I have some code that works perfectly fine on Linux BUT on Windows it only works as expected if is compiled using Cygwin, which emulates a Linux env. on Windows but is bad for portability (you must have Cygwin installed for compiled binary to work.) The program does the following:
- Opens a document in read mode and ccs=UTF-8 and reads it char by char.
- Writes the braille Unicode pattern (U+2800..U+28FF) corresponding to that letter, num. or punct. mark to a 'dest' document (opened in write mode and ccs=UTF-8)
Significant code:
const char *brai[26] = {
"⠁","⠃","⠉","⠙","⠑","⠋","⠛","⠓","⠊","⠚",
"⠅","⠇","⠍","⠝","⠕","⠏","⠟","⠗","⠎","⠞",
"⠥","⠧","⠭","⠽","⠵","⠺"
}
int main(void) {
setlocale(LC_ALL, "es_MX.UTF-8");
FILE *source = fopen(origen, "r, ccs=UTF-8");
FILE *dest = fopen(destino, "w, ccs=UTF-8");
unsigned int letra;
while ((letra = fgetc(source)) != EOF) {
// This next line is the problem, I guess:
fwprintf(dest, L"%s", "⠷"); // Prints directly the braille sign as a char[]
// OR prints it from an array that contains the exact same sign.
fwprintf(dest, L"%s", brai[7]);
}
}
Code works as expected on Linux every time, but not for Windows. I tried everything and nothing seems to get the output right. On the 'dest' document I get random chars like: 甥╩極肠─猀甥iꃢ¨.
The only way to print braille patterns to the doc so far on Windows was:
fwprintf(dest, L"⠷");
Which is not very useful (would need to make an 'else if' for every case instead). If you wish to see the full code, it's on Github: https://github.com/oliver-almaraz/Texto_a_Braille
What I tried so far:
- Changing files open options to UTF-16LE and UNICODE.
- Changing fwprintf() arguments in every way I could imagine.
- Changing the array properties to unsigned int for the arrays containing the braille patterns.
- Different compilers.