From: Xavier Leroy <xavier.leroy@inria.fr>
To: Oleg <oleg_inconnu@myrealbox.com>
Cc: caml-list@inria.fr
Subject: Re: [Caml-list] internal representation of string
Date: Mon, 26 Aug 2002 19:22:02 +0200 [thread overview]
Message-ID: <20020826192202.A6666@pauillac.inria.fr> (raw)
In-Reply-To: <200208261344.JAA23445@dewberry.cc.columbia.edu>; from oleg_inconnu@myrealbox.com on Mon, Aug 26, 2002 at 09:46:40AM -0400
> What is the internal representation of string? Is it basically a C-string
> [with or without terminating '\0'] plus integer storing its size? Or is it
> something more sophisticated?
Like all heap blocks, strings contain a header defining the size of
the string in machine words. The actual block contents are:
- the characters of the string
- padding bytes to align the block on a word boundary.
The padding is one of
00
00 01
00 00 02
00 00 00 03
on a 32-bit machine, and up to 00 00 .... 07 on a 64-bit machine.
Thus, the string is always zero-terminated, and its length can be
computed as follows:
number_of_words_in_block * sizeof(word) + last_byte_of_block - 1
The null-termination comes handy when passing a string to C, but is
not relied upon to compute the length (in Caml), allowing the string
to contain nulls.
> Also, do functions like String.sub implement
> copy-on-write mechanism or do they copy when they are called?
They copy when they are called. Caml strings really behave like
compactly-represented character arrays.
Hope this answers your question,
- Xavier Leroy
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prev parent reply other threads:[~2002-08-26 17:22 UTC|newest]
Thread overview: 2+ messages / expand[flat|nested] mbox.gz Atom feed top
2002-08-26 13:46 Oleg
2002-08-26 17:22 ` Xavier Leroy [this message]
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