...one of the most highly
regarded and expertly designed C++ library projects in the
world.
— Herb Sutter and Andrei
Alexandrescu, C++
Coding Standards
A view representing query parameters in a URL.
Defined in header <boost/url/params_encoded_view.hpp>
class params_encoded_view : public params_encoded_base
Name |
Description |
---|---|
A Bidirectional iterator to a query parameter. |
|
The reference type. |
|
A signed integer type used to represent differences. |
|
A Bidirectional iterator to a query parameter. |
|
The reference type. |
|
An unsigned integer type to represent sizes. |
|
The value type. |
Name |
Description |
---|---|
Return an iterator to the beginning. |
|
Return the query corresponding to these params. |
|
Return true if a matching key exists. |
|
Return the number of matching keys. |
|
Return true if there are no params. |
|
Return an iterator to the end. |
|
Find a matching key. |
|
Find a matching key. |
|
Assignment. |
|
Conversion. |
|
params_encoded_view [constructor] |
Constructor. |
Return the number of params. |
Name |
Description |
---|---|
Return the maximum number of characters possible. |
Name |
Description |
---|---|
Parse a string and return an encoded params view. |
Objects of this type are used to interpret the query parameters as a bidirectional view of key/value pairs. The view does not retain ownership of the elements and instead references the original character buffer. The caller is responsible for ensuring that the lifetime of the buffer extends until it is no longer referenced.
url_view u( "?first=John&last=Doe" ); params_encoded_view p = u.encoded_params();
Strings produced when elements are returned have type param_pct_view
and represent encoded
strings. Strings passed to member functions may contain percent escapes,
and throw exceptions on invalid inputs.
Changes to the underlying character buffer can invalidate iterators which reference it.
Convenience header <boost/url.hpp>