Reputation: 7048
I'm kind of new to using Unicode string and pointers and I've no idea how the conversion to unicode to ascii and versa-versa works. Following is what I'm trying to do,
const wchar_t *p = L"This is a string";
If I wanted to convert it to char*
, how would the conversion work with converting wchar_t*
to char*
and vice-versa?
or by value using wstring
to string
class object and vice-versa
std::wstring wstr = L"This is a string";
If i'm correct, can you just copy the string to a new buffer without conversion?
Upvotes: 17
Views: 65138
Reputation: 49850
In the future (VS 2010 already supports it), this will be possible in standard C++ (finally!):
#include <string>
#include <locale>
std::wstring_convert<std::codecvt_utf8<wchar_t>> converter;
const std::wstring wide_string = L"This is a string";
const std::string utf8_string = converter.to_bytes(wide_string);
Upvotes: 23
Reputation: 2080
The widen() algorithm converts char
to wchar_t
:
char a;
a = 'a';
whcar_t wa = cin.widen(a);
Of course, you have to put it into a loop. And resolve the *;
The opposite is accomplished by narrow()
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 180305
The conversion from ASCII to Unicode and vice versa are quite trivial. By design, the first 128 Unicode values are the same as ASCII (in fact, the first 256 are equal to ISO-8859-1).
So the following code works on systems where char
is ASCII and wchar_t
is Unicode:
const char* ASCII = "Hello, world";
std::wstring Unicode(ASCII, ASCII+strlen(ASCII));
You can't reverse it this simple: 汉 does exist in Unicode but not in ASCII, so how would you "convert" it?
Upvotes: 5
Reputation: 46095
The solutions are platform-dependent. On Windows use MultiByteToWideChar and WideCharToMultiByte API functions. On Unix/linux platforms iconv library is quite popular.
Upvotes: 3