Thanks to @0x499602D2, I found out I had an array out of bounds error in my functions. To be more clear, I wanted my function to construct an unicode string whose characters are in the range [start, end]. This was my final version:
// Generate an unicode string of length 'len' whose characters are in range [start, end]
wchar_t* generateRandomUnicodeString(size_t len, size_t start, size_t end)
{
wchar_t* ustr = new wchar_t[len+1]; // +1 for '\0'
size_t intervalLength = end - start + 1; // +1 for inclusive range
srand(time(NULL));
for (auto i = 0; i < len; i++) {
ustr[i] = (rand() % intervalLength) + start;
}
ustr[len] = L'\0';
return ustr;
}
When this function is called as follows, it generates an unicode string with 5 cyrillic characters.
int main()
{
_setmode(_fileno(stdout), _O_U16TEXT);
wchar_t* output = generateRandomUnicodeString(5, 0x0400, 0x04FF);
wcout << "Random Unicode String = " << output << endl;
delete[] output;
return 0;
}
PS: This function as weird and arbitrary as it may seem, serves a usual purpose for me, I need to generate sample strings for a unit-test case that checks to see if unicode strings are written and retrieved properly from a database, which is the backend of a c++ application. In the past we have seen failures with unicode strings that contain non-ASCII characters, we tracked that bug down and fixed it and this random unicode string logic serves to test that fix.
uchars[end+1]is accessing an out of bounds address. It should beuchars[end-beg+2]. Moreover, the for loop is only assigning characters from addresses[0, 9]; the other 2 indexes are untouched. Is that what you meant to do?