Symbian3/PDK/Source/GUID-261ADCEC-C8C8-46E3-A7DC-804AC868C233.dita
author Dominic Pinkman <Dominic.Pinkman@Nokia.com>
Fri, 22 Jan 2010 18:26:19 +0000
changeset 1 25a17d01db0c
child 3 46218c8b8afa
permissions -rw-r--r--
Addition of the PDK content and example code for Documentation_content according to Feature bug 1607 and bug 1608

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  PUBLIC "-//OASIS//DTD DITA Concept//EN" "concept.dtd">
<concept id="GUID-261ADCEC-C8C8-46E3-A7DC-804AC868C233" xml:lang="en"><title>Descriptors</title><prolog><metadata><keywords/></metadata></prolog><conbody>
<p>Descriptors are self-describing strings that can be used to store binary data and text. Each descriptor object holds the length of the string as well as its type which identifies the underlying memory layout of the data it holds. For more information on different descriptor classes, see <xref href="jar:GUID-35228542-8C95-4849-A73F-2B4F082F0C44.jar!/sdk/doc_source/NewStarter/2-essentials.html#gsguide%2eessentials%2edescriptors" format="application/java-archive">Descriptors</xref>.</p>
<p>There are modifiable and non-modifiable descriptors, the latter type is identified by a "C" suffix in the class name. The length of a non-modifiable descriptor is defined when compiling an application, and the length of a modifiable descriptor can vary within the limits set by <codeph>iMaxLength</codeph>. Nonmodifiable descriptors are more secure, as their length is checked during compilation. The following figure shows the differences between these types.</p>
<fig id="GUID-A8F9937F-25A6-4E80-845F-35994B7E13E5"><title>Differences between modifiable, nonmodifiable, and pointer descriptors</title><image href="GUID-40619192-8C2F-4267-BFCA-F53E10BF5A31_d0e8647_href.png"/></fig>
<p>When designing applications, avoid using fixed-length buffers as parameters and use base classes (preferably constant base type <codeph><xref href="jar:GUID-35228542-8C95-4849-A73F-2B4F082F0C44.jar!/sdk/doc_source/reference/reference-cpp/Kernel_Architecture_2/e32cmn.hGlobals.html#%3a%3aTDesC" format="application/java-archive">TDesC</xref></codeph>) instead. Descriptor objects provide a flexible interface for manipulating the contained string, including size and length checks. Take advantage of these when possible.</p>
<p>For an example, see <xref href="http://www.forum.nokia.com/info/sw.nokia.com/id/3397e4ea-c067-4a4a-bf16-9747e1968b3e/S60_Platform_Descriptor_Example_v2_0_en.zip.html" scope="external">S60 Platform: Descriptor Example</xref> on Forum Nokia.</p>
</conbody></concept>