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I have a C++ struct

struct UnmanagedStruct
{
   char* s;
};

and a C# struct

struct ManagedStruct {
   [MarshalAs(UnmanagedType.LPStr)]
   string s;
}

the C++ library exposes

extern "C" UnmanagedStruct __declspec(dllexport) foo( char* input );

And it is imported like

  [DllImport("SomeDLL.dll", CharSet = CharSet.Ansi)]
  static extern ManagedStruct foo( string input );
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1 Answer

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Edit & Correction: For return values of p/invoke calls, the "normal" method doesn't work. I was so used to the normal, ref, and out behaviors related to method parameters that I assumed return values would work in a similar fashion. Here is the link for a solution to the return value problem:
PInvoke error when marshalling struct with a string in it

You only need to use a StringBuilder if you are passing the struct to the C++ method as a byref parameter and the string is a buffer that the method will alter. For a return value, you just need to specify the type of string, which in this case is:

struct ManagedStruct
{
    [MarshalAs(UnmanagedType.Lpstr)]
    string s;
}

Rememer to add a property to expose the string, since s is private here (which is OK, fields should be private).

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1  
There's nothing wrong with making fields public in structs that are used solely for P/Invoke purposes. All accessors would be trivial anyway, and this would not ever change in the future, so why write more code? – Pavel Minaev Jul 31 at 23:29
I tried that but I keep getting Method's type signature is not PInvoke compatible – DevDevDev Jul 31 at 23:31
Reading the Microsoft help it says "ANSI strings must be marshaled using an IntPtr and passed as an array of bytes." – DevDevDev Jul 31 at 23:43
@SteveM, what help? Link, please. Most likely it's for some corner case, not applicable here. – Pavel Minaev Aug 1 at 0:13
msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/… – DevDevDev Aug 3 at 17:40
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