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I am attempting to write UTF8 strings to stdout - and have them correctly displayed in the console.

To achieve this I am using SetConsoleOutputCP(CP_UTF8) and writing the data with WriteFile. The result is as expected, my string is displayed properly. The problem arises only when checking how many bytes are actually written: When called from a normal command console, it will properly count the number of bytes, regardless whether stdout is redirected or not. When started from VS2013, it reports the number of characters written instead.

Obviously, not knowing how many bytes actually got written make this approach borderline useless.

What I would like to know:

  • Is there any reasonable explanation for this? It seems as this should be a bug?
  • Is there a simple fix/workaround that I can use here?

A short example program that displays the described behavior:

#include <stdio.h>
#include <Windows.h>

int wmain(int, wchar_t const**)
{
    UINT oldcp = GetConsoleOutputCP();
    if (!SetConsoleOutputCP(CP_UTF8))
    {
        fprintf(stderr, "setting cp failed\n");
        return EXIT_FAILURE;
    }

    unsigned char utf8data[] = { 'H', 0xc3, 0xa4, 'l', 'l', 0xc3, 0xb6, '!', '\n', 0x00 };
    DWORD size = (DWORD)(sizeof(utf8data) / sizeof(*utf8data)) - 1;

    fprintf(stderr, "bytes in data: %d\n", size);
    DWORD written = 0;
    BOOL success = WriteFile(GetStdHandle(STD_OUTPUT_HANDLE), utf8data, size, &written, nullptr);
    if (!success) 
    {
        fprintf(stderr, "WriteFile failed\n");
        return EXIT_FAILURE;
    }

    fprintf(stderr, "bytes written: %d\n", written);

    SetConsoleOutputCP(oldcp);
    return EXIT_SUCCESS;
}

Output when called as consoleutf8.exe:

bytes in data: 9
Hällö!
bytes written: 9

Output when called as consoleutf8.exe > out.txt (out.txt contains the correct 9 bytes):

bytes in data: 9
bytes written: 9

Output when called from VS (ctrl+f5 or f5 does not matter, Debug/Release neither):

bytes in data: 9
Hällö!
bytes written: 7

P.S.: I am aware that I can detect if a console is attached and then use WriteConsoleW on an UCS2-encoded version of my data, however I would like to circumvent this if possible.

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  • A classic solution for issues between launch with and without Visual Studio is to initialize all variables. Some IDEs and sometimes compiling under Debug, will initialize the variables to zero; but release won't. Feb 20, 2014 at 22:45
  • 1
    I do not see any uninitialized variables in my code. Maybe you could point out where exactly you see cause for further initialization? Feb 20, 2014 at 22:52

1 Answer 1

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The difference is the console settings. The default VS debug console uses raster fonts which don't render your text properly. You probably have your personal consoles set to use Lucida, which renders the text fine and returns 7 bytes written. If you change the VS console to use the same you get the same result.

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  • I can repro what @HerrJoebob says - when my cmd console is set to raster fonts, I get bytes written: 9 and the output is gibberish. If I change the console font to Consolas or Lucida console, I get bytes written: 7 and a readable word. However, I would think that WriteFile() should return the number of bytes it passed to the device, not the number of bytes the device 'cooked' that data into for display purposes, right? Seems to me that this should be considered a bug in WriteFile(). Feb 21, 2014 at 1:17
  • This indeed seems to be the problem. And to be honest is beyond ridiculous, I never expected the font of the console to impact WriteFile... Feb 21, 2014 at 11:28
  • Agree with both of you, hopefully somebody with more internals knowledge will comment on why this is.
    – HerrJoebob
    Feb 21, 2014 at 18:22

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