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1075

answers:

2

I know following is the way to use unicode in C#

string unicodeString = "\u0D15";

In my situation, I will not get the character code (0D15) at compile time. I get this from a XML file at runtime. I wonder how do I convert this code to unicode string? I tried the following

// will not compile as unrecognized escape sequence
string unicodeString = "\u" + codeFromXML; 

// will compile, but just concatenates u with the string got from XML file.
string unicodeString = "\\u" + codeFromXML;

How do I handle this situation?

Any help would be great!

+8  A: 

You want to use the char.ConvertFromUtf32 function.

string codePoint = "...";

int code = int.Parse(codePoint, System.Globalization.NumberStyles.HexNumber);
string unicodeString = char.ConvertFromUtf32(code).ToString();
arul
Thanks for the reply. But, codeFromXML is a string. ConvertFromUtf32 accepts int. I tried to use int.Parse, but getting FormatException.
Appu
See the updated reply.
arul
A: 

Here's an NUnit test showing arul and Adrian's solution - note that one solution starts with input in a string, while with the other solution the input starts in just a char.

    [Test]
    public void testConvertFromUnicode()
    {

        char myValue = Char.Parse("\u0D15");
        Assert.AreEqual(3349, myValue);

        char unicodeChar = '\u0D15';
        string unicodeString = Char.ConvertFromUtf32(unicodeChar);
        Assert.AreEqual(1, unicodeString.Length);
        char[] charsInString = unicodeString.ToCharArray();
        Assert.AreEqual(1, charsInString.Count());
        Assert.AreEqual((int) '\u0D15', charsInString[0]);
    }
dplante