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A modifiable string with a fixed-size storage area.
        Defined in header <boost/beast/core/static_string.hpp>
      
template< std::size_t N, class CharT = char, class Traits = std::char_traits<CharT>> class static_string
| Name | Description | 
|---|---|
| 
                  The type of  | |
| Name | Description | 
|---|---|
| 
                  Assign  | |
| Access specified character with bounds checking. | |
| Accesses the last character. | |
| Returns an iterator to the beginning. | |
| Returns a non-modifiable standard C character array version of the string. | |
| Returns the number of characters that can be held in currently allocated storage. | |
| Returns an iterator to the beginning. | |
| Returns an iterator to the end. | |
| Clears the contents. | |
| 
                  Copy a substring (pos, pos+count) to character string pointed to
                  by  | |
| Returns a reverse iterator to the beginning. | |
| Returns a reverse iterator to the end. | |
| Returns a pointer to the first character of a string. | |
| 
                  Returns  | |
| Returns an iterator to the end. | |
| Accesses the first character. | |
| Returns the number of characters, excluding the null terminator. | |
| Returns the maximum number of characters that can be stored, excluding the null terminator. | |
| 
                  Convert a static string to a  | |
| 
                  Copy assignment.  | |
| Access specified character. | |
| Returns a reverse iterator to the beginning. | |
| Returns a reverse iterator to the end. | |
| Reserves storage. | |
| Changes the number of characters stored. | |
| Reduces memory usage by freeing unused memory. | |
| Returns the number of characters, excluding the null terminator. | |
| static_string [constructor] | 
                  Default constructor (empty string).  | 
| Exchange the contents of this string with another. | 
| Name | Description | 
|---|---|
| Maximum size of the string excluding the null terminator. | |
| A special index. | 
        These objects behave like std::string
        except that the storage is not dynamically allocated but rather fixed in
        size. These strings offer performance advantages when a protocol imposes
        a natural small upper limit on the size of a value.
      
The stored string is always null-terminated.