1 .TH PCRE_PATTERN_TO_HOST_BYTE_ORDER 3 "24 June 2012" "PCRE 8.30"
3 PCRE - Perl-compatible regular expressions
10 .B int pcre_pattern_to_host_byte_order(pcre *\fIcode\fP,
11 .B " pcre_extra *\fIextra\fP, const unsigned char *\fItables\fP);"
13 .B int pcre16_pattern_to_host_byte_order(pcre16 *\fIcode\fP,
14 .B " pcre16_extra *\fIextra\fP, const unsigned char *\fItables\fP);"
16 .B int pcre32_pattern_to_host_byte_order(pcre32 *\fIcode\fP,
17 .B " pcre32_extra *\fIextra\fP, const unsigned char *\fItables\fP);"
23 This function ensures that the bytes in 2-byte and 4-byte values in a compiled
24 pattern are in the correct order for the current host. It is useful when a
25 pattern that has been compiled on one host is transferred to another that might
26 have different endianness. The arguments are:
28 \fIcode\fP A compiled regular expression
29 \fIextra\fP Points to an associated \fBpcre[16|32]_extra\fP structure,
31 \fItables\fP Pointer to character tables, or NULL to
32 set the built-in default
34 The result is 0 for success, a negative PCRE_ERROR_xxx value otherwise.
36 There is a complete description of the PCRE native API in the
40 page and a description of the POSIX API in the