FName

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When you name a new asset in the Content Browser , change a parameter in a Dynamic Material Instance, or access a bone in a Skeletal Mesh, you are using FNames . FNames provide a very lightweight system for using strings, where a given string is stored only once in a data table, even if it is reused.

FNames are case-insensitive. They are immutable, and cannot be manipulated. The storage system and static nature of FNames means that it is fast to look up and access FNames with keys. Another feature of the FName subsystem is the use of a hash table to provide fast string to FName conversions.

FNames are case-insensitive, and are stored as a combination of an index into a table of unique strings and an instance number.

Creating FNames

FName TestHUDName = FName(TEXT("ThisIsMyTestFName"));

Conversions

FNames can only be converted to FStrings and FText, and can only be converted from FStrings.

From FName

From

To

Example

FName

FString

TestHUDString = TestHUDName.ToString();

FName

FText

TestHUDText = FText::FromName(TestHUDName);

FName -> FText is valid in some cases, but be aware that the FNames's content will not benefit from the FText's "auto localization".

To FName

From

To

Example

FString

FName

TestHUDName = FName(*TestHUDString);

FString -> FName is dangerous as the conversion is lossy as FName's are case insensitive.

FText

FName

There is no direct conversion from FText to FName. Instead, convert to FString and then to FName.

FText -> FString -> FName is dangerous as the conversion is lossy as FName's are case insensitive.

When doing these conversions, be aware that they may contain characters that are not valid for the type of FName you are creating. The INVALID_NAME_CHARACTERS macro in NameTypes.h defines which characters are invalid for FNames, and several functions within FName (such as IsValidObjectName() ) check the validity of FNames for particular use cases.

Comparisons

The == operator can be used to compare two FNames, and returns true or false. Rather than doing string comparisons, this compares the values in Index, which is a significant CPU savings.

FName::Compare can also be used to compare two FNames, and it will return less than 0 if this less than Other, 0 if this equal to Other, and greater than 0 if this greater than Other.

CompareFloat = TestFName.Compare(OtherFName); 

Using FNames

Using an FName is pretty straightforward. Let us say that you wanted to get the bone named pelvis from the Skeletal Mesh Component of an Actor. The C++ code below shows the use of an FName constructed on the fly while being passed to GetBoneRotation() .

FRotator rotPelvis = Mesh->MeshGetInstance(this))->GetBoneRotation(FName(TEXT("pelvis")));

This creates an FName that is passed to GetBoneRotation(), which returns the FRotator for that corresponding bone. The name of the bone gets loaded into the FName table when the package loads, so the constructor for the FName finds the bone's name in the hash table, avoiding an allocation.

Searching the Name Table

If you want to determine if an FName is in the name table, but you do not want to automatically add it, you can supply a different search type to the FName constructor:

if( FName(TEXT("pelvis"), FNAME_Find) != NAME_None )
{
    // Do something
}

If the name does not exist in the name table, the Index of the FName is set to NAME_None. Note that we are not checking a pointer for null as you would with a normal string.

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