\section{\class{wxStringTokenizer}}\label{wxstringtokenizer} wxStringTokenizer helps you to break a string up into a number of tokens. To use this class, you should create a wxStringTokenizer object, give it the string to tokenize and also the delimiters which separate tokens in the string (by default, white space characters will be used). Then \helpref{GetNextToken}{wxstringtokenizergetnexttoken} may be called repeatedly until it \helpref{HasMoreTokens}{wxstringtokenizerhasmoretokens} returns FALSE. For example: \begin{verbatim} wxStringTokenizer tkz("first:second:third::fivth", ":"); while ( tkz.HasMoreTokens() ) { wxString token = tkz.GetNextToken(); // process token here } \end{verbatim} Another feature of this class is that it may return the delimiter which was found after the token with it. In a simple case like above, you are not interested in this because the delimiter is always {\tt ':'}, but if the delimiters string has several characters, you might need to know which of them follows the current token. In this case, pass {\tt TRUE} to wxStringTokenizer constructor or \helpref{SetString}{wxstringtokenizersetstring} method and the delimiter will be appended to each returned token (except for the last one). \wxheading{Derived from} \helpref{wxObject}{wxobject} \wxheading{Include files} \latexignore{\rtfignore{\wxheading{Members}}} \membersection{wxStringTokenizer::wxStringTokenizer}\label{wxstringtokenizerwxstringtokenizer} \func{}{wxStringTokenizer}{\void} Default constructor. \func{}{wxStringTokenizer}{\param{const wxString\& }{to\_tokenize}, \param{const wxString\& }{delims = " $\backslash$t$\backslash$r$\backslash$n"}, \param{bool }{ret\_delim = FALSE}} Constructor. Pass the string to tokenize, a string containing delimiters, a flag specifying whether to return delimiters with tokens. \membersection{wxStringTokenizer::\destruct{wxStringTokenizer}}\label{wxstringtokenizerdtor} \func{}{\destruct{wxStringTokenizer}}{\void} Destructor. \membersection{wxStringTokenizer::CountTokens}\label{wxstringtokenizercounttokens} \constfunc{int}{CountTokens}{\void} Returns the number of tokens in the input string. \membersection{wxStringTokenizer::HasMoreTokens}\label{wxstringtokenizerhasmoretokens} \constfunc{bool}{HasMoreTokens}{\void} Returns TRUE if the tokenizer has further tokens. \membersection{wxStringTokenizer::GetNextToken}\label{wxstringtokenizergetnexttoken} \constfunc{wxString}{GetNextToken}{\void} Returns the next token or empty string if the end of string was reached. \membersection{wxStringTokenizer::GetPosition}\label{wxstringtokenizergetposition} \constfunc{size\_t}{GetPosition}{\void} Returns the current position (i.e. one index after the last returned token or 0 if GetNextToken() has never been called) in the original string. \membersection{wxStringTokenizer::GetString}\label{wxstringtokenizergetstring} \constfunc{wxString}{GetString}{\void} Returns the part of the starting string without all token already extracted. \membersection{wxStringTokenizer::SetString}\label{wxstringtokenizersetstring} \func{void}{SetString}{\param{const wxString\& }{to\_tokenize}, \param{const wxString\& }{delims = " $\backslash$t$\backslash$r$\backslash$n"}, \param{bool }{ret\_delim = FALSE}} Initializes the tokenizer. Pass the string to tokenize, a string containing delimiters, a flag specifying whether to return delimiters with tokens.