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I am making a library which lets user insert and search key-value pairs as trie data structure. When I insert a unicode string, it breaks down into 4 characters(utf-8)(which is okay), but each character becomes ‘?’. So I tried using setlocale(LC_ALL, "") which didn’t work (or maybe I just dunno what are the right arguments for my case and where to call it). I don’t really care about printing or reading the character as it is. All I want is that it can somehow be represented uniquely.

In my trie there are links like node *next[256].

So all I want is when a unicode string gets inserted, it gets inserted as a unique combination which would make it possible to search that string uniquely. Also I want a way to detect that a unicode character was broken down into 4 individual chars. Thats because, e.g., If in a string “wxyz" a unicode character “x” is broken down into a,b,c,d then trie would store “wabcdyz”. But if I was actually searching a string wabcdyz(not unicode), then it would find the entry for that string but that would be a mismatch.

Here is a program that shows the unicode character being broken down into four ? characters:

#include <stdio.h>

int main()
{
    printf("Hello World");

    char a[] = "Ƃ";

    int i;
    for(i = 0 ; a[i] != '\0' ; ++i)
    {
        printf("%c", a[i]);
    }

    return 0;
}
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    @IgorGalczak UTF-8 characters can be from one to four bytes (if you respect the artificial limitation of Unicode to 0x10FFFF code points) or one to six (if you stick with the original definition of UTF-8). I suspect OP is actually getting UTF-16 or -32.
    – zwol
    May 22, 2019 at 15:03
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    @Mihir By design, every byte of a UTF-8 multibyte sequence has its high bit set, so they can never collide with ASCII characters. As long as your trie structure does not clobber the high bit, it should be able to work with UTF-8 strings just like it does ASCII, without ever having to know the encoding explicitly. However, if your Unicode strings consistently have four bytes per character they are probably not UTF-8, but UTF-32, which is much harder to work with. Please tell us what the numeric value of each of the four bytes in one of the problem characters is.
    – zwol
    May 22, 2019 at 15:05
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    "Unicode string"? In C you have an encoding. So you are meaning "UTF-8"? Or you are doing like python, an unicode interface and you handle (and hide) the details? May 22, 2019 at 15:13
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    @Mihir, I note that you say "Unicode", but tag [utf-8], and describe behavior that doesn't seem consistent with UTF-8. UTF-8 is one way of representing Unicode text, but not the only way. May 22, 2019 at 15:14
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    @Mihir Two questions: (1) Why does your test program use int a[] = "Ƃ"? That is definitely wrong. It won't even compile on my computer. (2) What does your program print, on your computer, if you change %c to %02x in the printf call?
    – zwol
    May 22, 2019 at 16:00

1 Answer 1

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UTF-8 is a mechanism for encoding Unicode character sequences as byte sequences, but not the only way. Unicode does not imply UTF-8, and, technically, UTF-8 does not imply Unicode, either.

When I insert a unicode string, it breaks down into 4 characters(utf-8)

That is a function of how you store the string data, and

  • it sounds broken
  • it is probably not using UTF-8, contrary to your assertion

So all I want is when a unicode string gets inserted, it gets inserted as a unique combination which would make it possible to search that string uniquely.

That's relatively easy: encode all your strings the same way. Encoding all of them in UTF-8 would be my choice, but you may also use any other stateless encoding that supports all the characters that may appear in your strings, such as UTF-16 or UTF-32. But you must use a consistent encoding for all characters of all strings.

Having done that properly, you don't necessarily need to do anything else special to make your trie work.* If you choose UTF-16 or UTF-32, however, then I would suggest structuring the trie around the size of their code units (16- or 32 bits, respectively). That's not necessary, but it will likely yield advantages in the form of shallower and therefore better-performing tries.


* Note, however, that UTF-16 and UTF-32 code units include many encompassing bytes with value 0, such as 0x0031 and 0x00000200. If you do treat these as byte sequences instead of code-unit sequences, then you must account for that. In particular, you must avoid assuming that individual null bytes serve as terminators.

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  • That answers most of my question. But how should I even enable utf-8? e.g., I pass Ƃ as a string to get inserted. When I traverse through string character by char, it reads it as ‘?’ ‘? ‘?’ ‘?’. How should I make it read it correctly? May 22, 2019 at 15:33
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    @Mihir We really can't help you any further until you tell us the numeric value of each of those four bytes. I can tell you right now that Ƃ, encoded in UTF-8, should produce the two-byte sequence 0xC6 0x82, so that makes it practically certain that you are not getting UTF-8, but I still don't know what you are getting. It would also help if you showed us the exact code construct that you mean by "I pass Ƃ as a string to get inserted."
    – zwol
    May 22, 2019 at 15:40
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    @JohnBollinger You should probably also mention that UTF-16 and -32 are incompatible with using C's one-byte \0 string terminators; you can use U+0000 instead, but then you have to work with code units instead of bytes.
    – zwol
    May 22, 2019 at 15:41
  • @Mihir Oh, also, we need to know whether or not you are using Windows. The answer to your setlocale issues changes depending on that.
    – zwol
    May 22, 2019 at 15:43
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    @Mihir I copied your program into your question. In the future, please provide example code by editing the question, not by using pastebin; we want questions and answers to make sense years from now, and that doesn't work if they depend on links to external sites that may no longer be valid. (Did you know you can edit your question? The tiny gray word edit under the links is a button. Yes, really. Yes, it's bad UI design. Sorry.)
    – zwol
    May 22, 2019 at 15:58

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