I have:
unsigned char *foo();
std::string str;
str.append(static_cast(foo()));
The error: invalid static_cast from
Hope it help. :)
const unsigned attribName = getname();
const unsigned attribVal = getvalue();
const char *attrName=NULL, *attrVal=NULL;
attrName = (const char*) attribName;
attrVal = (const char*) attribVal;
char *
and const unsigned char *
are considered unrelated types. So you want to use reinterpret_cast
.
But if you were going from const unsigned char*
to a non const
type you'd need to use const_cast
first. reinterpret_cast
cannot cast away a const
or volatile
qualification.
reinterpret_cast
You would need to use a reinterpret_cast<>
as the two types you are casting between are unrelated to each other.
Try reinterpret_cast
unsigned char *foo();
std::string str;
str.append(reinterpret_cast<const char*>(foo()));
unsigned char* is basically a byte array and should be used to represent raw data rather than a string generally. A unicode string would be represented as wchar_t*
According to the C++ standard a reinterpret_cast between unsigned char* and char* is safe as they are the same size and have the same construction and constraints. I try to avoid reintrepret_cast even more so than const_cast in general.
If static cast fails with what you are doing you may want to reconsider your design because frankly if you are using C++ you may want to take advantage of what the "plus plus" part offers and use string classes and STL (aka std::basic_string might work better for you)