| Defined in header <string.h> | ||
|---|---|---|
| char *strstr( const char *str, const char *substr ); | (1) | |
| /*QChar*/ *strstr( /*QChar*/ *str, const char *substr ); | (2) | (since C23) | 
substr in the null-terminated byte string pointed to by str. The terminating null characters are not compared.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*. (strstr) or a function pointer is used), the actual function declaration (1) becomes visible.The behavior is undefined if either str or substr is not a pointer to a null-terminated byte string.
| str | - | pointer to the null-terminated byte string to examine | 
| substr | - | pointer to the null-terminated byte string to search for | 
Pointer to the first character of the found substring in str, or a null pointer if such substring is not found. If substr points to an empty string, str is returned.
#include <string.h>
#include <stdio.h>
 
void find_str(char const *str, char const *substr)
{
    char *pos = strstr(str, substr);
    pos ? printf("found the string '%s' in '%s' at position %td\n",
                 substr, str, pos - str)
        : printf("the string '%s' was not found in '%s'\n",
                 substr, str);
}
 
int main(void)
{
    char *str = "one two three";
    find_str(str, "two");
    find_str(str, "");
    find_str(str, "nine");
    find_str(str, "n");
 
    return 0;
}Output:
found the string 'two' in 'one two three' at position 4 found the string '' in 'one two three' at position 0 the string 'nine' was not found in 'one two three' found the string 'n' in 'one two three' at position 1
| finds the first occurrence of a character (function) | |
| finds the last occurrence of a character (function) | |
| C++ documentation for strstr | |
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