Protocol buffers and UTF-8

帅比萌擦擦* 提交于 2019-12-03 08:50:26
Mark Wilkins

It may be overkill, but the ICU libraries will do everything you need and you can use them on both Windows and Linux.

However, if you are only wanting conversion, then under Windows, a simple call to MultiByteToWideChar and WideCharToMultiByte can do the conversion between UTF-8 and

UTF-16. For example:

// utf-8 to utf-16
MultiByteToWideChar( CP_UTF8, 0, myUtf8String, -1,
                     myUtf16Buf, lengthOfUtf16Buf );

With Linux, libidn might do what you need. It can convert between UTF-8 and UCS, which I think is equivalent to UTF-32 at some level. For example:

// utf-8 to UCS
ucsStr = stringprep_utf8_to_ucs4( "asdf", 4, &items );

However, in Linux I think you might be best simply working with UTF-8. Unless you have an existing library for UTF-16, I am not sure there is a compelling reason to use it in Linux.

The Boost Serialization library contains a UTF-8 codecvt facet that you can use to convert unicode to UTF-8 and back. There even is an example in the documentation doing exactly that.

Take a look at UTF8-CPP:

// converts a utf-8 encoded std::string s to utf-16 wstring ws
utf8to16(s.begin(), s.end(), back_inserter(ws));

On Linux it's trivial: each wchar_t is one Unicode codepoint, and with trivial bitops you can find the corresponding UTF-8 byte(s). On Windows it isn't much harder, as there is an API for it: WideCharToMultiByte(CP_UTF8, 0, input.c_str(), input.size(), &out[0], out.size(), 0,0);

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