GLib Reference Manual | ||||
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Singly-Linked ListsSingly-Linked Lists — linked lists containing integer values or pointers to data, limited to iterating over the list in one direction. |
#include <glib.h> GSList; GSList* g_slist_alloc (void); GSList* g_slist_append (GSList *list, gpointer data); GSList* g_slist_prepend (GSList *list, gpointer data); GSList* g_slist_insert (GSList *list, gpointer data, gint position); GSList* g_slist_insert_before (GSList *slist, GSList *sibling, gpointer data); GSList* g_slist_insert_sorted (GSList *list, gpointer data, GCompareFunc func); GSList* g_slist_remove (GSList *list, gconstpointer data); GSList* g_slist_remove_link (GSList *list, GSList *link_); GSList* g_slist_delete_link (GSList *list, GSList *link_); GSList* g_slist_remove_all (GSList *list, gconstpointer data); void g_slist_free (GSList *list); void g_slist_free_1 (GSList *list); #define g_slist_free1 guint g_slist_length (GSList *list); GSList* g_slist_copy (GSList *list); GSList* g_slist_reverse (GSList *list); GSList* g_slist_insert_sorted_with_data (GSList *list, gpointer data, GCompareDataFunc func, gpointer user_data); GSList* g_slist_sort (GSList *list, GCompareFunc compare_func); GSList* g_slist_sort_with_data (GSList *list, GCompareDataFunc compare_func, gpointer user_data); GSList* g_slist_concat (GSList *list1, GSList *list2); void g_slist_foreach (GSList *list, GFunc func, gpointer user_data); GSList* g_slist_last (GSList *list); #define g_slist_next (slist) GSList* g_slist_nth (GSList *list, guint n); gpointer g_slist_nth_data (GSList *list, guint n); GSList* g_slist_find (GSList *list, gconstpointer data); GSList* g_slist_find_custom (GSList *list, gconstpointer data, GCompareFunc func); gint g_slist_position (GSList *list, GSList *llink); gint g_slist_index (GSList *list, gconstpointer data); void g_slist_push_allocator (gpointer dummy); void g_slist_pop_allocator (void);
The GSList structure and its associated functions provide a standard singly-linked list data structure.
Each element in the list contains a piece of data, together with a pointer which links to the next element in the list. Using this pointer it is possible to move through the list in one direction only (unlike the Doubly-Linked Lists which allow movement in both directions).
The data contained in each element can be either integer values, by using one of the Type Conversion Macros, or simply pointers to any type of data.
List elements are allocated from the slice allocator, which is more efficient than allocating elements individually.
Note that most of the GSList functions expect to be passed a pointer to the first element in the list. The functions which insert elements return the new start of the list, which may have changed.
There is no function to create a GSList. NULL
is considered to be the empty
list so you simply set a GSList* to NULL
.
To add elements, use g_slist_append()
, g_slist_prepend()
, g_slist_insert()
and g_slist_insert_sorted()
.
To remove elements, use g_slist_remove()
.
To find elements in the list use g_slist_last()
, g_slist_next()
,
g_slist_nth()
, g_slist_nth_data()
, g_slist_find()
and
g_slist_find_custom()
.
To find the index of an element use g_slist_position()
and g_slist_index()
.
To call a function for each element in the list use g_slist_foreach()
.
To free the entire list, use g_slist_free()
.
typedef struct { gpointer data; GSList *next; } GSList;
The GSList struct is used for each element in the singly-linked list.
gpointer data ; |
holds the element's data, which can be a pointer to any kind of data, or any integer value using the Type Conversion Macros. |
GSList *next ; |
contains the link to the next element in the list. |
GSList* g_slist_alloc (void);
Allocates space for one GSList element.
It is called by the g_slist_append()
, g_slist_prepend()
, g_slist_insert()
and
g_slist_insert_sorted()
functions and so is rarely used on its own.
Returns : | a pointer to the newly-allocated GSList element. |
GSList* g_slist_append (GSList *list, gpointer data);
Adds a new element on to the end of the list.
The return value is the new start of the list, which may have changed, so make sure you store the new value.
Note that g_slist_append()
has to traverse the entire list to find the end,
which is inefficient when adding multiple elements. A common idiom to
avoid the inefficiency is to prepend the elements and reverse the list
when all elements have been added.
/* Notice that these are initialized to the empty list. */ GSList *list = NULL, *number_list = NULL; /* This is a list of strings. */ list = g_slist_append (list, "first"); list = g_slist_append (list, "second"); /* This is a list of integers. */ number_list = g_slist_append (number_list, GINT_TO_POINTER (27)); number_list = g_slist_append (number_list, GINT_TO_POINTER (14));
GSList* g_slist_prepend (GSList *list, gpointer data);
Adds a new element on to the start of the list.
The return value is the new start of the list, which may have changed, so make sure you store the new value.
/* Notice that it is initialized to the empty list. */ GSList *list = NULL; list = g_slist_prepend (list, "last"); list = g_slist_prepend (list, "first");
GSList* g_slist_insert (GSList *list, gpointer data, gint position);
Inserts a new element into the list at the given position.
GSList* g_slist_insert_before (GSList *slist, GSList *sibling, gpointer data);
Inserts a node before sibling
containing data
. Returns the new head of the list.
slist : |
a GSList. |
sibling : |
node to insert data before.
|
data : |
data to put in the newly-inserted node. |
Returns : | new head of the list. |
GSList* g_slist_insert_sorted (GSList *list, gpointer data, GCompareFunc func);
Inserts a new element into the list, using the given comparison function to determine its position.
GSList* g_slist_remove (GSList *list, gconstpointer data);
Removes an element from a GSList. If two elements contain the same data, only the first is removed. If none of the elements contain the data, the GSList is unchanged.
GSList* g_slist_remove_link (GSList *list, GSList *link_);
Removes an element from a GSList, without freeing the element.
The removed element's next link is set to NULL
, so that it becomes a
self-contained list with one element.
GSList* g_slist_delete_link (GSList *list, GSList *link_);
Deletes a node of list
. Returns the new list head.
list : |
a GSList. |
link_ : |
node to delete. |
Returns : | new head of list .
|
GSList* g_slist_remove_all (GSList *list, gconstpointer data);
Removes all list nodes with data equal to data
. Returns the new
head of the list. Contrast with g_slist_remove()
which removes only
the first node matching the given data.
list : |
a GSList. |
data : |
data to remove. |
Returns : | new head of list .
|
void g_slist_free (GSList *list);
Frees all of the memory used by a GSList. The freed elements are returned to the slice allocator.
list : |
a GSList. |
void g_slist_free_1 (GSList *list);
Frees one GSList element.
It is usually used after g_slist_remove_link()
.
list : |
a GSList element. |
GSList* g_slist_copy (GSList *list);
Copies a GSList.
Note that this is a "shallow" copy. If the list elements consist of pointers to data, the pointers are copied but the actual data isn't.
list : |
a GSList. |
Returns : | a copy of list .
|
GSList* g_slist_insert_sorted_with_data (GSList *list, gpointer data, GCompareDataFunc func, gpointer user_data);
Inserts a new element into the list, using the given comparison function to determine its position.
list : |
a GSList. |
data : |
the data for the new element. |
func : |
the function to compare elements in the list. It should return a number > 0 if the first parameter comes after the second parameter in the sort order. |
user_data : |
data to pass to comparison function. |
Returns : | the new start of the GSList.
Since 2.10
|
GSList* g_slist_sort (GSList *list, GCompareFunc compare_func);
Sorts a GSList using the given comparison function.
list : |
a GSList. |
compare_func : |
the comparison function used to sort the GSList. This function is passed the data from 2 elements of the GSList and should return 0 if they are equal, a negative value if the first element comes before the second, or a positive value if the first element comes after the second. |
Returns : | the start of the sorted GSList. |
GSList* g_slist_sort_with_data (GSList *list, GCompareDataFunc compare_func, gpointer user_data);
Like g_slist_sort()
, but the sort function accepts a user data argument.
list : |
a GSList |
compare_func : |
comparison function. |
user_data : |
data to pass to comparison function. |
Returns : | new head of the list. |
GSList* g_slist_concat (GSList *list1, GSList *list2);
Adds the second GSList onto the end of the first GSList. Note that the elements of the second GSList are not copied. They are used directly.
void g_slist_foreach (GSList *list, GFunc func, gpointer user_data);
Calls a function for each element of a GSList.
list : |
a GSList. |
func : |
the function to call with each element's data. |
user_data : |
user data to pass to the function. |
#define g_slist_next(slist)
A convenience macro to gets the next element in a GSList.
GSList* g_slist_nth (GSList *list, guint n);
Gets the element at the given position in a GSList.
gpointer g_slist_nth_data (GSList *list, guint n);
Gets the data of the element at the given position.
GSList* g_slist_find (GSList *list, gconstpointer data);
Finds the element in a GSList which contains the given data.
GSList* g_slist_find_custom (GSList *list, gconstpointer data, GCompareFunc func);
Finds an element in a GSList, using a supplied function to find the desired element. It iterates over the list, calling the given function which should return 0 when the desired element is found. The function takes two gconstpointer arguments, the GSList element's data as the first argument and the given user data.
gint g_slist_position (GSList *list, GSList *llink);
Gets the position of the given element in the GSList (starting from 0).
gint g_slist_index (GSList *list, gconstpointer data);
Gets the position of the element containing the given data (starting from 0).
list : |
a GSList. |
data : |
the data to find. |
Returns : | the index of the element containing the data, or -1 if the data is not found. |
void g_slist_push_allocator (gpointer dummy);
g_slist_push_allocator
has been deprecated since version 2.10 and should not be used in newly-written code. It does nothing, since GSList has been
converted to the slice allocator
Sets the allocator to use to allocate GSList elements.
Use g_slist_pop_allocator()
to restore the previous allocator.
Note that this function is not available if GLib has been compiled
with --disable-mem-pools
dummy : |
the GAllocator to use when allocating GSList elements. |
void g_slist_pop_allocator (void);
g_slist_pop_allocator
has been deprecated since version 2.10 and should not be used in newly-written code. It does nothing, since GSList has been
converted to the slice allocator
Restores the previous GAllocator, used when allocating GSList elements.
Note that this function is not available if GLib has been compiled
with --disable-mem-pools