3

I need to have a function in C++/CLI which do the link between a C++ native std::list<std::string> and a string[] in C# to do something like that with my WinForm :

    ComboBox1.Items.AddRange(installs);

installs is the string[].

Do you have an idea? How can I do this? C++/CLI programming is hard without Intellisense. :(

What do you think about this?

Native C++ .cpp

std::list<std::string>* Get_Liste_place_de_marche(void)
{
    list<string>* liste_place_de_marche = new list<string>;
    liste_place_de_marche->push_back("CAC 40");
    liste_place_de_marche->push_back("DAX");
    return liste_place_de_marche;
}

And I need to code this function using the last code to the top :

C++/CLI .cpp called in my Winform with C#

array<System::String^>^ NativeMethod::Get_Liste_place_de_marche(void)
{
    typedef std::list<std::string>::const_iterator iter_t;

    std::list<std::string> const* list = new std::list<std::string>;
    list = ::Get_Liste_place_de_marche();

    array<System::String^>^ ret = gcnew array<System::String^>(list->size());
    int j = 0;

    for (iter_t i = list->begin(); i != list->end(); ++i)
        ret[j++] = gcnew System::String(i->c_str());

    return ret;
}

It should work? Because I have many errors...

2
  • 1
    What is liste<string>? Do you mean std::list<std::string>?
    – ildjarn
    Jun 29, 2011 at 14:07
  • Ups yes sorry I wrote list in french :o)
    – bdelmas
    Jun 29, 2011 at 14:26

1 Answer 1

4

The following should do the job:

array<System::String^>^ ArrayFromList(std::list<std::string> const& list) {
    typedef std::list<std::string>::const_iterator iter_t;

    array<System::String^>^ ret = gcnew array<System::String^>(list.size());
    int j = 0;

    for (iter_t i = list.begin(); i != list.end(); ++i)
        ret[j++] = gcnew System::String(i->c_str());

    return ret;
}

I would try to keep this more general, though. For instance, it’s customary in C++ to work on iterator ranges instead of containers. Furthermore, the above only works on (zero-terminated) strings. Very similar code will be needed to convert other object collections. It might make sense to abstract the object conversion away.

8
  • 1
    @Konrad : System.String is nonsensical here, and cli::array::operator[]'s argument is int so j should be signed for consistency.
    – ildjarn
    Jun 29, 2011 at 15:10
  • @Nazka : It will work if you change System.String to System::String, and as I mentioned in my other comment, j should be of type int rather than unsigned (though this isn't strictly necessary in order to get the code to compile).
    – ildjarn
    Jun 29, 2011 at 15:20
  • @ildjarn Sorry, the System.String was an accident. As for unsigned, you’re right but it’s the CLI that is “wrong” here. Call it idiosyncrasy … since C++ does it right and make indices unsigned. Jun 29, 2011 at 15:26
  • 1
    @Konrad : Agreed, but this is C++/CLI not C++, so idiosyncrasies aside... ;-] Also, you still have array<System.String^>^ ret.
    – ildjarn
    Jun 29, 2011 at 15:37
  • 2
    @Nazka it works but it leaks memory like crazy. Just omit the pointers and the calls to new. Oh, and get a good beginner’s C++ book because this is one of the things that you need to know as a C++ developer. Jun 29, 2011 at 15:51

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