source: pacpusframework/trunk/3rd/apache-log4cxx/include/log4cxx/helpers/tchar.h@ 184

Last change on this file since 184 was 89, checked in by morasjul, 12 years ago

PACPUS 2.0 Beta deployed in new branch

Major changes:
-Add communication interface between components
-Add examples for communications interface (TestComponents)
-Move to Qt5 support

  • Property svn:executable set to *
File size: 7.2 KB
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1/*
2 * Licensed to the Apache Software Foundation (ASF) under one or more
3 * contributor license agreements. See the NOTICE file distributed with
4 * this work for additional information regarding copyright ownership.
5 * The ASF licenses this file to You under the Apache License, Version 2.0
6 * (the "License"); you may not use this file except in compliance with
7 * the License. You may obtain a copy of the License at
8 *
9 * http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
10 *
11 * Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
12 * distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
13 * WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
14 * See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
15 * limitations under the License.
16 */
17
18#ifndef _LOG4CXX_HELPERS_TCHAR_H
19#define _LOG4CXX_HELPERS_TCHAR_H
20
21#error log4cxx/helpers/tchar.h is obsolete, see details following this line.
22
23/**
24* A short history of log4cxx's tchar.h
25*
26* The previous log4cxx/helpers/tchar.h contained macros that
27* attempted to replicate macros and functions defined by
28* the Microsoft SDK's tchar.h and related header files
29* such as _T() and TCHAR.
30*
31* When building apps using both log4cxx and Microsoft SDK's tchar.h,
32* these definitions could conflict and, for example, the code generated
33* by _T("Foo") would depend on the include order of the two
34* tchar.h's.
35*
36* The motivation of tchar.h in the Microsoft SDK was to
37* support presenting either a wide-char or multi-byte char
38* facade to a C API depending on the presence of
39* the _UNICODE or _MBCS preprocessor macros. When _UNICODE
40* was set then tchar was typedef'd as wchar_t and, for example,
41* the CreateProcess macro was defined to be CreateProcessW, If
42* _MBCS was defined, then tchar was typedef'd as char
43* and CreateProcess macro was defined to be CreateProcessA.
44*
45* In either case, the setting of _UNICODE or _MBCS
46* didn't affect the implementation of the operating system.
47* If you were running the Windows NT family, all the multi-byte
48* methods delegated to a wide-char implementation.
49* In the Windows 9x family, most wide-char methods delegated
50* to a multi-byte implementation.
51*
52* In practice, most Microsoft Windows executables were either
53* wide-char or multi-byte centric. However, they did not
54* have to be exclusively so. An application built with
55* _UNICODE, could still call multi-byte API functions,
56* they would just need to explicitly call CreateProcessA
57* instead of using the facade macro. An executable could
58* also use both a multi-byte centric and wide-char centric
59* DLL's since all the calls eventually hit the same
60* underlying implementation be it a wide-char on in
61* Windows NT or multi-char in Windows 9x.
62*
63* The use of log4cxx/helpers/tchar.h in log4cxx 0.9.7 was
64* undesirable because it made log4cxx either exclusively
65* wide-char or exclusively multi-byte and had to be consistant
66* with the character model of the calling executable.
67* This would make it extremely difficult to use
68* log4cxx when DLL's with different character models
69* where called by the same application. Since log4cxx
70* was C++, not C, function overloading could be
71* used instead of the CreateProcess et al macros
72* used in the Windows headers.
73*
74* In the rework before the 0.9.8, the following changes
75* were made to log4cxx:
76*
77* 1. All inclusions of log4cxx/helpers/tchar.h
78* and use of TCHAR, log4cxx::String and _T
79* were removed from log4cxx.
80* 2. log4cxx/logstring.h was added to define the
81* implementation character model using the log4cxx::logchar
82* and log4cxx::LogString typedefs and LOG4CXX_STR macro.
83* 3. Methods commonly used by calling applications were defined
84* in both wide-char and multi-byte and both pointer and string
85* forms with conversion to the implementation character
86* model delayed as long as possible.
87* 4. Use of Standard Template Library streams within
88* log4cxx was substantially reduced (but not totally
89* elminated).
90* 5. The LOG4CXX_DEBUG and similar macros were simplified
91* and now only take arguments that evaluate to
92* character pointers or strings and no longer take
93* the right hand side of an insertion operation:
94*
95* // This used to work, but no longer
96* LOG4CXX_DEBUG(logger, "foo" << i);
97*
98* If you extensively used this idiom, please consider
99* migrating to stream-like API defined in log4cxx/stream.h.
100*
101* 6. The LOG4CXX_DEBUG and similar use the LOG4CXX_LOCATION
102* macro to define the log statement location instead of
103* using __FILE__ and __LINE__. Logger::debug and
104* similar now take const LocationInfo& instead of
105* separate const char* and int arguments. This allows
106* class and method names to appear in location info.
107* 7. log4cxx include files no longer include config.h
108* or related files. config.h and related files
109* may be used by log4cxx implementation, but have
110* no effect on the exposed API.
111*
112* It is expected that the default implementation character
113* model will be wchar_t. However this may vary by platform
114* and may be changed based on feedback.
115*
116* Developers using log4cxx should seldom be concerned
117* with the internal character model of log4cxx unless
118* writing custom appenders or layouts. An application
119* should not be using log4cxx::logchar, log4cxx::LogString
120* or LOG4CXX_STR unless dealing with something that is
121* clearly a log4cxx internal. If you find something
122* defined as using or returning LogString that you
123* don't consider a log4cxx internal, please file a
124* bug report or post a message to one of the mailing lists.
125*
126* wchar_t literals should be preferred in log requests since
127* since they eliminate potential encoding confusion
128* when the development and deployment encodings are different.
129*
130* Migration strategies:
131*
132* If you followed the examples in the previous log4cxx versions,
133* you may have _T() macros littered through your code
134* and inclusions of this file. If you are on the Microsoft
135* platform, the simplest solution is to just include
136* the Platform SDK's tchar.h which would result your log
137* statements matching the character model of your application.
138*
139* If you targetting another platform and your only use of
140* _T() in related to log4cxx, then I would recommend replacing
141* all _T() with another macro (say MYAPP_LOGSTR())
142* and defining that macro in a commonly included header file
143* or defining _T() in a commonly included header file.
144*
145* I would first try defining these macros as
146*
147* #define _T(str) L ## str
148*
149* If that results in too many compilation errors, then try:
150*
151* #define _T(str) str
152*
153* Using the first form will result in wchar_t literals which
154* will avoid potential encoding confusion and is expected
155* to result in slightly better performance when logging.
156*
157* Since the best choice for _T() depends on the application,
158* there is not a definition within log4cxx.
159*
160* Use encoding conversion macros A2T, W2T, et al should
161* not longer be necessary. If you are doing a lot of
162* work converting between encodings, you might consider
163* using the stream-like interface in log4cxx/stream.h
164* which defines insertion operators for multi-byte
165* strings in addition to exposing all the
166* insertion operations defined for
167* std::basic_ostream<wchar_t>.
168*
169*/
170
171#endif //_LOG4CXX_HELPERS_TCHAR_H
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