5

How can I print a string like this: €áa¢cée£ on the console/screen? I tried this:

#include <iostream>    
#include <string>
using namespace std;

wstring wStr = L"€áa¢cée£";

int main (void)
{
    wcout << wStr << " : " << wStr.length() << endl;
    return 0;
}

which is not working. Even confusing, if I remove from the string, the print out comes like this: ?a?c?e? : 7 but with in the string, nothing gets printed after the character.

If I write the same code in python:

#!/usr/bin/env python
# -*- coding: utf-8 -*-

wStr = u"€áa¢cée£"
print u"%s" % wStr

it prints out the string correctly on the very same console. What am I missing in c++ (well, I'm just a noob)? Cheers!!


Update 1: based on n.m.'s suggestion

#include <iostream>
#include <string>
using namespace std;

string wStr = "€áa¢cée£";
char *pStr = 0;

int main (void)
{
    cout << wStr << " : " << wStr.length() << endl;

    pStr = &wStr[0];
    for (unsigned int i = 0; i < wStr.length(); i++) {
        cout << "char "<< i+1 << " # " << *pStr << " => " << pStr << endl;
        pStr++;
    }
    return 0;
}

First of all, it reports 14 as the length of the string: €áa¢cée£ : 14 Is it because it's counting 2 byte per character?

And all I get this:

char 1 # ? => €áa¢cée£
char 2 # ? => ??áa¢cée£
char 3 # ? => ?áa¢cée£
char 4 # ? => áa¢cée£
char 5 # ? => ?a¢cée£
char 6 # a => a¢cée£
char 7 # ? => ¢cée£
char 8 # ? => ?cée£
char 9 # c => cée£
char 10 # ? => ée£
char 11 # ? => ?e£
char 12 # e => e£
char 13 # ? => £
char 14 # ? => ?

as the last cout output. So, actual problem still remains, I believe. Cheers!!


Update 2: based on n.m.'s second suggestion

#include <iostream>
#include <string>

using namespace std;

wchar_t wStr[] = L"€áa¢cée£";
int iStr = sizeof(wStr) / sizeof(wStr[0]);        // length of the string
wchar_t *pStr = 0;

int main (void)
{
    setlocale (LC_ALL,"");
    wcout << wStr << " : " << iStr << endl;

    pStr = &wStr[0];
    for (int i = 0; i < iStr; i++) {
       wcout << *pStr << " => " <<  static_cast<void*>(pStr) << " => " << pStr << endl;
       pStr++;
    }
    return 0;
}

And this is what I get as my result:

€áa¢cée£ : 9
€ => 0x1000010e8 => €áa¢cée£
á => 0x1000010ec => áa¢cée£
a => 0x1000010f0 => a¢cée£
¢ => 0x1000010f4 => ¢cée£
c => 0x1000010f8 => cée£
é => 0x1000010fc => ée£
e => 0x100001100 => e£
£ => 0x100001104 => £
 => 0x100001108 => 

Why there it's reported as 9 than 8? Or this is what I should expect? Cheers!!

5
  • What is the encoding of your source code file? ASCII?
    – selalerer
    Jul 23, 2011 at 10:33
  • Possible duplicate : stackoverflow.com/questions/331690/c-source-in-unicode
    – BenjaminB
    Jul 23, 2011 at 10:35
  • @selalerer: "encoding of the source file" - like # -*- coding: utf-8 -*- in python? How do I know or set that in c++? I just use vim to write the script. Cheers!!
    – MacUsers
    Jul 23, 2011 at 10:42
  • 1
    @Mac Every source file is just a text file. Every text file has some encoding, it can be some thing based on the ASCII table (in which every character is one byte) or UTF-8 or UTF-16 etc... Today every text editor supports saving the file in which ever encoding you choose. How to do this in vim? stackoverflow.com/questions/778069/…
    – selalerer
    Jul 23, 2011 at 16:13
  • @selalerer: this what it is: uniTest.cpp: UTF-8 Unicode c program text. I'd be surprised if it wasn't. The vim is being used in the very same way for every thing, whilst, e.g. python works but c++ not. Anything else do you thing still missing? cheers!
    – MacUsers
    Jul 23, 2011 at 16:27

1 Answer 1

8

Drop the L before the string literal. Use std::string, not std::wstring.

UPD: There's a better (correct) solution. keep wchar_t, wstring and the L, and call setlocale(LC_ALL,"") in the beginning of your program.

You should call setlocale(LC_ALL,"") in the beginning of your program anyway. This instructs your program to work with your environment's locale, instead of the default "C" locale. Your environment has a UTF-8 one so everything should work.

Without calling setlocale(LC_ALL,""), the program works with UTF-8 sequences without "realizing" that they are UTF-8. If a correct UTF-8 sequence is printed on the terminal, it will be interpreted as UTF-8 and everything will look fine. That's what happens if you use string and char: gcc uses UTF-8 as a default encoding for strings, and the ostream happily prints them without applying any conversion. It thinks it has a sequence of ASCII characters.

But when you use wchar_t, everything breaks: gcc uses UTF-32, the correct re-encoding is not applied (because the locale is "C") and the output is garbage.

When you call setlocale(LC_ALL,"") the program knows it should recode UTF-32 to UTF-8, and everything is fine and dandy again.

This all assumes that we only ever want to work with UTF-8. Using arbitrary locales and encodings is beyond the scope of this answer.

12
  • WOW!! that really works. That makes me asking another question: What does wstring (hence, also wchar_t I think) actually for then? Cheers!!
    – MacUsers
    Jul 23, 2011 at 13:16
  • 1
    wchar_t is a nebulous type that is "big enough to hold any character from your system's character set", but it's entirely up to your platform what to do with that. Usually you have to interface it with the environment using mbstowcs/wcstombs functions, or %Ls in printf, etc. See here for a little rant of mine on the subject, or use C++0x for explicit Unicode strings.
    – Kerrek SB
    Jul 23, 2011 at 14:21
  • @n.m.: Well, I'm not really very sure now if it's really working: If I try something like this: cout << *pStr << " => " << pStr << endl; - it prints this: ? => €áa¢cée£ on the console. pStr is a pointer of type char. I've updated my original post with new my modified script. Cheers!!
    – MacUsers
    Jul 23, 2011 at 14:30
  • @Kerrek SB: Thanks for the links. Is C++0x supported on any platform/OS? Cheers!!
    – MacUsers
    Jul 23, 2011 at 14:46
  • C++0x is supported by GCC 4.3 and up, and by MSVS2010. Don't know about other compilers...
    – Kerrek SB
    Jul 23, 2011 at 14:49

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.