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I have a zero terminated string:

char* s = ...;

and I am generating C source code (at runtime) and I want to output a string literal representing s that will produce an identical string to s in the generated C program.

The algorithm I am using is:

Output "

Foreach char c in s
    if c == " output \"
    else if c == \ output \\
    else output c

Output "

Are there any other characters that I need to give special treatment other than " and \?

8
  • There are plenty others. Unicode, single quotes, new lines, etc. all require special handling Aug 31, 2012 at 4:14
  • What if s contains an escaped \"?
    – dda
    Aug 31, 2012 at 4:14
  • @dda: Than it will correctly be encoded as "...\\\"..." Aug 31, 2012 at 4:24
  • @RichardJ.RossIII: Won't unicode and single quotes be preserved? Do they need escaping? Aug 31, 2012 at 4:30
  • @Andrew: I think the problem Richard refers to is that the source character set of a C implementation is not necessarily the same as the execution character set. Which is a fancy way of saying that just because char can contain certain characters (for example Latin 1 or UTF-8) doesn't necessarily mean that source files can. Also the more obvious point you didn't question, that newlines need special treatment. ASCII 0x27 single-quote doesn't need special treatment, but the "curved" quote at 0x92 in Windows CP-1252 and \u2019 might. Aug 31, 2012 at 8:15

2 Answers 2

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  • You must encode ", \, \r and \n and \0 (and \? as Michael Burr mentions). Failure to do this will break your code.
  • You should encode non-ASCII characters using the hexadecimal escape code, e.g. \x80. It is implementation defined if you have non-ASCII characters in your source code. Failure to encode these characters will work on some compilers but it could break on others.
  • You can encode ASCII non-printable characters. It would improve the readability of the generated source code if you used the escape codes for characters like \t, \b, \x05, etc. If you don't do this your code will still work but it might be hard to read.
  • You don't need to escape ' inside a double-quoted string. It's legal, but it's unnecessary and it doesn't make the source code more readable.
3
  • If there are bytes in a C string literal from 0x80 to 0xFF than aren't they they preserved as-is? Aug 31, 2012 at 4:28
  • @AndrewTomazos-Fathomling: I believe that this is implementation dependent. It will probably work, but it's not wise to rely on it.
    – Mark Byers
    Aug 31, 2012 at 4:41
  • I believe that an implementation is permitted to interpret source files as (for example) UTF-8. If you wrote an ISO-Latin or CP1252 string "as is" into the source file, then you lose, unless after writing the source file you then transcode it. I believe an implementation is also permitted to interpret source files as pure ASCII, and reject the file if it contains any bytes not in the list of source characters required by the standard. Then you just lose full stop, unless you used escape codes. Aug 31, 2012 at 8:23
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the set of escape sequences in standard C include the following:

\' 
\" 
\? 
\\ 
\a  (alert - usually Ctrl-G)
\b  (backspace)
\f  (form feed)
\n  
\r
\t
\v  (vertical tab)

Note that the \? is in there so the question mark can be escaped so a sequence like "??!" can be encoded as `"\?\?!" to prevent it from being interpreted as a dreaded trigraph.

For completeness, I would consider handling each of these (though some of them like \a and \v I might escape using a \x escape sequence instead - that may depend on your needs). Also, for any other non-printable character, I'd convert to its hex equivalent using the \x escape sequence.

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