diff -r a22b6da0587e -r 302dddaf741d ucx/string.h
--- a/ucx/string.h Fri Jan 17 12:44:54 2014 +0100
+++ b/ucx/string.h Tue Mar 18 09:53:50 2014 +0100
@@ -227,7 +227,7 @@
*
*
* The integer referenced by count
is used as input and determines
- * the maximum size of the resulting list, i.e. the maximum count of splits to
+ * the maximum size of the resulting array, i.e. the maximum count of splits to
* perform + 1.
*
* The integer referenced by count
is also used as output and is
@@ -237,24 +237,24 @@
*
free()
. Use sstrsplit_a() with
* an allocator to managed memory, to avoid this.
*
* @param string the string to split
* @param delim the delimiter string
- * @param count IN: the maximum size of the resulting list (0 for an
- * unbounded list), OUT: the actual size of the list
- * @return a list of the split strings as sstr_t array or
+ * @param count IN: the maximum size of the resulting array (0 = no limit),
+ * OUT: the actual size of the array
+ * @return a sstr_t array containing the split strings or
* NULL
on error
*
* @see sstrsplit_a()
@@ -266,7 +266,7 @@
*
* Read the description of sstrsplit() for details.
*
- * The memory for the sstr_t.ptr pointers of the list items and the memory for
+ * The memory for the sstr_t.ptr pointers of the array items and the memory for
* the sstr_t array itself are allocated by using the UcxAllocator.malloc()
* function.
*
@@ -276,9 +276,9 @@
* @param allocator the UcxAllocator used for allocating memory
* @param string the string to split
* @param delim the delimiter string
- * @param count IN: the maximum size of the resulting list (0 for an
- * unbounded list), OUT: the actual size of the list
- * @return a list of the split strings as sstr_t array or
+ * @param count IN: the maximum size of the resulting array (0 = no limit),
+ * OUT: the actual size of the array
+ * @return a sstr_t array containing the split strings or
* NULL
on error
*
* @see sstrsplit()