The KeyMap class is used to store a set of values with associated keys which identify the values. The keys are strings. These may be case sensitive or insensitive as selected by the KeyCase attribute, and trailing spaces are ignored. The value associated with a key can be integer (signed 4 and 2 byte, or unsigned 1 byte), floating point (single or double precision), void pointer, character string or AST Object pointer. Each value can be a scalar or a one-dimensional vector. A KeyMap is conceptually similar to a Mapping in that a KeyMap transforms an input into an output - the input is the key, and the output is the value associated with the key. However, this is only a conceptual similarity, and it should be noted that the KeyMap class inherits from the Object class rather than the Mapping class. The methods of the Mapping class cannot be used with a KeyMap.
"
printf"
format specifiers identified by "
%"
symbols in the
normal way. "
options"
string contains "
%"
format specifiers,
then an optional list of additional arguments may follow it in order to supply
values to be substituted for these specifiers. The rules for supplying these are
identical to those for the astSet function (and for the C "
printf"
function).
A null Object pointer (AST__NULL) will be returned if this function is invoked with the AST error status set, or if it should fail for any reason.
"
int
status"
.