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7798

answers:

4

Is there any method? My computer is AMD64,

::std::string str;
BOOL loadU(const wchar_t* lpszPathName, int flag = 0);

when I used:

loadU(&str);

the VS2005 compiler says: Error 7 error C2664:: cannot convert parameter 1 from 'std::string *__w64 ' to 'const wchar_t *'

How can I do it ?

+3  A: 

If you have a std::wstring object, you can call c_str() on it to get a wchar_t*:

std::wstring name( L"Steve Nash" );
wchar_t* szName = name.c_str();

Since you are operating on a narrow string, however, you would first need to widen it. There are various options here; one is to use Windows' built-in MultiByteToWideChar routine. That will give you an LPWSTR, which is equivalent to wchar_t*.

Matt Dillard
+2  A: 

First convert it to std::wstring:

std::wstring widestr = std::wstring(str.begin(), str.end());

Then get the C string:

wchar_t* widecstr = widestr.c_str();
marijne
This should work fine for ASCII strings, but it will not work if the underlying string is UTF-8 encoded. Using a conversion routine like MultiByteToWideChar() ensures that this scenario is handled properly.
Matt Dillard
You should use MultiByteToWideChar with correct codepage. To be precise, two calls to it are needed: the first to get the required length of the target wchar_t string and the second to convert the char string to the wchar_t string.
Johann Gerell
It will only work if wchar_t is Unicode and char is Latin-1 or ASSCII. The first 256 character values of Unicode exactly match Latin-1; the first 128 characters of Latin-1 exactly match ASCII.
MSalters
+3  A: 

You can use the ATL text conversion macros to convert a narrow (char) string to a wide (wchar_t) one. For example, to convert a std::string:

#include <atlconv.h>
...
std::string str = "Hello, world!";
CA2W pszWide(str.c_str());
loadU(pszWide);

You can also specify a code page, so if your std::string contains UTF-8 chars you can use:

CA2W pszWide(str.c_str(), CP_UTF8);

Very useful but Windows only.

Rob
You probably want CA2CW. You might also want to add a basic explanation for the macro naming convention (eg: Const Ascii -> Const Wchar).
Nick
There is no CA2CW conversion function. There is a CA2CT version but this simply calls CA2W. See <atlconv.h> for a full list.
Rob
+1  A: 

If you are on Linux/Unix have a look at mbstowcs() and wcstombs() defined in GNU C (from ISO C 90).

  • mbs stand for "Multi Bytes String" and is basically the usual zero terminated C string.

  • wcs stand for Wide Char String and is an array of wchar_t.

For more background details on wide chars have a look at glibc documentation here.

kriss