Strings are almost never the best internal representation for anything but actual text. Strings are for people; computers use numbers. For cards especially it's a no-brainer, since cards often need to be compared by rank and added by value. It takes a lot less code to tell a program that 12 > 11 or to add 10 to a total than it does to tell it that "K" > "Q" or to add "J" to a total. Using strings internally is common with rookie programmers too lazy to learn about data representation.
Of course in an object-oriented language like C++ you can use objects, but the member variables of those objects that hold the card rank and suits should be integers so you can index lookup tables, compare ranges, and so on.
I wrote an essay on card representations here.
For blackjack, if you don't need a general-purpose card representation, then just using the integers 1 to 10 is ideal. Use 1 for aces, not 11, it will make your total calculations faster: you only ever need to promote one ace from 1 to 11, but you'd need to demote several from 11 to 1.
For example, if you have an array of these integers representing a hand, adding the hand total is something like this (of course, fleshed out):
int total = 0, acefound = 0, soft = 0;
for (int i = 0; i < cardsinhand; ++i) {
total += hand[i];
if (1 == hand[i]) acefound = 1;
}
if (acefound && total < 12) {
soft = 1;
total += 10;
}
Simple, and blindingly fast. If you are representing actual cards, so you'll have face cards with ranks 11, 12, 13, then just add something like if (r > 10) r = 10;
in there (another reason to make aces 1). I can simulate billions of hands in minutes like this.
Card
class, and maybe a backingenum
for the 13 possible values.