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 \
?
s
contains an escaped \"?"...\\\"..."
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. ASCII0x27
single-quote doesn't need special treatment, but the "curved" quote at0x92
in Windows CP-1252 and\u2019
might.