7

I am trying to convert some old Delphi 7 code to Delphi 2010

function AnsiToDOS(S: String): String;
begin
  SetLength(Result, Length(S));
  if S <> '' then begin
     CharToOEM(PChar(S), PChar(Result));
  end;
end;

I get the "Incompatible types: 'Char' and 'AnsiChar' " error at the line:

CharToOEM (external User32 function) found in

Windows.pas unit

Can I rewrite this AnsiToDos function somehow, or do I need to write my own CharToOEM routine?

5
  • 1
    The function CharToOEM is Banned for microsoft instead use WideCharToMultiByte.
    – RRUZ
    Mar 13, 2012 at 18:26
  • @RRUZ Lots of those banned functions are perfectly reasonable to use. Mar 13, 2012 at 18:29
  • 1
    @DavidHeffernan i prefer follow the MSDN recommendations (when is possible).
    – RRUZ
    Mar 13, 2012 at 18:32
  • @RRUZ I agree in principle but these particular recommendations are highly debatable and there is a very large body of opinion contrary to this. Mar 13, 2012 at 18:37
  • @RRUZ, look at the remarks: "The classic C runtime, "n" functions are banned because they are so hard to call correctly. The authors have seen numerous errors calling these functions". Classic "guns kill people" i'd say.
    – OnTheFly
    Mar 13, 2012 at 19:20

2 Answers 2

6

In Unicode Delphi, CharToOem maps to the Unicode version CharToOemW which has the following signature:

function CharToOem(Source: PWideChar; Dest: PAnsiChar): BOOL; stdcall;

So you need to supply an ANSI output buffer but your code provides a Unicode output buffer.

The natural conversion is to switch to an AnsiString return value. At the same time renamed the function as StringToOem to better reflect what it does.

function StringToOem(const S: String): AnsiString;
begin
  SetLength(Result, Length(S));
  if S <> '' then begin
    CharToOem(PChar(S), PAnsiChar(Result));
  end;
end;

An alternative would be to convert to OEM in place, but for this you need to pass in an ANSI string and call the ANSI version of the API call explicitly.

function AnsiStringToOem(const S: AnsiString): AnsiString;
begin
  Result := S;
  UniqueString(Result);
  if S <> '' then begin
    CharToOemA(PAnsiChar(Result), PAnsiChar(Result));
  end;
end;

I do have to comment that I am surprised to see the OEM character set still being actively used in the modern day. I thought it had gone the way of the dinosaurs!

5
  • 3
    If you're modifying strings in-place, don't forget to call UniqueString first.
    – user743382
    Mar 13, 2012 at 18:50
  • Since when consoles became a dinosaurs?
    – OnTheFly
    Mar 13, 2012 at 19:25
  • @user539484 Since when were consoles restricted to OEM text? Mar 13, 2012 at 19:32
  • Since Windows NT they do not. Yet even Microsoft stock tools are printing messages in (tada!) CP_OEMCP. You are not even using any characters outside Latin-1 set, i presume?
    – OnTheFly
    Mar 13, 2012 at 19:48
  • Indeed surprising: I just found out that WSDLImp.dpr in Delphi XE2 still uses it to convert string to OEM: ` CharToOEMA(PAnsiChar(AStr), PAnsiChar(AStr));` Sep 3, 2012 at 23:24
-1

The most simple will be (in C++Builder):

typedef AnsiStringT<850> OEMString;
AnsiString (or String) aStr = L"my ansi text";
OEMString oStr = aStr;  // convert
cout << oStr.c_str() << endl;

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