If you really need a writable buffer of char that is copied from the contents of a std::string, you can use std::vector<char>
std::vector<char> urlAsVec( sup.begin(), sup.end() );
urlAsVec.push_back( '\0' );
char * url = &urlAsVec[0]; // pointer you can safely write to
You can also initialize the vector this way:
std::vector<char> urlAsVec( sup.c_str(), sup.c_str() + sup.size() + 1 );
which will write your null-terminator for you too.
Another alternative:
std::vector<char> urlAsVec( sup.size() + 1 );
sup.copy( &urlAsVec[0], sup.size() );
Note that your vector will automatically initialize all its elements to 0 so the null terminator will be there even though sup.copy() doesn't write it. You can use sup.copy( ptr, len)
instead of strcpy anyway, which is slightly safer in that you can specify the buffer size (although strncpy would allow that too), although you will still have to write the null terminator manually (or have it already allocated).
For example if you use this:
char url[ BUFLEN ] = {0};
sup.copy( url, BUFLEN-1 );
for some fixed value BUFLEN you will get a copy or partial copy of the source string written into your buffer. Note that my initializer ensures all your unwritten bytes are 0.
std::string
everywhere, until you needed to pass it to a legacy system. Then usestd::string::c_str()
. Is there a reason you can't usestd::string
?