/src/icu/source/i18n/double-conversion-utils.h
Line  | Count  | Source (jump to first uncovered line)  | 
1  |  | // © 2018 and later: Unicode, Inc. and others.  | 
2  |  | // License & terms of use: http://www.unicode.org/copyright.html  | 
3  |  | //  | 
4  |  | // From the double-conversion library. Original license:  | 
5  |  | //  | 
6  |  | // Copyright 2010 the V8 project authors. All rights reserved.  | 
7  |  | // Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without  | 
8  |  | // modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions are  | 
9  |  | // met:  | 
10  |  | //  | 
11  |  | //     * Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright  | 
12  |  | //       notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer.  | 
13  |  | //     * Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above  | 
14  |  | //       copyright notice, this list of conditions and the following  | 
15  |  | //       disclaimer in the documentation and/or other materials provided  | 
16  |  | //       with the distribution.  | 
17  |  | //     * Neither the name of Google Inc. nor the names of its  | 
18  |  | //       contributors may be used to endorse or promote products derived  | 
19  |  | //       from this software without specific prior written permission.  | 
20  |  | //  | 
21  |  | // THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE COPYRIGHT HOLDERS AND CONTRIBUTORS  | 
22  |  | // "AS IS" AND ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT  | 
23  |  | // LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR  | 
24  |  | // A PARTICULAR PURPOSE ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE COPYRIGHT  | 
25  |  | // OWNER OR CONTRIBUTORS BE LIABLE FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL,  | 
26  |  | // SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT  | 
27  |  | // LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE,  | 
28  |  | // DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION) HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY  | 
29  |  | // THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT  | 
30  |  | // (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE  | 
31  |  | // OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE.  | 
32  |  |  | 
33  |  | // ICU PATCH: ifdef around UCONFIG_NO_FORMATTING  | 
34  |  | #include "unicode/utypes.h"  | 
35  |  | #if !UCONFIG_NO_FORMATTING  | 
36  |  |  | 
37  |  | #ifndef DOUBLE_CONVERSION_UTILS_H_  | 
38  |  | #define DOUBLE_CONVERSION_UTILS_H_  | 
39  |  |  | 
40  |  | #include <cstdlib>  | 
41  |  | #include <cstring>  | 
42  |  |  | 
43  |  | // ICU PATCH: Use U_ASSERT instead of <assert.h>  | 
44  |  | #include "uassert.h"  | 
45  |  | #ifndef DOUBLE_CONVERSION_ASSERT  | 
46  |  | #define DOUBLE_CONVERSION_ASSERT(condition)         \  | 
47  | 0  |     U_ASSERT(condition);  | 
48  |  | #endif  | 
49  |  | #ifndef DOUBLE_CONVERSION_UNIMPLEMENTED  | 
50  | 0  | #define DOUBLE_CONVERSION_UNIMPLEMENTED() (abort())  | 
51  |  | #endif  | 
52  |  | #ifndef DOUBLE_CONVERSION_NO_RETURN  | 
53  |  | #ifdef _MSC_VER  | 
54  |  | #define DOUBLE_CONVERSION_NO_RETURN __declspec(noreturn)  | 
55  |  | #else  | 
56  |  | #define DOUBLE_CONVERSION_NO_RETURN __attribute__((noreturn))  | 
57  |  | #endif  | 
58  |  | #endif  | 
59  |  | #ifndef DOUBLE_CONVERSION_UNREACHABLE  | 
60  |  | #ifdef _MSC_VER  | 
61  |  | void DOUBLE_CONVERSION_NO_RETURN abort_noreturn();  | 
62  |  | inline void abort_noreturn() { abort(); } | 
63  |  | #define DOUBLE_CONVERSION_UNREACHABLE()   (abort_noreturn())  | 
64  |  | #else  | 
65  | 0  | #define DOUBLE_CONVERSION_UNREACHABLE()   (abort())  | 
66  |  | #endif  | 
67  |  | #endif  | 
68  |  |  | 
69  |  | // Not all compilers support __has_attribute and combining a check for both  | 
70  |  | // ifdef and __has_attribute on the same preprocessor line isn't portable.  | 
71  |  | #ifdef __has_attribute  | 
72  |  | #   define DOUBLE_CONVERSION_HAS_ATTRIBUTE(x) __has_attribute(x)  | 
73  |  | #else  | 
74  |  | #   define DOUBLE_CONVERSION_HAS_ATTRIBUTE(x) 0  | 
75  |  | #endif  | 
76  |  |  | 
77  |  | #ifndef DOUBLE_CONVERSION_UNUSED  | 
78  |  | #if DOUBLE_CONVERSION_HAS_ATTRIBUTE(unused)  | 
79  |  | #define DOUBLE_CONVERSION_UNUSED __attribute__((unused))  | 
80  |  | #else  | 
81  |  | #define DOUBLE_CONVERSION_UNUSED  | 
82  |  | #endif  | 
83  |  | #endif  | 
84  |  |  | 
85  |  | #if DOUBLE_CONVERSION_HAS_ATTRIBUTE(uninitialized)  | 
86  | 0  | #define DOUBLE_CONVERSION_STACK_UNINITIALIZED __attribute__((uninitialized))  | 
87  |  | #else  | 
88  |  | #define DOUBLE_CONVERSION_STACK_UNINITIALIZED  | 
89  |  | #endif  | 
90  |  |  | 
91  |  | // Double operations detection based on target architecture.  | 
92  |  | // Linux uses a 80bit wide floating point stack on x86. This induces double  | 
93  |  | // rounding, which in turn leads to wrong results.  | 
94  |  | // An easy way to test if the floating-point operations are correct is to  | 
95  |  | // evaluate: 89255.0/1e22. If the floating-point stack is 64 bits wide then  | 
96  |  | // the result is equal to 89255e-22.  | 
97  |  | // The best way to test this, is to create a division-function and to compare  | 
98  |  | // the output of the division with the expected result. (Inlining must be  | 
99  |  | // disabled.)  | 
100  |  | // On Linux,x86 89255e-22 != Div_double(89255.0/1e22)  | 
101  |  | //  | 
102  |  | // For example:  | 
103  |  | /*  | 
104  |  | // -- in div.c  | 
105  |  | double Div_double(double x, double y) { return x / y; } | 
106  |  |  | 
107  |  | // -- in main.c  | 
108  |  | double Div_double(double x, double y);  // Forward declaration.  | 
109  |  |  | 
110  |  | int main(int argc, char** argv) { | 
111  |  |   return Div_double(89255.0, 1e22) == 89255e-22;  | 
112  |  | }  | 
113  |  | */  | 
114  |  | // Run as follows ./main || echo "correct"  | 
115  |  | //  | 
116  |  | // If it prints "correct" then the architecture should be here, in the "correct" section.  | 
117  |  | #if defined(_M_X64) || defined(__x86_64__) || \  | 
118  |  |     defined(__ARMEL__) || defined(__avr32__) || defined(_M_ARM) || defined(_M_ARM64) || \  | 
119  |  |     defined(__hppa__) || defined(__ia64__) || \  | 
120  |  |     defined(__mips__) || \  | 
121  |  |     defined(__nios2__) || defined(__ghs) || \  | 
122  |  |     defined(__powerpc__) || defined(__ppc__) || defined(__ppc64__) || \  | 
123  |  |     defined(_POWER) || defined(_ARCH_PPC) || defined(_ARCH_PPC64) || \  | 
124  |  |     defined(__sparc__) || defined(__sparc) || defined(__s390__) || \  | 
125  |  |     defined(__SH4__) || defined(__alpha__) || \  | 
126  |  |     defined(_MIPS_ARCH_MIPS32R2) || defined(__ARMEB__) ||\  | 
127  |  |     defined(__AARCH64EL__) || defined(__aarch64__) || defined(__AARCH64EB__) || \  | 
128  |  |     defined(__riscv) || defined(__e2k__) || \  | 
129  |  |     defined(__or1k__) || defined(__arc__) || \  | 
130  |  |     defined(__microblaze__) || defined(__XTENSA__) || \  | 
131  |  |     defined(__EMSCRIPTEN__) || defined(__wasm32__)  | 
132  |  | #define DOUBLE_CONVERSION_CORRECT_DOUBLE_OPERATIONS 1  | 
133  |  | #elif defined(__mc68000__) || \  | 
134  |  |     defined(__pnacl__) || defined(__native_client__)  | 
135  |  | #undef DOUBLE_CONVERSION_CORRECT_DOUBLE_OPERATIONS  | 
136  |  | #elif defined(_M_IX86) || defined(__i386__) || defined(__i386)  | 
137  |  | #if defined(_WIN32)  | 
138  |  | // Windows uses a 64bit wide floating point stack.  | 
139  |  | #define DOUBLE_CONVERSION_CORRECT_DOUBLE_OPERATIONS 1  | 
140  |  | #else  | 
141  |  | #undef DOUBLE_CONVERSION_CORRECT_DOUBLE_OPERATIONS  | 
142  |  | #endif  // _WIN32  | 
143  |  | #else  | 
144  |  | #error Target architecture was not detected as supported by Double-Conversion.  | 
145  |  | #endif  | 
146  |  |  | 
147  |  | #if defined(_WIN32) && !defined(__MINGW32__)  | 
148  |  |  | 
149  |  | typedef signed char int8_t;  | 
150  |  | typedef unsigned char uint8_t;  | 
151  |  | typedef short int16_t;  // NOLINT  | 
152  |  | typedef unsigned short uint16_t;  // NOLINT  | 
153  |  | typedef int int32_t;  | 
154  |  | typedef unsigned int uint32_t;  | 
155  |  | typedef __int64 int64_t;  | 
156  |  | typedef unsigned __int64 uint64_t;  | 
157  |  | // intptr_t and friends are defined in crtdefs.h through stdio.h.  | 
158  |  |  | 
159  |  | #else  | 
160  |  |  | 
161  |  | #include <stdint.h>  | 
162  |  |  | 
163  |  | #endif  | 
164  |  |  | 
165  |  | typedef uint16_t uc16;  | 
166  |  |  | 
167  |  | // The following macro works on both 32 and 64-bit platforms.  | 
168  |  | // Usage: instead of writing 0x1234567890123456  | 
169  |  | //      write DOUBLE_CONVERSION_UINT64_2PART_C(0x12345678,90123456);  | 
170  | 0  | #define DOUBLE_CONVERSION_UINT64_2PART_C(a, b) (((static_cast<uint64_t>(a) << 32) + 0x##b##u))  | 
171  |  |  | 
172  |  |  | 
173  |  | // The expression DOUBLE_CONVERSION_ARRAY_SIZE(a) is a compile-time constant of type  | 
174  |  | // size_t which represents the number of elements of the given  | 
175  |  | // array. You should only use DOUBLE_CONVERSION_ARRAY_SIZE on statically allocated  | 
176  |  | // arrays.  | 
177  |  | #ifndef DOUBLE_CONVERSION_ARRAY_SIZE  | 
178  |  | #define DOUBLE_CONVERSION_ARRAY_SIZE(a)                                   \  | 
179  |  |   ((sizeof(a) / sizeof(*(a))) /                         \  | 
180  |  |   static_cast<size_t>(!(sizeof(a) % sizeof(*(a)))))  | 
181  |  | #endif  | 
182  |  |  | 
183  |  | // A macro to disallow the evil copy constructor and operator= functions  | 
184  |  | // This should be used in the private: declarations for a class  | 
185  |  | #ifndef DOUBLE_CONVERSION_DISALLOW_COPY_AND_ASSIGN  | 
186  |  | #define DOUBLE_CONVERSION_DISALLOW_COPY_AND_ASSIGN(TypeName)      \  | 
187  |  |   TypeName(const TypeName&);                    \  | 
188  |  |   void operator=(const TypeName&)  | 
189  |  | #endif  | 
190  |  |  | 
191  |  | // A macro to disallow all the implicit constructors, namely the  | 
192  |  | // default constructor, copy constructor and operator= functions.  | 
193  |  | //  | 
194  |  | // This should be used in the private: declarations for a class  | 
195  |  | // that wants to prevent anyone from instantiating it. This is  | 
196  |  | // especially useful for classes containing only static methods.  | 
197  |  | #ifndef DOUBLE_CONVERSION_DISALLOW_IMPLICIT_CONSTRUCTORS  | 
198  |  | #define DOUBLE_CONVERSION_DISALLOW_IMPLICIT_CONSTRUCTORS(TypeName) \  | 
199  |  |   TypeName();                                    \  | 
200  |  |   DOUBLE_CONVERSION_DISALLOW_COPY_AND_ASSIGN(TypeName)  | 
201  |  | #endif  | 
202  |  |  | 
203  |  | // ICU PATCH: Wrap in ICU namespace  | 
204  |  | U_NAMESPACE_BEGIN  | 
205  |  |  | 
206  |  | namespace double_conversion { | 
207  |  |  | 
208  | 0  | inline int StrLength(const char* string) { | 
209  | 0  |   size_t length = strlen(string);  | 
210  | 0  |   DOUBLE_CONVERSION_ASSERT(length == static_cast<size_t>(static_cast<int>(length)));  | 
211  | 0  |   return static_cast<int>(length);  | 
212  | 0  | }  | 
213  |  |  | 
214  |  | // This is a simplified version of V8's Vector class.  | 
215  |  | template <typename T>  | 
216  |  | class Vector { | 
217  |  |  public:  | 
218  | 0  |   Vector() : start_(NULL), length_(0) {} | 
219  | 0  |   Vector(T* data, int len) : start_(data), length_(len) { | 
220  | 0  |     DOUBLE_CONVERSION_ASSERT(len == 0 || (len > 0 && data != NULL));  | 
221  | 0  |   } Unexecuted instantiation: icu_70::double_conversion::Vector<char>::Vector(char*, int) Unexecuted instantiation: icu_70::double_conversion::Vector<char const>::Vector(char const*, int)  | 
222  |  |  | 
223  |  |   // Returns a vector using the same backing storage as this one,  | 
224  |  |   // spanning from and including 'from', to but not including 'to'.  | 
225  | 0  |   Vector<T> SubVector(int from, int to) { | 
226  | 0  |     DOUBLE_CONVERSION_ASSERT(to <= length_);  | 
227  | 0  |     DOUBLE_CONVERSION_ASSERT(from < to);  | 
228  | 0  |     DOUBLE_CONVERSION_ASSERT(0 <= from);  | 
229  | 0  |     return Vector<T>(start() + from, to - from);  | 
230  | 0  |   }  | 
231  |  |  | 
232  |  |   // Returns the length of the vector.  | 
233  | 0  |   int length() const { return length_; }Unexecuted instantiation: icu_70::double_conversion::Vector<char>::length() const Unexecuted instantiation: icu_70::double_conversion::Vector<char const>::length() const  | 
234  |  |  | 
235  |  |   // Returns whether or not the vector is empty.  | 
236  | 0  |   bool is_empty() const { return length_ == 0; } | 
237  |  |  | 
238  |  |   // Returns the pointer to the start of the data in the vector.  | 
239  | 0  |   T* start() const { return start_; }Unexecuted instantiation: icu_70::double_conversion::Vector<char>::start() const Unexecuted instantiation: icu_70::double_conversion::Vector<char const>::start() const  | 
240  |  |  | 
241  |  |   // Access individual vector elements - checks bounds in debug mode.  | 
242  | 0  |   T& operator[](int index) const { | 
243  | 0  |     DOUBLE_CONVERSION_ASSERT(0 <= index && index < length_);  | 
244  | 0  |     return start_[index];  | 
245  | 0  |   } Unexecuted instantiation: icu_70::double_conversion::Vector<char>::operator[](int) const Unexecuted instantiation: icu_70::double_conversion::Vector<char const>::operator[](int) const  | 
246  |  |  | 
247  |  |   T& first() { return start_[0]; } | 
248  |  |  | 
249  | 0  |   T& last() { return start_[length_ - 1]; } | 
250  |  |  | 
251  | 0  |   void pop_back() { | 
252  | 0  |     DOUBLE_CONVERSION_ASSERT(!is_empty());  | 
253  | 0  |     --length_;  | 
254  | 0  |   }  | 
255  |  |  | 
256  |  |  private:  | 
257  |  |   T* start_;  | 
258  |  |   int length_;  | 
259  |  | };  | 
260  |  |  | 
261  |  |  | 
262  |  | // Helper class for building result strings in a character buffer. The  | 
263  |  | // purpose of the class is to use safe operations that checks the  | 
264  |  | // buffer bounds on all operations in debug mode.  | 
265  |  | class StringBuilder { | 
266  |  |  public:  | 
267  |  |   StringBuilder(char* buffer, int buffer_size)  | 
268  | 0  |       : buffer_(buffer, buffer_size), position_(0) { } | 
269  |  |  | 
270  | 0  |   ~StringBuilder() { if (!is_finalized()) Finalize(); } | 
271  |  |  | 
272  | 0  |   int size() const { return buffer_.length(); } | 
273  |  |  | 
274  |  |   // Get the current position in the builder.  | 
275  | 0  |   int position() const { | 
276  | 0  |     DOUBLE_CONVERSION_ASSERT(!is_finalized());  | 
277  | 0  |     return position_;  | 
278  | 0  |   }  | 
279  |  |  | 
280  |  |   // Reset the position.  | 
281  | 0  |   void Reset() { position_ = 0; } | 
282  |  |  | 
283  |  |   // Add a single character to the builder. It is not allowed to add  | 
284  |  |   // 0-characters; use the Finalize() method to terminate the string  | 
285  |  |   // instead.  | 
286  | 0  |   void AddCharacter(char c) { | 
287  | 0  |     DOUBLE_CONVERSION_ASSERT(c != '\0');  | 
288  | 0  |     DOUBLE_CONVERSION_ASSERT(!is_finalized() && position_ < buffer_.length());  | 
289  | 0  |     buffer_[position_++] = c;  | 
290  | 0  |   }  | 
291  |  |  | 
292  |  |   // Add an entire string to the builder. Uses strlen() internally to  | 
293  |  |   // compute the length of the input string.  | 
294  | 0  |   void AddString(const char* s) { | 
295  | 0  |     AddSubstring(s, StrLength(s));  | 
296  | 0  |   }  | 
297  |  |  | 
298  |  |   // Add the first 'n' characters of the given string 's' to the  | 
299  |  |   // builder. The input string must have enough characters.  | 
300  | 0  |   void AddSubstring(const char* s, int n) { | 
301  | 0  |     DOUBLE_CONVERSION_ASSERT(!is_finalized() && position_ + n < buffer_.length());  | 
302  | 0  |     DOUBLE_CONVERSION_ASSERT(static_cast<size_t>(n) <= strlen(s));  | 
303  | 0  |     memmove(&buffer_[position_], s, n);  | 
304  | 0  |     position_ += n;  | 
305  | 0  |   }  | 
306  |  |  | 
307  |  |  | 
308  |  |   // Add character padding to the builder. If count is non-positive,  | 
309  |  |   // nothing is added to the builder.  | 
310  | 0  |   void AddPadding(char c, int count) { | 
311  | 0  |     for (int i = 0; i < count; i++) { | 
312  | 0  |       AddCharacter(c);  | 
313  | 0  |     }  | 
314  | 0  |   }  | 
315  |  |  | 
316  |  |   // Finalize the string by 0-terminating it and returning the buffer.  | 
317  | 0  |   char* Finalize() { | 
318  | 0  |     DOUBLE_CONVERSION_ASSERT(!is_finalized() && position_ < buffer_.length());  | 
319  | 0  |     buffer_[position_] = '\0';  | 
320  | 0  |     // Make sure nobody managed to add a 0-character to the  | 
321  | 0  |     // buffer while building the string.  | 
322  | 0  |     DOUBLE_CONVERSION_ASSERT(strlen(buffer_.start()) == static_cast<size_t>(position_));  | 
323  | 0  |     position_ = -1;  | 
324  | 0  |     DOUBLE_CONVERSION_ASSERT(is_finalized());  | 
325  | 0  |     return buffer_.start();  | 
326  | 0  |   }  | 
327  |  |  | 
328  |  |  private:  | 
329  |  |   Vector<char> buffer_;  | 
330  |  |   int position_;  | 
331  |  |  | 
332  | 0  |   bool is_finalized() const { return position_ < 0; } | 
333  |  |  | 
334  |  |   DOUBLE_CONVERSION_DISALLOW_IMPLICIT_CONSTRUCTORS(StringBuilder);  | 
335  |  | };  | 
336  |  |  | 
337  |  | // The type-based aliasing rule allows the compiler to assume that pointers of  | 
338  |  | // different types (for some definition of different) never alias each other.  | 
339  |  | // Thus the following code does not work:  | 
340  |  | //  | 
341  |  | // float f = foo();  | 
342  |  | // int fbits = *(int*)(&f);  | 
343  |  | //  | 
344  |  | // The compiler 'knows' that the int pointer can't refer to f since the types  | 
345  |  | // don't match, so the compiler may cache f in a register, leaving random data  | 
346  |  | // in fbits.  Using C++ style casts makes no difference, however a pointer to  | 
347  |  | // char data is assumed to alias any other pointer.  This is the 'memcpy  | 
348  |  | // exception'.  | 
349  |  | //  | 
350  |  | // Bit_cast uses the memcpy exception to move the bits from a variable of one  | 
351  |  | // type of a variable of another type.  Of course the end result is likely to  | 
352  |  | // be implementation dependent.  Most compilers (gcc-4.2 and MSVC 2005)  | 
353  |  | // will completely optimize BitCast away.  | 
354  |  | //  | 
355  |  | // There is an additional use for BitCast.  | 
356  |  | // Recent gccs will warn when they see casts that may result in breakage due to  | 
357  |  | // the type-based aliasing rule.  If you have checked that there is no breakage  | 
358  |  | // you can use BitCast to cast one pointer type to another.  This confuses gcc  | 
359  |  | // enough that it can no longer see that you have cast one pointer type to  | 
360  |  | // another thus avoiding the warning.  | 
361  |  | template <class Dest, class Source>  | 
362  | 0  | Dest BitCast(const Source& source) { | 
363  |  |   // Compile time assertion: sizeof(Dest) == sizeof(Source)  | 
364  |  |   // A compile error here means your Dest and Source have different sizes.  | 
365  | 0  | #if __cplusplus >= 201103L  | 
366  | 0  |   static_assert(sizeof(Dest) == sizeof(Source),  | 
367  | 0  |                 "source and destination size mismatch");  | 
368  |  | #else  | 
369  |  |   DOUBLE_CONVERSION_UNUSED  | 
370  |  |   typedef char VerifySizesAreEqual[sizeof(Dest) == sizeof(Source) ? 1 : -1];  | 
371  |  | #endif  | 
372  |  | 
  | 
373  | 0  |   Dest dest;  | 
374  | 0  |   memmove(&dest, &source, sizeof(dest));  | 
375  | 0  |   return dest;  | 
376  | 0  | } Unexecuted instantiation: unsigned long icu_70::double_conversion::BitCast<unsigned long, double>(double const&) Unexecuted instantiation: double icu_70::double_conversion::BitCast<double, unsigned long>(unsigned long const&) Unexecuted instantiation: unsigned int icu_70::double_conversion::BitCast<unsigned int, float>(float const&) Unexecuted instantiation: float icu_70::double_conversion::BitCast<float, unsigned int>(unsigned int const&)  | 
377  |  |  | 
378  |  | template <class Dest, class Source>  | 
379  |  | Dest BitCast(Source* source) { | 
380  |  |   return BitCast<Dest>(reinterpret_cast<uintptr_t>(source));  | 
381  |  | }  | 
382  |  |  | 
383  |  | }  // namespace double_conversion  | 
384  |  |  | 
385  |  | // ICU PATCH: Close ICU namespace  | 
386  |  | U_NAMESPACE_END  | 
387  |  |  | 
388  |  | #endif  // DOUBLE_CONVERSION_UTILS_H_  | 
389  |  | #endif // ICU PATCH: close #if !UCONFIG_NO_FORMATTING  |