being used. Allows the compiler to do better type checking, and, conceivably, generate better code. Helps people convince themselves of program correctness because they know the functions they call are limited in how they can modify your variables. Helps people know what functions are safe to use without locks in multi-threaded programs. Cons: const is viral: if you pass a const variable to a function, that function must have const in its prototype (or the variable will need a const_cast). This can be a particular problem when calling library functions. Decision: const variables, data members, methods and arguments add a level of compile-time type checking; it is better to detect errors as soon as possible. Therefore we strongly recommend that you use const whenever it makes sense to do so: If a function does not modify an argument passed by reference or by pointer, that argument should be const. Declare methods to be const whenever possible. Accessors should almost always be const. Other methods should be const if they do not modify any data members, do not call any non-const methods, and do not return a non-const pointer or non-const reference to a data member. Consider making data members const whenever they do not need to be modified after construction. However, do not go crazy with const. Something like const int * const * const x; is likely overkill, even if it accurately describes how const x is. Focus on what's really useful to know: in this case, const int** x is probably sufficient. The mutable keyword is allowed but is unsafe when used with threads, so thread safety should be carefully considered first. Where to put the const Some people favor the form int const *foo to const int* foo. They argue that this is more readable because it's more consistent: it keeps the rule that const always follows the object it's describing. However, this consistency argument doesn't apply in this case, because the "don't go crazy" dictum eliminates most of the uses you'd have to be consistent with. Putting the const first is arguably more readable, since it follows English in putting the "adjective" (const) before the "noun" (int). That said, while we encourage putting const first, we do not require it. But be consistent with the code around you! Integer Types link ▶Of the built-in C++ integer types, the only one used is int. If a program needs a variable of a different size, use a precise-width integer type from , such as int16_t. Definition: C++ does not specify the sizes of its integer types. Typically people assume that short is 16 bits, int is 32 bits, long is 32 bits and long long is 64 bits. Pros: Uniformity of declaration. Cons: The sizes of integral types in C++ can vary based on compiler and architecture. Decision: defines types like int16_t, uint32_t, int64_t, etc. You should always use those in preference to short, unsigned long long and the like, when you need a guarantee on the size of an integer. Of the C integer types, only int should be used. When appropriate, you are welcome to use standard types like size_t and ptrdiff_t. We use int very often, for integers we know are not going to be too big, e.g., loop counters. Use plain old int for such things. You should assume that an int is at least 32 bits, but don't assume that it has more than 32 bits. If you need a 64-bit integer type, use int64_t or uint64_t. For integers we know can be "big", use int64_t. You should not use the unsigned integer types such as uint32_t, unless the quantity you are representing is really a bit pattern rather than a number, or unless you need defined twos-complement overflow. In particular, do not use unsigned types to say a number will never be negative. Instead, use assertions for this. On Unsigned Integers Some people, including some textbook authors, recommend using unsigned types to represent numbers that are never negative. This is intended as a form of self-documentation. However, in C, the advantages of such documentation are outweighed by the real bugs it can introduce. Consider: for (unsigned int i = foo.Length()-1; i >= 0; --i) ... This code will never terminate! Sometimes gcc will notice this bug and warn you, but often it will not. Equally bad bugs can occur when comparing signed and unsigned variables. Basically, C's type-promotion scheme causes unsigned types to behave differently than one might expect. So, document that a variable is non-negative using assertions. Don't use an unsigned type. 64-bit Portability link ▶Code should be 64-bit and 32-bit friendly. Bear in mind problems of printing, comparisons, and structure alignment. printf() specifiers for some types are not cleanly portable between 32-bit and 64-bit systems. C99 defines some portable format specifiers. Unfortunately, MSVC 7.1 does not understand some of these specifiers and the standard is missing a few, so we have to define our own ugly versions in some cases (in the style of the standard include file inttypes.h): // printf macros for size_t, in the style of inttypes.h #ifdef _LP64 #define __PRIS_PREFIX "z" #else #define __PRIS_PREFIX #endif // Use these macros after a % in a printf format string // to get correct 32/64 bit behavior, like this: // size_t size = records.size(); // printf("%"PRIuS"\n", size); #define PRIdS __PRIS_PREFIX "d" #define PRIxS __PRIS_PREFIX "x" #define PRIuS __PRIS_PREFIX "u" #define PRIXS __PRIS_PREFIX "X" #define PRIoS __PRIS_PREFIX "o" Type DO NOT use DO use Notes void * (or any pointer) %lx %p int64_t %qd, %lld %"PRId64" uint64_t %qu, %llu, %llx %"PRIu64", %"PRIx64" size_t %u %"PRIuS", %"PRIxS" C99 specifies %zu ptrdiff_t %d %"PRIdS" C99 specifies %zd Note that the PRI* macros expand to independent strings which are concatenated by the compiler. Hence if you are using a non-constant format string, you need to insert the value of the macro into the format, rather than the name. It is still possible, as usual, to include length specifiers, etc., after the % when using the PRI* macros. So, e.g. printf("x = %30"PRIuS"\n", x) would expand on 32-bit Linux to printf("x = %30" "u" "\n", x), which the compiler will treat as printf("x = %30u\n", x). Remember that sizeof(void *) != sizeof(int). Use intptr_t if you want a pointer-sized integer. You may need to be careful with structure alignments, particularly for structures being stored on disk. Any class/structure with a int64_t/uint64_t member will by default end up being 8-byte aligned on a 64-bit system. If you have such structures being shared on disk between 32-bit and 64-bit code, you will need to ensure that they are packed the same on both architectures. Most compilers offer a way to alter structure alignment. For gcc, you can use __attribute__((packed)). MSVC offers #pragma pack() and __declspec(align()). Use the LL or ULL suffixes a
----------ChromeDriver v2.23 (2016-08-04)---------- Supports Chrome v51-53 Resolved issue 1378: Android 6: Intitialization of Chrome driver fails when Chrome/Webview process is in running (R) state [['OS-Android', 'Pri-1']] Resolved issue 1379: Chromedriver does not catch all available browser console log entries [['OS-All', 'Pri-2']] ----------ChromeDriver v2.22 (2016-06-06)---------- Supports Chrome v49-52 Resolved issue 1348: Timeout error while navigating to URL on Chrome 51+ [['OS-All', 'Pri-0']] Resolved issue 1381: Timeout error occurs when alert dialog is displayed on Chrome 52+ [['OS-All', 'Pri-1', 'merge-merged-2743']] Resolved issue 1339: Failure when executing JS in a content script context [['OS-All', 'Pri-1']] Resolved issue 1387: ChromeDriver hangs when calling driver.get() for same-process navigations [['OS-All', 'Pri-1']] Resolved issue 1365: Touch emulation is not working under mobile emulation in Chrome 50+ [['OS-All', 'Pri-1']] Resolved issue 1224: Chrome WebDriver throws an exception when trying to click a button inside a frame [['OS-All', 'Pri-2']] Resolved issue 107: ChromeDriver Won't Switch To Frame inside nested frameset [['OS-All', 'Pri-2']] Resolved issue 1368: ExecuteScript returns "Cannot read property 'document' of null" [[]] Resolved issue 1355: Session not created exception when connecting to existing browser on localhost [[]] Resolved issue 1331: "chromeOptions.excludeSwitches" is not working on Android [[]] ----------ChromeDriver v2.21 (2016-01-28)---------- Supports Chrome v46-50 Resolved issue 1276: empty FindElement response is returned while trying to find element with tagname object/embed [['OS-All', 'Pri-1']] Resolved issue 1272: GET url returns "data:text/html,chromewebdata" [['OS-All', 'Pri-2']] Resolved issue 1310: ChromeDriver hangs (and times out) when inspecting inactive background pages [['OS-All', 'Pri-2']] Resolved issue 824: ChromeDriver creates two cookies when the cookie to add contains the domain [['OS-All', 'Pri-2']] Resolved issue 1274: ExecuteScript sends script to wrong execution context [['OS-All', 'Pri-2']] Resolved issue 1249: Change "get current URL" behavior in ChromeDriver [['OS-All', 'Pri-2']] Resolved issue 904: include Alert text in UnhandledAlertError stack trace [['OS-All', 'Pri-2']] Resolved issue 474: getAttribute() fails when attribute name has colon (:) character [['OS-All', 'Pri-3']] Resolved issue 1245: Unable to switch to 1st opened window in session [[]] Resolved issue 1290: Cannot access elements from subframes [[]] Resolved issue 1261: getTitle() should return empty string instead of page url when page title is empty [[]] Resolved issue 1238: testExecuteInRemovedFrame fails on waterfall bots [['OS-All']] Resolved issue 1246: Chromedriver version number is not displayed in logs/ getCapabilities() [['OS-All']] ----------ChromeDriver v2.20 (2015-10-08)---------- Supports Chrome v43-48 Resolved issue 1225: RESPONSE InitSession unknown error: Device <device_id> is not online [['OS-Android', 'Pri-0']] Resolved issue 960: ChromeDriver support to access WebView elements [['OS-All', 'Pri-2']] Resolved issue 1229: Spec violation: /sessions endpoint returns session ID at `sessionId` key instead of `id` key [['OS-All', 'Pri-2']] ----------ChromeDriver v2.19 (2015-08-28)---------- Supports Chrome v43-47 Resolved issue 1167: Various issues with ChromeDriver navigation tracker [['OS-All', 'Pri-1']] Resolved issue 1205: Chrome crashes when enabling touch emulation [['OS-Mac', 'OS-Windows', 'Pri-1']] Resolved issue 1142: cookies' httponly attribute is not returned [['Pri-2']] ----------ChromeDriver v2.18 (2015-08-19)---------- Supports Chrome v43-46 Resolved issue 1158: Unable to find elements after installing Chrome 44 [['ChromeDriver-2.17', 'OS-All', 'Pri-1']] Resolved issue 635: Implement touch actions for android chrome [['OS-Android', 'Pri-2']] Resolved issue 1194: unknown error: cannot determine loading status from disconnected: received Inspector.detached event [[]]
******************************************* ************ WPTOOLS 6 History ************ ********** http://www.wpcubed.com ********* **** Copyright (C) 2012 J. Ziersch and **** **** WPCubed GmbH, Munich, Germany ******** ******************************************* * - = bug fix * + = new feature * * = changed, expanded feature ******************************************* * IMPORTANT: Please edit file WPINC.INC to * activate WPREPORTER, WPSPELL, wPDF, TBX * and GraphicEx / PNGImage support! * Delphi 2009 and later as inbuilt PNGImage ******************************************* * THE MANUAL (PDF) AND REFERENCE (HLP,CHM) * ARE PROVIDED AS SEPERATE DOWNLOADS! ******************************************* ~~~~~~~~~~ Important Notes ~~~~~~~~~~~~ - With Delphi XE2 or XE3 it is possible to compile WPTools into a 64 bit applications. You need WPTools 6 PRO or WPTools 6 Premium for this. - Localization and Inch/CM selection see http://www.wpcubed.com/manuals/wp5man/index.html?localization.htm Also see demo\tasks\localization. There are the required XML files. - if flag wpDontAddExternalFontLeading is active in property FormatOptionsEx the text will be formatted more like WPTools4/MS-Word. You can alternatively set global variable WPDoNotAddExternalFontLeading := TRUE and select the Printer WYSIWYG mode: TWPRichText1.HeaderFooter.UpdateReformatMode(true) - The FormatOption wpDisableAutosizeTables can be required for good display of tables. wpNoMinimumCellPadding for narrow layout, too. - If you plan to use DBWPRichText please check http://www.wpcubed.com/forum/viewtopic.php?p=3456 - The reader/writer receive their options through "FormatStrings" please see list at http://www.wpcubed.com/manuals/formatstrings.htm - WPTools is configured using the file WPINC.INC, here WPREPORTER is activated and the optional WPShared, WPSPell and wPDF can be selected to be compiled into main WPTools package. - also see FAQ: http://www.wpcubed.com/forum/viewforum.php?f=15 - and support forum: http://www.wpcubed.com/forum/ - WPTools 6 PRO and PREMIUM will be compiled as Version 5 if $define "WP6" is not set ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ We recommend to use TMS components to create modern user interfaces, toolbars and ribbons. 19.2.2013 - WPTools 6.29.1 - fix in rtf writing code to solve problem with merged cells - fix possible rangecheck error - fix problem with TextObject.LoadFromFile and Delphi XE3 * RTF reader now handles UNC file links which use "\\" in the path * the cursor was not painted if DoubleBuffered was set to true for the parent of the editor + WPTools Premium: Saves and loads \column * improved theming of TWPToolbar and TWPToolPanel + new event: OnPaintDesktopBackground. It can be used to draw the parent of the editor, for example if it is a TMS panel or pager control. Example: procedure TForm1.WPRichText1PaintDesktopBackground(Sender: TObject; Canvas: TCanvas; R: TRect); begin // This would paint the TWPRichText, too - but TWPRichText is locked for repaint during this event AdvOfficePager1.PaintTo(Canvas, -WPRichText1.Left, -WPRichText1.Top); end; - HighlightTextColor can now also be used if 2Pass Painting is used 21.12.2012 - WPTools 6.29 - images in RTF label were not painted when label was moved + added support for XE3 to WPTools STD edition * stream RTFvariables were not loaded from WPT format. They are loaded now. 9.11.2012 - WPTools 6.28 - Update to RTF reader to load landscape flag for sections better - when page mirror was used, after a page break the text indentation was sometimes wrong - hyphenation code was broken - workaround for word files which have space characters in table definitions 16.10.2012 - WPTools 6.27'' * some additions to the PRO edition for XE3 26.9.2012 - WPTools 6.27' * The PRO Version now supports Delphi XE3 3.8.2012 - WPTools 6.27 - fix for wrong display of tables with header and footer rows. Sometimes both were painted without any data. + to load old Hiedit templates as RTF code use the formatstring -HiEditFields. This will create merge fields for ALL fields. - NL sign was not shown right after CTRL+ENTER was pressed (requires ShowNL) - fix for rangecheck exception with paintpages array - fix for footer and page mirror - doubleclick word selection now stops at NL - Workaround for Windows Spooler problems - some images would get lost - sections use footer and header of previous section, not general - ASetBorder did change all border types 12.3.2012 - WPTools 6.25.4 * allows changing of column width in redonly editors. Can be switchoed off in EditOptions or set compiler define TOTALREADONLY + wpDisableSelectAll in EditOptionsEx2 * changed reformat/repaint after Undo/Redo - pro and premium: Due to a problem with precompiler cursoir selection did not work correctly 8.3.2012 - WPTools 6.25.3' - borders for paragraphs with multiple lines were not drawn correctly - change in DBWPRich.pas to use LoadFromString instead of Text - fix possible range check error - change in WPTbar.pas to use different default for BevelOuter - change in WPIOHTML to use default charattr of paragraph is a paragraph is empty 9.2.2012 - WPTools 6.25.2 * new 2-pass painting triggers CustomPaint event only on second loop (when the text is painted) * changed protection of empty paragraph to WPTools 5 way + inside of the OnPrepareImageForSaving event it is now possible to set Writer.CurrentImageName to the name of the file which should be saved. This is only useful if ObjRef = nil and so no ObjRef.Filename can be set. + TParagraph.GetSubText now has optional parameter to disable the object reference char codes #1, #2 and #3 * HTML writer ignores #13 codes when writing the text. * additional savety code in HTML writer * HTML reader sets image width and height to contents, (if possible) * HTML reader: changes UTF8 handling for UTF8Sequence=1 * HTML reader does not stop on \0 anymore * HTML writer writes img tag also for empty images IF a name is provided in event PrepareImageforSaving * HTML reader does not add space at end anymore - the UNICODE reader uses attribute of current paragraph. This is important for consistent behaviour between ANSI and UNICODE version - when writing HTML background color is not set to white when shading is 0. 0 is treated as default value. - image align center and right now works in HTML - fix an endless loop when image was too large - improvement of table border drawing - improvement for right align in table cells + numbering will be used when wpFormatAsWebpage was set in AsWebpage 10.1.2012 - WPTools 6.25 + HTML reader reads cell heighs - RTF writer writes background color easier to understand by Word * improved XML reader/writer (unit WPIOXml1) * improved word wise cursor movement when fields are used + new "paint attributes" mode. Use WPRichText1.BrushStart to select this mode. - dashes were not painted using the current font color - some stability improvements 7.11.2011 - WPTools 6.22 + procedure TParagraph.CellSelectionAdd; + procedure CellSelectionRemove; + EditOptionsEx2: wpCellMultiSelect - allows multiselection in tables when CTRL is pressed + improved XML import/export (unit WPIOXML1.PAS) - some smaller bugs fixed 3.11.2011 - WPTools 6.21.2 - fix problem with TWPToolButton - improved HTML writer to write parameters in "" - improved display of arabic text 24.10.2011 - WPTools 6.21.1 - fix problem when painting insertpoints after tab stops. They were painted two times. - fix in XML and HTML writer. Close tags when extracting text from fields 19.10.2011 - WPTools 6.21 + CodeLocate can now also accessed in non-visual TWPRTFDataCollection and not just TWPCustomRtfEdit + CodeSelect can now also accessed in non-visual TWPRTFDataCollection and not just TWPCustomRtfEdit + TWPRTFDataCollection.CodeLocatePair( FormatName : String; var spar, epar : TParagraph; var spos, epos, : Integer ) :Integer; - solves problem with integrated Bin64 decoder + DeleteField now has optional "Contents" parameter to delete a certain field with contents + the text writer now understand the option -softlinebreaks to create a \n at the end of every line. In fact all soft line breaks will be handled like the #10 code. + CodeLoadSaveEmbeddedText - load or save text in fields, bookmarks, hyperlinks + the regular save and load methods (LoadFromFile, SaveToFile) can now access text wrapped by paired objects. specify the fieldname in the format string, i.e. "f:name=RTF" to save or load the contents of the field "name". + There is an overloaded LoadFromString which expects a WideString as parameter (Delphi 6+) - The Setup named the Delphi 2009 files "Delphi 2005" due to a typo. (Delphi 2005 units are not included anymore) - fix probable range check error in WPRTEDEFS 13.10.2011 - WPTools 6.20 + completely new setup procedure. The PRO and Premium releases don't include object files which makes them much smaller. * compiled new WPTools 6 Reference (CHM file) * Delphi XE2: several small changes to improve theming support * Delphi XE2: several small changes to provide compatibilty to 64bit compiler (requires WPTools PRO) + new demo developed with Delphi XE2, showcases actions, splitscreen, simulated MDI and property dialogs (Demos\XE2\WPWord) + wpDeleteAtEOFRemovesSpaceAfter in EditOptionsEx2 - TextObjectsGetList did not work * WPRuler uses Delphi XE2 VCL Theme plus * added defaults to properties TWPRichText - change in RTF reader to let section inherit the default layout, not the current page layout - fix of problem with table borders when also PageMirror was used. * change to DeleteMarkedChar. It now has additional parameter DeleteEmptyParAndTables : Boolean * change in unit WPWordConv to handle RTF as DOC files if they do not start with "{\rtf" * updated border dialog TWPParagraphBorderDlgEx * updated border drawing code - now supports dotted lines with wider lines. * modified method DeleteColumn * modified WPT reading code to repair table width which were negative + improved image rendering code for transparent (PNG) images. They will be drawn transparently also when scaled and also in high resolution rendering mode. + new code to draw dotted lines which also supports wider lines + new function WPReplaceTokens (unit WPUtils.PAS). It is a ReplaceTokens function to be used on a TWPRTFDataCollection, not TWPRichText - WPPremium - fix problem when there were too columns * MergeText now restores before Merge Cursor position and selection (except for cell selection) * resizing a table column does not move the cursor to the nearby cell anymore * different frame line when resizing columns and rows + InsertColumn now also works if wpAllowSplitOfCombinedCellsOnly was used in EditOptionsEx + new event OnPaintTextFrameRect let you paint background and borders for text frames, i.e. the text body or, with WPTools Premium, custom frames. + WPPREMIUM: In OnMeasureTextPage it is possible to set columns for certain pages. Using PageInfo.colflags=1 it is possible to activate a line between the columns It is also possible to add custom frames using PageInfo.rtfpage.AddFrameRect. + new ViewOptionEx: wpHideParBordersBeforAndAfterPageBreaks + improved paint routine now avoids clipping of characters which were overlapping their bounding box, such as italic letters or "f". The improvement is especially visible when selecting text or using character background colors + WPPREMIUM: it is now possible to print a line between columns using wpShowColumnCenterLine in ViewOptionsEx + With WPTools Premium it is now possible to print a line between certain colums - use par.ASet(WPAT_COLFLAGS, WPCOLUM_LINE); + paragraph styles can now contain border definion for paragraphs + TWPTextObjList now has a IndexOfSource function and a Source[] string array to access the objects * revised code to draw double borders - always draws twou lines on screen even when zoomed * improved saving of numbering attributes with styles * style dialog can now apply number level even if style does not have numbering yet. * revised wpNoEditOutsideTable - was not checked for keyboard input * fix problem with - - - - - at end of line - fix problem with spell-as-you go after hyperlinks - fix problem with page numbers in sections when tables were spanning pages - fix problem with right aligned negative numbers in merge fields * automatic text attribute was not inherited to tables inserted in fields * images with mode "under text " can now be also clicked at positiones where there is no text. - WPLngCtr now defines DONT_OVERRIDE_COM, that fixes the IDE problem with DevExpress Toolbar controls 18.7.2011 - WPTools 6.16.2 * ObjectMode wpobjPositionAtCenter can be used to aligh character based images to the center line. (Other RTF reader will not understand this feature) * some changes to prepare 64bit compatibility (requires WPTools 6 PRO) 7.7.2011 - WPTools 6.16.1 * change to avoid flickering when doing auto scroll * message strings are now loaded from resource strings - modified DBCS support for RTF reader * outerborder action now works for sinle cells and paragraphs 15.6.2011 - WPTools 6.16 + Many improvements to new Border Dialog. It is now possible to apply borders and colors to odd and even rows only. * RTF reader defines symbol IGNORE_AUTOWIDTH_TBL. This disable the Word2010 auto width columns which are not read correctly. Reason: Word 2010 seem to always add an empty column to the end. + using WPRichText1.Caret.Blink:=true it is possible to activate the blinking caret (0.5sec interval). * updated actions to apply inner and outer borders to selected cells * update to ExSymbolDialog, Tab and Table dialog - improved WPTOOLS reader to read and apply outline properties to current outline setting (unless wpLoadDoesNotOverride is used) - wpsec_ResetPageNumber flag is now saved in WPTOOLS format * tripple click in margin selects paragraph + double click in margin selects current cell + tripple click in margin selects current row - change for PaintEngine and TWPRichTextLabel to not shrink tables which are small enough to fit the page This solves a problem with dissapearing text in WPRichTextLabel - fix selection problem when several images were linked to same paragraph - when moving images the Z order will not be reset - HTML Writer: A style with name "DIV" will be added to the style sheet to save the default font - HTML Writer: BaseFont tag will now be written with font size (requires -writebasefont option) - improved display of character background color for fields and other special code - Saving a style sheet did not work with Unicode Compiler 8.5.2011 - WPTools 6.15 * updated border painting * updated Inner/Outer Border Action * new object sizing routine lets the user make the size larger than the page - update in WPTools reader to overwrite outline styles when loading tzhe same group 9.3.2011 - WPTools 6.14.6 * change in format routine to fix problem when a nested table cell caused a page break. 14.12.2010 - WPTools 6.14 * fix for SetAsString code (Unicode Delphi) * several fixes and updates in editor * WPTools Premium: $define DONT_AUTOENTER_TEXTBOXES in WPINC.INC to switch of the behavior, that when editing a textbox the user can click on any other and edit that. 22.9.2010 - WPTools 6.13.3 * WPCtrMemo.PAS now defines TEXT_IS_UNICODE fro Delphi 2009 and later. Now the property Text and SelText reads and writes unicode strigs * change in RTF reader to read ANSI characters in the range 128..255 * Tables and rows can now be hidden. (TParagraph.Hidden) * The Lines property now supports unicode strings (Delphi 2009 and later) + HTML reader and writer now use the entitly ­ as soft hyphen 27.8.2010 - WPTools 6.13.2a + new ViewOptionEx wpUnderlineWebLinks. If active links like http://www.wptools.de will be drawn using the attributes for hyperlinks The HyperlinkCursor will be selected and the hyperlink event will be triggered * other fixes in RTF engine - Memo._OverrideCharset was not set to -1 27.7.2010 - WPTools 6.13.1 + WPRichText1.Memo.ColorGridLines can be used to change the color of the grid lines (ViewOptions) 23.7.2010 - WPTools 6.13 * several improvements of editor * improvement to RTF writer to when writing table cells * improved right aligned text * fixed problem with line heights of lines which are empty except for new line character 22.6.2010 - WPTools 6.12.1b - fix for problem when pressing Accent + Backspace - fix for WPReporter to assign default attribute to destination - fix for WPReporter to move images when converting templates 18.6.2010 - WPTools 6.12.1a * the new border dialog now reads the current border attributes from table cells, tables or selections - Premium: fix problem when loading columns which started on first line - fix in wpfUseKerning mode (FormatOptionsEx2) - it did not work as expected with some texts (We recommend to use wpfUseKerning - it produces better print quality on screen) * Pasting of HTML now works better - fix for right tabs when also borders were used 13.6.2010 - WPTools 6.12 + all new, powerful yet intuitive Border dialog. The border dialog can modify a range of selected cells, columns, rows, tables and also only modify certain properties while leaving the others unchanged. You need to activate the compiler symbol NEWBORDER to use it by default + new method: procedure SetBorderProperties(Inner, Outer: TWPTextStyle; ApplyMode : TWPParagraphBordApply; Mode : TWPUpdateBorderProperties = [wpSetBorderFlags, wpSetBorderType, wpSetBorderWidth, wpSetBorderColor, wpSetParColor, wpSetParShading]); This method is mainly used by the new border dialog. + new flags in ViewOptionsEx: wpShowCurrentCellAsSelected, // Displays current cell to be selected. Disables current selection wpShowCurrentRowAsSelected, // Displays current table row to be selected. Disables current selection wpShowCurrentTableAsSelected // Displays current table to be selected. Disables current selection + new property YOffsetNormal to defined an upper border for normal and wordwrap view. * feature Header.MarginMirror changed to work like MS Word new flag: wpMarginMirrorBookPrint in FormatOptionsEx2 to enable the previous logic * workaround for MouseWheel UP beeing triggered too often (10 mms check) + ClipboardOption wpcoDontPasteHTML to disable HTML pasting completely (avoid problems with firefox) + it is now possible to load base64 embedded JPEGs from HTML * it is now possible to change width of tables which exceed right margin - fix bug in HTML writer for lists in table cells - fix in RTF writer to write character colors also for text which is using a character style - fix: numbering was not always updated - fix: better use fonts in certain RTF files written by MS Word + Update to WPLanguageControl to make Localization easier to use. Only< this code is not required: procedure TForm1.WPLanguageControl1Loaded(Sender: TObject); begin WPLangInterface := TWPLocalizationInterface.Create(WPLanguageControl1); WPLocalizeAllStrings; end; 6.5.2010 - WPTools 6.11.2 * improvement to border rendering * improvement to XML unit WPIOXML1 (Premium) 5.5.2010 - WPTools 6.11.1 + ConvertTableToText now supports option to also handle soft line breaks - fix problems with underlines at end of line - fix problem when loading hyperlinks in RTF - fix problem when saving attributes to XML (WPTools Premium) - fix problem with text rendering - fix problem with tables which habe header row and pages with different header margin 19.4.2010 - WPTools 6.11 + EditOptionEx: wpRowMultiSelect + new event: OnInternPaintPar + new event: RTFDataCollection AfterApplyUndoObject 14.4.2010 - WPTools 6.10.6 * fields are now passed as unicode strings to PDF exporter * Delphi 2010/2009 import has been improved to load unicode values which are stroed in fields. 5.4.2010 - WPTools 6.10.5 + flag: wpDontExtendSelectionToRightMargin. Do not extend selection to end of line + wpInvertActiveRow in ViewOptionsEx - some fixes for Delphi 2009 and Delphi 2010 - fix for section support - WPTools premium: Fix for images in text boxes - workwaround to load RTF which use emfblib for pngblib 28.2.2010 - WPTools 6.10 - improve word left/right movement to skip hidden text - improve http load of images - improve support for numbering - improve saving of character style attributes 11.2.2010 - WPTools 6.09.1 + LoadFromString now has a "WithClear" parameter - fix in RTF reader to better load files which do not define codepage - fix in paint routine to solve a rare lockup - fix in format routine to improve section support 6.2.2010 - WPTools 6.09.1 - fix of problem in save routine when footnotes were used (WPTools premium) - fix in HTML writer - Image optiions now have a Rotation property which allows 90, 180 and 270 setting. - HTML reader and writer now support different colors for left,right,top, bottom lines 1.2.2010 - WPTools 6.09 - HTML writer will write 8 hard spaces for TAB stops at the start of a paragraph - HTML writer will write page information only if -PageInfo was used in format string - fix problem with left aligned text and image wrap around (wrong alignment) - fix problem with sometimes duplicated images in PDF export - fix problem with black rectangle in first line under Windows 7, 64 bit - Improvment to RTF reader to ignore section properties which are not followed by \sect 14.12.2009 - WPTools 6.08 - graphics are resized to fill text area - fixed problems in numbering - fixed problem with one word paragraphs in justified paragraphs - other improvements in editor 27.10.2009 - WPTools 6.07 - fixed one leaking TList per TWPRichText * improved layout of most important dialogs * improved extended insert symbol dialog - fix in RTF reader to load sections and header+footer written by Word 2003 - don't add unwanted cell padding when loading table cells - fix in WPTools reader to read custom number styles - if paragraph styles use number styles the indent defined in the style has priority over numberstyle - LabelDef now also works for one row and one column - better handling of mousewheel event - fix for tabs in tables + GIF animation (requires GifImage) library (not threaded) to use it You need to set ViewOption wpUseOwnDoubleBuffer and call the method RefreshAniImages using a timer object. - fix problem when sections were used with LabeDef.Active = true * change in HTML writer to close tags before paragraph end 4.10.2009 - WPTools 6.06 - fix problem with Delphi 2010 support (language control) - fix problem with PDF export to reduce PDF size - improve support for IME * improve AsWebPage format mode. Now WordWrap propery is supported. - fix searching text upwards with "Whole Word" selected + RTF writer now can use format option "-writehighlight" to writh \highlight instead of \cb 14.9.2009 - WPTools 6.05.9 + added Delphi 2010 Support - problem when pasting from "The Bat" - fix problem in Delphi 2009 (Assign Method) 3.8.2009 - WPTools 6.05.8' * when using "Delete All" in the tabstop dialog, all tabs will be cleared added to manual: Tabstop Category - fixed problem when deleting text in a paragraph. The alignment was cleared unexpectedly. - fix problem with installer, WPMangeHeaderFooter.DFM was not included - fix for IPara in mail merge field objects - improved handling of hoover effect for hyperlinks - improved text rendering for wPDF output (CID Mode) - add correct WPManHeadFoot.dfm 23.7.2009 - WPTools 6.05.7 + WRITE_PROP_WPTOOLSOBJ $define in WPIOWriteRTF. Avoid problems when saving RTF and opting in Word In case of special objects, such as SPAN codes, \*\wpfldinst is beeing written what is ignored by WOrd + Dialog HeaderFooter can optionally create and manage header&footer for the current section + new KeepN Handling. This is by default activated in FormatOptionsEx2 + new wpfHideParagraphWithHiddenText in FormatOptionsEx2. Now paragraphs will be hidden if empty or only contain hidden text. + new format option -zap1 will remove the every first byte to convert a two byte stream into singly byte -zap2 will remove every second byte. Usie this option when loading data from unicode data sets - bugfix for table loading in RTF 15.7.2009 - WPTools 6.05 + TParagraph.Trim method to remove white spaces at start and end + Vertical Scrolling by pressing the middle mouse button now works. + improved auto thumbnail mode * enhancement to HTML reader / writer to handle embedded SPAN objects + new method: ApplySPANStyles(and_remove : Boolean=false; ignore_charattr : Boolean = false); can be used to apply SPAN styles to the text which it embeds + The function InputSpanObjects( Attributes : TWPAbstractCharAttrInterface ) : TWPTextObj; can be used to wrap the selected text into SPAN objects + method LoadCSSheet can be used to load paragraph styles in CSS format from a string - fix problem with Wordrwap and centered text + new even OnTextObjectMovePosition (move event) - OnTextObjectMove is still used for resize (unchanged) 28.6.2009 - WPTools 6.04 + WPTools Premium: Column Balancing * many improvements in RTF reader. Word documents are now understood better * Improvement in check for protected text (ppMergedText) + new ViewOptionsEx property - auto hyperlinks were not working + TWPComboBox has an event OnUpdateItems which will be triggered after the items had been automatically assigned. 24.6.2009 - WPTools 6.03.6 * thinner page borders in thumbnail mode. ViewOptionsEx: wpAutoThumbnailMode will show pagenumbers only when in thubmbnail mode (= wpShowPageNRinGap in ViewOptions) + property ColorDesktop and DeskGradientHorizontal to render the background with a gradient fill * fix for protected text handling (CR after a field) * fix for text alignment near a movable image - EditOption AutoDetectHyperlinks was not working anymore * WPReporter: SuperMerge.Stack.PageBreakAFterGroup := true was ot working when footers were used 1.6.2009 - WPTools 6.03.5 - fix problem with display of character attributes when attributes were inherited from paragraph styles - fix problems with selection deletion in single column, single row tables - improvement of RTF writer when writing sections 11.5.2009 - WPTools 6.03.3 - improved report band dialog, new ShowOptions property - fix in RTF reader to load header/footer - change in HTML writer to save SPAN instead of FONT tag - several fixes in editor * WPTools Premium: better column support. Fixed column height now splits correctly on 2 pages. 28.4.2009 - WPTools 6.03.2 - fix problem with justified text in PDF 21.4.2009 - WPTools 6.03.1 - fix problem with images when used in Delphi 2009 - better support for header/footer in RTF files created by word. (Ignore bogus header/footer) - soome stability fixes 25.3.2009 - WPTools 6.03 + improved text rendering - optimation for character distances on screen to provide better display + improvement on ShowMergeFieldNames to improve cursor movement and drag and drop + automatic disable dragging of fields inside of fields + improved merge field selection. TextObject.SelectedObject now returns the mergefield if it was completely selected + change in HTML saving code to save src in after width adn height (for outlook) * various bugfixes 17.1.2009 - WPTools 6.02 - WPPREMIUM: Text after Columns initialized with WPAT_COLUMNS_Y is now allowed + TWPToolBar FontName drop down now lists fonts used by document first - fix for tables which use a fixed row height and are splitted on different pages + improvements necessary for Delphi 2009 - the Locaization demo now works + EditOptionEx wpDontPreserveObjectsAgainstDeletion - fix problem in ImageObject LoadFromStream when GraphicEx is used - fix problem with Delphi 2009 when loading WPReporter templates - fix problem with HTML reader with paragraph style of first paragraph + GetFontUnicodeRanges dynamically linked to avoid Win98 problem 26.10.2008 - WPTools 6.01 * updated HTTP Demo, now with "Source View" + DELETE/BACKSPC at start of line removes right/center alignment + loads background images for paragraphs, tables and styles * improvement to text protection (empty lines) - improvements to HTML and CSS reader - improved HTML format routine - improved MIME loading - now supports binary data despite Synapse does not) + MIME reader capturesHTML body for SourceVIew * DataProvider now uses MergeText('',true) instead of MergeText + boolean wphttp_Disable to disconnect HTTP temporarily * several changes to improve compatibility with Delphi 2009 17.10.2008 - WPTools 6.00.1 - several changes to fix problems which occured with use of Delphi 2009 * update to WPIO_MIME to also load binary encoded GIFS and JPEGS from EML files 16.10.2008 - WPTools 6.00 * new installer + VCL demo * fixed problem with TWPComboBox and default attributes * updated "Tasks\Mini" demo project - fix in default actions 3.10.2008 - WPTools 6 Beta c - remove not required unit reference form WPRTEReport * update to manual 2.10.2008 - WPTools 6 Beta b - fix in Installation script 30.9.2008 - WPTools 6 Beta a 1) Application-Server-Mode WPTools 6 introduces a feature which is called "Application-Server-Mode". This is only available when you have the PREMIUM version. This mode is activated when true is assigned to the global boolean variable WPAppServerMode. When this mode is activated the editor does not use the double buffered output anymore. While this can cause some flickering the network traffic is reduced when the application runs on an application server, such as Citrix. Please note, effective with WPTools 6, software which was written for application servers (such as clinic software) may only be distributed when a TEAM or SITE license of WPTools was acquired.END 2) Integrated Label Printing When activated the integrated label printing shows multiple labels on one virtual sheet of paper. The cursor can move from label to label freely. The user can so edit the labels, add new or delete unwanted labels before the complete sheet is printed. This is a very unique and versatile feature. 3) Additions to the PDF export with wPDF V3 Create embedded data objects Create edit / memo fields Create a check box field Also the creation of PDF tags was enhanced. So now hints to paragraph styles will be also exported. 4) Additional Control over Clipboard Actions a) properties to select the format b) added security 5) Added Section API + WPRichText1.ActiveSection + WPRichText1.InputSection + TWPPagePropDlg has new method ExecuteEx. Use it to change current page size or Section WPPagePropDlg1.ExecuteEx(WPRichText1.ActiveSection); 6) Load over HTTP connections (requires Synapse) 7) Load and save MIME encoded HTML with embedded images (requires Synapse) 8) Integrated XML syntax highlighting (non destructive) 9) WPReporter: Token to Template conversion with syntax highlighting 10) Additions to paragraph API 11) Special mode to format HTML documents
chromedriver,v2.24,支持chrome v52-54. ----------ChromeDriver v2.24 (2016-09-09)---------- Supports Chrome v52-54 Resolved issue 1497: GetLog fails when the current window is closed [['OS-All', 'Pri-0']] Resolved issue 1495: ChromeDriver crashes with "Check failed: !page_load_strategy_.empty()" [['OS-All', 'Pri-0']] Resolved issue 1463: SessionNotCreatedException: Runtime.evaluate missing 'wasThrown' on Chrome 54+ [['OS-All', 'Pri-0']] Resolved issue 1484: SendKeys of a Tab Key has no effect in Chrome 53 [['OS-All', 'Pri-1']] Resolved issue 1431: GetLog command does not work for Chrome 54+ [['OS-All', 'Pri-1']] Resolved issue 1411: sendKeys generates events that are missing some fields [['OS-All', 'Pri-1']] Resolved issue 1451: Chrome 54+ session not created exception: Runtime.executionContextCreated has invalid 'context' [['Pri-1']] Resolved issue 984: Extend ChromeDriver capabilities to cover network throttling feature from Chrome DevTools [['OS-All', 'Pri-2']] Resolved issue 1454: Net::ReadTimeout error on launching Canary v54 through RemoteWebDriver [[]] ----------ChromeDriver v2.23 (2016-08-04)---------- Supports Chrome v51-53 Resolved issue 1378: Android 6: Intitialization of Chrome driver fails when Chrome/Webview process is in running (R) state [['OS-Android', 'Pri-1']] Resolved issue 1379: Chromedriver does not catch all available browser console log entries [['OS-All', 'Pri-2']] ----------ChromeDriver v2.22 (2016-06-06)---------- Supports Chrome v49-52 Resolved issue 1348: Timeout error while navigating to URL on Chrome 51+ [['OS-All', 'Pri-0']] Resolved issue 1381: Timeout error occurs when alert dialog is displayed on Chrome 52+ [['OS-All', 'Pri-1', 'merge-merged-2743']] Resolved issue 1339: Failure when executing JS in a content script context [['OS-All', 'Pri-1']] Resolved issue 1387: ChromeDriver hangs when calling driver.get() for same-process navigations [['OS-All', 'Pri-1']] Resolved issue 1365: Touch emulation is not working under mobile emulation

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