What's the difference between std::string
and std::basic_string
? And why are both needed?
5 Answers
std::basic_string
is a class template for making strings out of character types, std::string
is a typedef
for a specialization of that class template for char
.
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27
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2so you are saying that std::string is typedef std::basic_string<char> std::string ? Nov 19, 2015 at 16:31
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10@MuhammadAnnaqeeb 2.5 years late but the short answer is to provide wide string (wstring) (Unicode, 2 bytes per character, wchar_t) support as well.– AndrewOct 15, 2016 at 2:19
std::string
is an instantiation of std::basic_string<T>
:
typedef std::basic_string<char> string
std::basic_string
is necessary to have a similar interface for all type of strings (wstring
for example).
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42The proper term is "specialization".
string
is a specialization ofbasic_string
. Nov 2, 2009 at 16:25 -
3I guess you could argue about that. "specialization" is usually used to indicate inheritance. A templated {class|function} is instantiated by substituting the template arguments. There is partial template specialization but this isn't used here.– pmrNov 2, 2009 at 17:14
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5Referring to a derived class as a 'specialization' is a less formal use of 'specialization'. The word 'specialization' isn't used like this at all in the standard (I'm fairly sure), but its used extensively to describe template specialization. The name of a template specialization can be used in contexts that don't force and implicit instantiation so specialization and instantiation are separate concepts. As well as a template specialization (the name of a template with a particular set of parameters), there are also partial specializations (class templates only) and explicit specializations. Nov 2, 2009 at 17:45
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2Using "specialization" here would be misleading. A template specialization has a specific meaning (unrelated to inheritance), but that's NOT what's used here. std::string is nothing more or less than a typedef, like:
namespace std { typedef basic_string<char> string; }
Technically, it's not really an instantiation either, but it's at least closer (instantiation, by definition, creates an instance, and a typedef only creates a name, not an instance). Nov 2, 2009 at 17:46 -
3@Charles: it's misleading because (with templates), "specialization" normally refers to either partial specialization, or explicit specialization, not a typedef for what will end up as a simple instantiation. Nov 2, 2009 at 18:01
A std::string
is an instantiation of the std::basic_string
template with a type of char
. You need both so that you can make strings of things besides char
, such a std::basic_string<wchar_t>
for a string of wide characters. Or if you want a string with 32 bit elements, std::basic_string<unsigned int>
.
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3I think this should be the top voted answer. It provides a use case of when you wouldn't instantiate
std::basic_string
without achar
type.– hlin117Sep 30, 2020 at 19:52 -
How do I do cout<< of std::basic_string<unsigned int>. It is giving error. Jul 4, 2021 at 10:22
Just a small addition to whatever everyone else answered. As std::string
is a specialization of basic_string
it also default some other parameters except the char type .A basic_string can have a custom char type (e.g. basic_string can have wide_chars ) , a custom char_trait (e.g. basic_string can have wide chars but support every operation of normal chars) ,and a custom allocator ( a basic_string can have some extra infos packed with it for a custom debugger or a static memory management).
Usefulness
The std::string
defaults all this parameters to reasonable values as on most cases you only need an std::string
and that is it's usefulness. On the other hand whenever you need something more custom you have std::basic_string
. So both have their different purposes
std::basic_string is a template that lets us create typedefs like std::string as std::basic_string and std::wstring as std::basic_string<wchar_t> so std::string is a specific kind of std::basic_string.
If you're using other kinds of IO std::basic_string can be useful there. For any of the *curses libs you might want to make a typedef for std::basic_string<cchar_t> and whatever structs libcaca and aalib use to draw to the screen.
std::basic_string is useful for a lot of stream or string like parsing. Imagine you're building a scripted dialog system for a game. You want to store strings of the dialogue, but you also need to encode actions like screen shake, or changing the images being displayed, or triggering an animation on some on-screen character. You can use a struct/union to hold each character or the action and have a std::basic_string of that type. If you want to process things differently you could have a std::basic_string of something like this struct.
struct Color {
uint8_t r;
uint8_t g;
uint8_t b;
};
struct Word {
std::string value;
uint32_t fadeInTimeInMs;
Color textColor;
uint8_t fontId;
uint8_t textSize;
};
Then your source text could look something like this.
In our {color:{100,100,100}family,} there {textSize:{8},fadeInTimeInMs:{750}was {textSize:{10},textColor:{150,0,30}no} clear} line between religion and fly fishing.
You could parse that into a std_basic_string and then when you're rendering to the screen you can use the per word styles.