This is so simple I'm embarrassed to ask, but how do you convert a c string to a d string in D2?

I've got two use cases.

string convert( const(char)* c_str );
string convert( const(char)* c_str, size_t length );
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up vote 10 down vote accepted
  1. Use std.string.toString(char*) (D1/Phobos) or std.conv.to!(string) (D2):

    // D1
    import std.string; 
    ... 
    string s = toString(c_str);
    
    
    // D2
    import std.conv;
    ...
    string s = to!(string)(c_str);
    
  2. Slice the pointer:

    string s = c_str[0..len];
    

    (you can't use "length" because it has a special meaning with the slice syntax).

Both will return a slice over the C string (thus, a reference and not a copy). Use the .dup property to create a copy.

Note that D strings are considered to be in UTF-8 encoding. If your string is in another encoding, you'll need to convert it (e.g. using the functions from std.windows.charset).

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toString is deprecated in D2. – KennyTM Mar 24 '10 at 14:04
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@Caspin: Use to!string or text from the std.conv module. – KennyTM Mar 24 '10 at 16:09
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IIRC string is immutable so for case 2, you will need to throw in a cast (if you know the c-string is immutable or a .idup for other cases. – BCS Mar 24 '10 at 17:43
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@The Elite: Yup, it does and if you like C++, you should take a look at D. (Be warned the ecosystem is a bit immature at the moment). – BCS Mar 24 '10 at 21:05
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@CyberShadow, D1 doesn't offer enough advantages over c++ to get my interest. D2's template syntax in particular is what has caught my interest, and range based containers instead of iterator based, and ... – deft_code Mar 25 '10 at 14:38
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