strcoll
, wcscoll
, _mbscoll
, _strcoll_l
, _wcscoll_l
, _mbscoll_l
Compares strings by using the current locale or a specified LC_COLLATE
conversion-state category.
Important
_mbscoll
and _mbscoll_l
cannot be used in applications that execute in the Windows Runtime. For more information, see CRT functions not supported in Universal Windows Platform apps.
Syntax
int strcoll(
const char *string1,
const char *string2
);
int wcscoll(
const wchar_t *string1,
const wchar_t *string2
);
int _mbscoll(
const unsigned char *string1,
const unsigned char *string2
);
int _strcoll_l(
const char *string1,
const char *string2,
_locale_t locale
);
int wcscoll_l(
const wchar_t *string1,
const wchar_t *string2,
_locale_t locale
);
int _mbscoll_l(
const unsigned char *string1,
const unsigned char *string2,
_locale_t locale
);
Parameters
string1
, string2
Null-terminated strings to compare.
locale
Locale to use.
Return value
Each of these functions returns a value indicating the relationship of string1
to string2
, as follows.
Return value | Relationship of string1 to string2 |
---|---|
< 0 | string1 less than string2 |
0 | string1 identical to string2 |
> 0 | string1 greater than string2 |
Each of these functions returns _NLSCMPERROR
on an error. To use _NLSCMPERROR
, include either STRING.H or MBSTRING.H. wcscoll
can fail if either string1
or string2
is NULL
or contains wide-character codes outside the domain of the collating sequence. When an error occurs, wcscoll
may set errno
to EINVAL
. To check for an error on a call to wcscoll
, set errno
to 0 and then check errno
after calling wcscoll
.
Remarks
Each of these functions performs a case-sensitive comparison of string1
and string2
according to the code page currently in use. These functions should be used only when there's a difference between the character set order and the lexicographic character order in the current code page and this difference is of interest for the string comparison.
All of these functions validate their parameters. If either string1
or string2
is a null pointer, or if count
is greater than INT_MAX
, the invalid parameter handler is invoked, as described in Parameter validation . If execution is allowed to continue, these functions return _NLSCMPERROR
and set errno
to EINVAL
.
The comparison of the two strings is a locale-dependent operation since each locale has different rules for ordering characters. The versions of these functions without the _l
suffix use the current thread's locale for this locale-dependent behavior; the versions with the _l
suffix are identical to the corresponding function without the suffix except that they use the locale passed in as a parameter instead of the current locale. For more information, see Locale.
By default, this function's global state is scoped to the application. To change this behavior, see Global state in the CRT.
Generic-text routine mappings
TCHAR.H routine | _UNICODE and _MBCS not defined |
_MBCS defined |
_UNICODE defined |
---|---|---|---|
_tcscoll |
strcoll |
_mbscoll |
wcscoll |
Requirements
Routine | Required header |
---|---|
strcoll |
<string.h> |
wcscoll |
<wchar.h>, <string.h> |
_mbscoll , _mbscoll_l |
<mbstring.h> |
_strcoll_l |
<string.h> |
_wcscoll_l |
<wchar.h>, <string.h> |
For more compatibility information, see Compatibility.
See also
Locale
String manipulation
strcoll
functions
localeconv
_mbsnbcoll
, _mbsnbcoll_l
, _mbsnbicoll
, _mbsnbicoll_l
setlocale
, _wsetlocale
strcmp
, wcscmp
, _mbscmp
_stricmp
, _wcsicmp
, _mbsicmp
, _stricmp_l
, _wcsicmp_l
, _mbsicmp_l
strncmp
, wcsncmp
, _mbsncmp
, _mbsncmp_l
_strnicmp
, _wcsnicmp
, _mbsnicmp
, _strnicmp_l
, _wcsnicmp_l
, _mbsnicmp_l
strxfrm
, wcsxfrm
, _strxfrm_l
, _wcsxfrm_l