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I am porting a code (using C++ VS2015 in Windows 10) to a Universal Windows Application (UWP). It uses a macro (#define) that concatenates various const strings at compile time and sends a "const char *" as parameter to a function (not pointing to the first element). A simple example is as follows:

const char * s = ((const char *)("xxxx1234" "567" "89") + 4);
printf("[%s]", s );

in a common C++ program, it prints

[123456789] // <-- OK

The same, but for "Universal Windows", yields the error:

 error C2440: 'initializing': cannot convert from 'Platform::String ^' to 'const char *'

If I omit the "+ 4" it works fine but I dont get the correct pointer offset. Prints

[xxxx123456789] <---- NG

How can I convert types or avoid defining the strings as Platform::String ? Preferably in one line, since it is a (#define) macro

1 Answer 1

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Ok, got it. Changed it to

const char * s = (const_cast<char *>("xxxx1234" "567" "89") + 4);

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