Reputation:
Does anyone know how to convert a char array to a LPCTSTR in c?
Edit:
For more reference, I need to add an integer to a string then convert that string to LPCTSTR for the first parameter of the windows function CreateFile().
This is the hardcoded example which I am currently using, but I need to be able to pass in any number to use as a port number.
CreateFile(_T("\\\\.\\COM11")... //hardcoded for com port 11
and here are several things I have tried, which I believe include the following suggestions for the next 2 answers of this post. They don't work unfortunately. If anyone could point out something I've done wrong and could possibly solve my problem, I'd appreciate it.
All of these examples assume that portNum is an int that is already assigned a valid value
char portName[12] = { 0 };
sprintf_s( portName, sizeof( portName ), "\\\\.\\COM%i", portNum );
CreateFile(portName...
I've also tried #1 with a LPCSTR case for what it's worth...
LPCSTR SomeFunction(LPCSTR aString) {
return aString;
}
main() {
char portName[12] = { 0 };
sprintf_s( portName, sizeof( portName ), "\\\\.\\COM%i", portNum );
LPCSTR lpPortName = SomeFunction(portName);
CreateFile(lpPortName...
const char * portName = "";
sprintf_s( portName, sizeof( portName ), "\\\\.\\COM%i", portNum );
LPCSTR lpPortName = portName;
CreateFile(lpPortName...
Upvotes: 12
Views: 63744
Reputation: 1316
It is an old classical question. I use it in UNICODE.
char *pChar = "My Caption of My application";
WCHAR wsz[512];
swprintf(wsz, L"%S", pChar);
SetWindowText(hWnd, // ウィンドウまたはコントロールのハンドル
wsz // タイトルまたはテキスト
);
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 21
char* filename;
LPCTSTR ime = CA2W(filename);
This is String Conversion Macro and works on my VS12
Upvotes: 2
Reputation: 277
I'm not sure if you figured something out in the end but I had the same problem and following worked well for me:
int comPortNum = 5;
char comPortName[32];
sprintf((LPTSTR)comPortName, TEXT("\\\\.\\COM%d"), comPortNum);
HANDLE h = CreateFile(comPortName,other arguments);
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 21
try like this.........
TCHAR *pcCommPort = TEXT("COM1");
HANDLE h = CreateFile(pcCommPort,other arguments);
Upvotes: 2
Reputation: 14341
You have string functions for TCHAR. You can use, for example, stprintf_s accepting TCHAR. This way, you make the code "independent" of unicode or multi-byte character set.
Your code (variant 1) becomes:
TCHAR portName[12] = { 0 };
stprintf_s( portName, sizeof( portName ) / sizeof(TCHAR), _T("\\\\.\\COM%i"), portNum );
CreateFile(portName...
Upvotes: 1
Reputation: 8065
"Does anyone know how to convert a char array to a LPCSTR in c?"
You don't have to do anything at all. It automatically converts to that type (except in initializers and sizeof).
"CreateFile(portName..."
Perhaps you should tell us the error message that VC++ gives you at compile time?
Perhaps you should also tell us what error message VC++ gave you when Adam Rosenfield's whcar_t version didn't work for you?
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 400454
You can implicitly convert a char array to an LPCSTR
without any casts:
void SomeFunction(LPCSTR aString);
...
char myArray[] = "hello, world!";
SomeFunction(myArray);
An LPCSTR
is a Windows typedef for a long pointer to a constant string. Back in the dark days of Win16 programming, there were different types of pointers: near pointers and far pointers, sometimes also known as short and long pointers respectively. Near pointers could only point to a 64KB segment of memory determined by one of the x86 segment registers. Far pointers could point to anything. Nowadays in Win32 with virtual memory, there is no need for near pointers -- all pointers are long.
So, an LPSTR
is a typedef for a char *
, or pointer to a string. An LPCSTR
is the const
version, i.e. it is a typedef for a const char *
. In C, arrays decay into pointers to their first elements, so a char[]
decays into a char*
. Finally, any type of "pointer to T" (for any type T) can be implicitly converted into a "pointer to const T". Thus, combining these three facts, we see that we can implicitly convert a char[]
into an LPCSTR
.
In response to your edit, I'm going to guess that you're compiling a Unicode application. If you look carefully at the documentation for CreateFile()
, you'll notice that the filename parameter is actually an LPCTSTR
, not an LPCSTR
(note the T
).
For pretty much every Win32 function that takes an argument of some string type (perhaps indirectly, i.e. as a member of a structure passed as a parameter), there are actually two versions of that function: one which takes 8-bit ANSI strings, and one which takes 16-bit wide-character strings. To get the actual function names, you append an A
or a W
to the function name. So, the ANSI version of CreateFile()
is named CreateFileA()
, and the wide-character version is named CreateFileW()
. Depending on whether or not you're compiling with Unicode enabled (i.e. whether the preprocessor symbol _UNICODE
is defined), the symbol CreateFile
is #define
d to either CreateFileA
or CreateFileW
as appropriate, and likewise for every other function that has an ANSI and a wide-character version.
Along the same lines, the type TCHAR
is typedef
ed to either char
or wchar_t
, depending on whether Unicode is enabled, and LPCTSTR
is typedef
ed to a pointer to a const TCHAR
.
Thus, to make your code correct, you should replace the strings you're using with TCHAR
strings, and use the type-generic version of sprintf_s
, _stprintf_s
:
TCHAR portName[32];
_stprintf_s(portName, sizeof(portName)/sizeof(TCHAR), _T("\\\\.\\COM%d"), portNum);
CreateFile(portName, ...);
Alternatively, you can explicitly use the ANSI or wide-character versions of everything:
// Use ANSI
char portName[32];
sprintf_s(portName, sizeof(portName), "\\\\.\\COM%d", portNum);
CreateFileA(portName, ...);
// Use wide-characters
wchar_t portName[32];
swprintf_s(portName, sizeof(portName)/sizeof(wchar_t), L"\\\\.\\COM%d", portNum);
CreateFileW(portName, ...);
Upvotes: 34
Reputation: 22159
In what format is your char array?
Is it a const char[]
or a non-const?
LPCSTR is just the (somewhat) confusing Microsoft name for "Long Pointer to Constant String".
LPCSTR bar = "hello";
const char *foo = bar;
const char *evil = "hello";
LPCSTR sauron = evil;
If you need to get a non-const version, you either cast away the constness, or you copy to a new array. I would probably prefer the latter. Variables are often const for a reason, and changing them is almost always bad practice.
Upvotes: 3