Is there a simple way of creating a std::string out of an const char[] ?
I mean something simpler then:
std::stringstream stream;
stream << const_char;
std::string string = stream.str();
std::string
has multiple constructors, one of which is string( const char* str );
.
You can use it like this:
std::string myString(const_char);
You could also use assignment, if you need to set the value at some time later than when the variable is declared:
myString = const_char;
std::string has a constructor that takes a const char*, so you can just do:
const char* charArray;
std::string str(charArray);
Just use the std::string constructor. You can pass it a char*:
char* charArray = "My String";
std::string stdstr( charArray );
If you want to convert it without creating an additional variable, such as passing an argument to a function in just one line, try this:
std::string() + const_char
This creates an empty string using std::string
's default constructor and concatenates your const char[]
or const char*
to it to result in type std::string
.