Defined in header <string.h> | ||
|---|---|---|
char *strrchr( const char *str, int ch ); | (1) | |
/*QChar*/ *strrchr( /*QChar*/ *str, int ch ); | (2) | (since C23) |
ch (after conversion to char as if by (char)ch) in the null-terminated byte string pointed to by str (each character interpreted as unsigned char). The terminating null character is considered to be a part of the string and can be found if searching for '\0'.T be an unqualified character object type. str is of type const T*, the return type is const char*. str is of type T*, the return type is char*. (strrchr) or a function pointer is used), the actual function declaration (1) becomes visible.The behavior is undefined if str is not a pointer to a null-terminated byte string.
| str | - | pointer to the null-terminated byte string to be analyzed |
| ch | - | character to search for |
Pointer to the found character in str, or null pointer if no such character is found.
#include <string.h>
#include <stdio.h>
int main(void)
{
char szSomeFileName[] = "foo/bar/foobar.txt";
char *pLastSlash = strrchr(szSomeFileName, '/');
char *pszBaseName = pLastSlash ? pLastSlash + 1 : szSomeFileName;
printf("Base Name: %s", pszBaseName);
}Output:
Base Name: foobar.txt
| finds the first occurrence of a character (function) |
|
| finds the first location of any character in one string, in another string (function) |
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C++ documentation for strrchr |
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