Convert wstring to string encoded in UTF-8

 ̄綄美尐妖づ 提交于 2019-11-27 07:07:49

C++ has no idea of Unicode. Use an external library such as ICU (UnicodeString class) or Qt (QString class), both support Unicode, including UTF-8.

skyde

The code below might help you :)

#include <codecvt>
#include <string>

// convert UTF-8 string to wstring
std::wstring utf8_to_wstring (const std::string& str)
{
    std::wstring_convert<std::codecvt_utf8<wchar_t>> myconv;
    return myconv.from_bytes(str);
}

// convert wstring to UTF-8 string
std::string wstring_to_utf8 (const std::wstring& str)
{
    std::wstring_convert<std::codecvt_utf8<wchar_t>> myconv;
    return myconv.to_bytes(str);
}

What's your platform? Note that Windows does not support UTF-8 locales so this may explain why you're failing.

To get this done in a platform dependent way you can use MultiByteToWideChar/WideCharToMultiByte on Windows and iconv on Linux. You may be able to use some boost magic to get this done in a platform independent way, but I haven't tried it myself so I can't add about this option.

You can use boost's utf_to_utf converter to get char format to store in std::string.

std::string myresult = boost::locale::conv::utf_to_utf<char>(my_wstring);

What locale does is that it gives the program information about the external encoding, but assuming that the internal encoding didn't change. If you want to output UTF-8 you need to do it from wchar_t not from char*.

What you could do is output it as raw data (not string), it should be then correctly interpreted if the systems locale is UTF-8.

Plus when using (w)cout/(w)cerr/(w)cin you need to imbue the locale on the stream.

The Lexertl library has an iterator that lets you do this:

std::string str;
str.assign(
  lexertl::basic_utf8_out_iterator<std::wstring::const_iterator>(wstr.begin()),
  lexertl::basic_utf8_out_iterator<std::wstring::const_iterator>(wstr.end()));
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