this is one area of C/C++ that i have never been good at.
my problem is that i have a string that will need to eventually contain some null characters. treating everything as a char array (or string) won't work, as things tend to crap out when they find the first null. so i thought, ok, i'll switch over to uint8_t, so everything is just a number. i can move things around as needed, and cast it back to a char when i'm ready.
my main question right now is: how can i copy a portion of a string to an uint8_t buffer?
effectively, i'd like to do something like:
std::string s = "abcdefghi";
uint8_t *val = (uint8_t*)malloc(s.length() + 1);
memset(val, 0, s.length() + 1);
// Assume offset is just some number
memcpy(val + offset, s.substr(1, 5).c_str(), 5);
obviously, i get an error when i try this. there is probably some sort of trickery that can be done in the first argument of the memcpy (i see stuff like (*(uint8_t*)) online, and have no clue what that means).
any help on what to do?
and while i am here, how can i easily cast this back to a char array? just static_cast the uint8_t pointer to a char pointer?
thanks a lot.
std::string
is perfectly capable of containing'\0'
characters. There's no reason to have to do this unless you're using C-string manipulation functions, or other APIs that only takechar*
s with no length. And those APIs won't do the right thing for strings that have embedded nulls anyway.(*(uint8_t*))
are often casts to a more abstract data type, then a cast that becomes legal at that point but wasn't previously, then a cast back down. It's used often when casting function pointers, for example(DWORD)(*(void**))(void(*)(int))
(-ish, haven't used it in a while). Just for reference. :)char
arrays are perfectly capable of holding nul characters, as astd::string
objects. Further, there is nothing thatuint8_t
does thatchar
doesn't do equally well. Please show us what you have tried, and we'll tell you where you are going wrong. Can you create a 10-line program that demonstrates what is going wrong for you? See sscce.org.