In response to discussion in
Cross-platform strings (and Unicode) in C++
How to deal with Unicode strings in C/C++ in a cross-platform friendly way?
I'm trying to assign a UTF-8
string to a std::string
variable in Visual Studio 2010
environment
std::string msg = "महसुस";
However, when I view the string view debugger, I only see "?????" I have the file saved as Unicode (UTF-8 with Signature) and i'm using character set "use unicode character set"
"महसुस" is a nepali language and it contains 5 characters and will occupy 15 bytes. But visual studio debugger shows msg size as 5
My question is:
How do I use std::string to just store the utf-8 without needing to manipulate it?
If you were using C++11 then this would be easy:
std::string msg = u8"महसुस";
But since you are not, you can use escape sequences and not rely on the source file's charset to manage the encoding for you, this way your code is more portable (in case you accidentally save it in a non-UTF8 format):
std::string msg = "\xE0\xA4\xAE\xE0\xA4\xB9\xE0\xA4\xB8\xE0\xA5\x81\xE0\xA4\xB8"; // "महसुस"
Otherwise, you might consider doing a conversion at runtime instead:
std::string toUtf8(const std::wstring &str)
{
std::string ret;
int len = WideCharToMultiByte(CP_UTF8, 0, str.c_str(), str.length(), NULL, 0, NULL, NULL);
if (len > 0)
{
ret.resize(len);
WideCharToMultiByte(CP_UTF8, 0, str.c_str(), str.length(), &ret[0], len, NULL, NULL);
}
return ret;
}
std::string msg = toUtf8(L"महसुस");