I have some byte streams that may or may not be encoded as 1) extended ASCII, 2) UTF-8, or 3) UTF-16. And they may be in English, French, or Chinese. I would like to write a simple program that allows the user to enter a byte stream and then pick one of the encodings and one of the languages and see what the string would look like when interpreted in that manner. Or simply interpret each string in each of the 9 possible ways and display them all. I would like to avoid having to switch regionalizations repeatedly. I'm using Delphi 2007. Is what I am trying to do even possible?
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In Delphi 2009 or later, this would be easier, since it supports Unicode and can do most of this transparently. For older versions, you have to do a bit more manual work. The first thing you want to do is convert the text to a common codepage; preferably UTF-16, since that's the native codepage on Windows. For that, you use the MultiByteToWideChar function. For UTF-8 to UTF-16, the language doesn't matter; for "extended ASCII", you will need to choose an appropriate source code page (e.g. Windows-1252 for English and French, and GB2312 or Big5 or some other Chinese code page - that depends on what you expect to receive). To store these, you can use a WideString, which stores UTF-16 directly. Once you have that, you have to draw the text somehow - and that requires you to either get a Unicode-capable control (a label is likely sufficient), or write one, or just call the appropriate Windows API function directly to draw - and that's where it can get a bit messy, because there are several functions for doing that. TextOutW is probably the simplest choice here, but another option would be DrawText. Make sure you explicitly call the W version of these function in order to work with Unicode. (See also the related question How do I draw Unicode text?). Take note: Due to CJK unification - the encoding of equivalent Chinese Hanzi, Japanese Kanji, and Korean Hanja characters at the same code points in Unicode - you need to pick a font that matches the expected kind of Chinese, traditional or simplified, in order to get expected rendering. To quote a somewhat related post by Michael Kaplan:
Unless you have a specific font you want/need to use, pick the first font in the list for the language variant you want to use, since these are standard fonts (on XP, you will need to enable East Asian Language support before they are available, on Vista and above, they are always included). If you do not do this, then Windows may either not render the characters at all (showing the missing character glyph instead), or it may use an inappropriate fallback (e.g. PMingLiu for Simplified Chinese) - the exact behavior depends on the API function you use to render the text. |
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