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September 3rd, 2009, 04:59 AM
#1
How to assign CString to wstring UNICODE compilation
I have a project originally compiled ANSI, it now needs to support UNICODE.
The front end is MFC and some of the backend is std C++ stl.
Currenty under ASCII compilation I have something like:
std:string val;
CString src;
val = src;
No problem.
When compile under UNICODE then have
std::wstring val
CString src
val = src;
Wont compile.
error C2679: binary '=' : no operator found which takes a right-hand operand of type 'CString' (or there is no acceptable conversion)
Can anyone help please?
Thanks.
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September 3rd, 2009, 05:52 AM
#2
Re: How to assign CString to wstring UNICODE compilation
Originally Posted by PRMARJORAM
...
When compile under UNICODE then have
...
How do you compile "under UNICODE"?
Did you defined both UNICODE and _UNICODE?
Victor Nijegorodov
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September 3rd, 2009, 06:06 AM
#3
Re: How to assign CString to wstring UNICODE compilation
Originally Posted by VictorN
How do you compile "under UNICODE"?
Did you defined both UNICODE and _UNICODE?
Im using the Visual studio 2005 compiler, so just switched the setting in the general options to the unicode character set and recompiled.
Although have edited my String typedef from std::string to std::wstring
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September 3rd, 2009, 06:24 AM
#4
Re: How to assign CString to wstring UNICODE compilation
CString is #ifdef'd to be synonymous to CStringA or to CStringW depending on settings. As victor indicates, this could be the problem.
Try literally changing yoru CString to CStringW in this particular case and retry. if it solves the issue, you need to get your compile settings corrected, if the error remains, then maybe there isn't an available (automatic) conversion available. In that case, you may need to explicitely typecast every CString to stringw conversion.
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September 3rd, 2009, 06:35 AM
#5
Re: How to assign CString to wstring UNICODE compilation
I tried CStringW, made no difference.
putting a typecast in front of the 'CStringW' also generates an error
I assume you mean
std::wstring val
CStringW src
val = (std::wstring)src;
error C2679: binary '=' : no operator found which takes a right-hand operand of type 'std::basic_string<_Elem,_Traits,_Ax>' (or there is no acceptable conversion)
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September 3rd, 2009, 06:52 AM
#6
Re: How to assign CString to wstring UNICODE compilation
std::wstring val
CString src
val = src.c_str();
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September 3rd, 2009, 06:58 AM
#7
Re: How to assign CString to wstring UNICODE compilation
I guess. you meant:
Code:
std::wstring val
CString src
src= val .c_str();
And from CStringW to std::wstring:
Code:
std::wstring val;
CStringW src;
val = (LPCWSTR)src;
Victor Nijegorodov
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September 3rd, 2009, 06:58 AM
#8
Re: How to assign CString to wstring UNICODE compilation
Originally Posted by 0xC0000005
std::wstring val
CString src
val = src.c_str();
CString not have the c_str() method!
error C2039: 'c_str' : is not a member of 'ATL::CStringT<BaseType,StringTraits>'
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September 3rd, 2009, 07:12 AM
#9
Re: How to assign CString to wstring UNICODE compilation
Thanks seems to be working now.
In the std C++ libs now, got lots of errors where have changed to wstring.
Got to put an L in front of any string literals.
And any str function calls got to be changed to wcs version.
Cant see we will ever go back to ASCII so dont need to control all this via some preprocessor directive.
But is this all I need to do? Are there any unforseen problems?
Thanks for your help.
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September 3rd, 2009, 07:18 AM
#10
Re: How to assign CString to wstring UNICODE compilation
Victor Nijegorodov
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September 3rd, 2009, 09:25 AM
#11
Re: How to assign CString to wstring UNICODE compilation
Originally Posted by VictorN
Yes that is very helpful thanks.
This clarifies what i have to do on the MFC side of my application to support UNICODE.
I also have similar but different problems with some libraries that are pure C++ std and STL.
I mean in there you have to use L"" whereas in MFC side you use _T("")
Thanks.
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September 3rd, 2009, 10:59 AM
#12
Re: How to assign CString to wstring UNICODE compilation
You can also use the conversion macros.
Code:
USES_CONVERSION;
std::wstring val
CString src
val = T2W( src );
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September 3rd, 2009, 11:04 AM
#13
Re: How to assign CString to wstring UNICODE compilation
Originally Posted by PRMARJORAM
Yes that is very helpful thanks.
This clarifies what i have to do on the MFC side of my application to support UNICODE.
I also have similar but different problems with some libraries that are pure C++ std and STL.
I mean in there you have to use L"" whereas in MFC side you use _T("")
Thanks.
This really is more of the VC and windows environment than MFC. The bottom line is that if you use _T("") around string literals, it will work for both. If you use "" or L"", you could run into trouble. Also, consider calling api's that take strings, If you call SomeWinApi( _T("xxx") ), it's going to always work. However, without the _T("") macro, you'll need to explicitly call either the SomeWinApiA (ANSI) or SomeWinApiW (UNICODE) api version.
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September 4th, 2009, 05:57 AM
#14
Re: How to assign CString to wstring UNICODE compilation
Can you have UNICODE and ASCII in the same program?
Actually, my specific problem is only that im downloading webpages. Most are western so no problem, but now some are not. specifically have a webpage using cyrillic text.
Im displaying a subset of the text from these webpages in a CListCtrl. When its cyrillic nothing is displayed. Im assuming here recompiling it all too UNICODE and then i should see cyrillic text in my CListCtrl? Its only in this instance i really need to use unicode - when displaying text from a non-western website?
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September 4th, 2009, 09:41 AM
#15
Re: How to assign CString to wstring UNICODE compilation
While you *can* have both ANSI and UNICODE in a single program, I'd recommened that you compile your program for all UNICODE. If you have data coming in (or going out) that's then convert the data to UNICODE immediately so it's in one format throughout your program.
The main reason for doing this is that the Windows Operating System uses UNICODE internally and any ANSI calls you make, convert the strings to UNICODE and then just call the UNICODE version of the api. So there is extra overhead while interacting with the OS if your program is primarily in ANSI.
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