C++ substring multi byte characters

[亡魂溺海] 提交于 2020-01-24 06:28:48

问题


I am having this std::string which contains some characters that span multiple bytes.

When I do a substring on this string, the output is not valid, because ofcourse, these characters are counted as 2 characters. In my opinion I should be using a wstring instead, because it will store these characters in as one element instead of more.

So I decided to copy the string into a wstring, but ofcourse this does not make sense, because the characters remain split over 2 characters. This only makes it worse.

Is there a good solution on converting a string to a wstring, merging the special characters into 1 element instead of 2.

Thanks


回答1:


There are really only two possible solutions. If you're doing this a lot, over large distances, you'd be better off converting your characters to a single element encoding, using wchar_t (or int32_t, or whatever is most appropriate. This is not a simple copy, which would convert each individual char into the target type, but a true conversion function, which would recognize the multibyte characters, and convert them into a single element.

For occasional use or shorter sequences, it's possible to write your own functions for advancing n bytes. For UTF-8, I use the following:

inline size_t
size(
    Byte                ch )
{
    return byteCountTable[ ch ] ;
}

template< typename InputIterator >
InputIterator
succ(
    InputIterator       begin,
    size_t              size,
    std::random_access_iterator_tag )
{
    return begin + size ;
}

template< typename InputIterator >
InputIterator
succ(
    InputIterator       begin,
    size_t              size,
    std::input_iterator_tag )
{
    while ( size != 0 ) {
        ++ begin ;
        -- size ;
    }
    return begin ;
}

template< typename InputIterator >
InputIterator
succ(
    InputIterator       begin,
    InputIterator       end )
{
    if ( begin != end ) {
        begin = succ( begin, end, size( *begin ),
                      std::::iterator_traits< InputIterator >::iterator_category() ) ;
    }
    return begin ;
}

template< typename InputIterator >
size_t
characterCount(
    InputIterator       begin,
    InputIterator       end )
{
    size_t              result = 0 ;
    while ( begin != end ) {
        ++ result ;
        begin = succ( begin, end ) ;
    }
    return result ;
}



回答2:


Simpler version. based on the solution provided Getting the actual length of a UTF-8 encoded std::string? by Marcelo Cantos

std::string substr(std::string originalString, int maxLength)
{
    std::string resultString = originalString;

    int len = 0;
    int byteCount = 0;

    const char* aStr = originalString.c_str();

    while(*aStr)
    {
        if( (*aStr & 0xc0) != 0x80 )
            len += 1;

        if(len>maxLength)
        {
            resultString = resultString.substr(0, byteCount);
            break;
        }
        byteCount++;
        aStr++;
    }

    return resultString;
}



回答3:


A std::string object is not a string of characters, it's a string of bytes. It has no notion of what's called "encoding" at all. Same goes for std::wstring, except that it's a string of 16bit values.

In order to perform operations on your text which require addressing distinct characters (as is the case when you want to take the substring, for instance) you need to know what encoding is used for your std::string object.

UPDATE: Now that you clarified that your input string is UTF-8 encoded, you still need to decide on an encoding to use for your output std::wstring. UTF-16 comes to mind, but it really depends on what the API which you will pass the std::wstring objects to expect. Assuming that UTF-16 is acceptable you have various choices:

  1. On Windows, you can use the MultiByteToWideChar function; no extra dependencies required.
  2. The UTF8-CPP library claims to provide a lightweight solution for dealing with UTF-* encoded strings. Never tried it myself, but I keep hearing good things about it.
  3. On Linux systems, using the libiconv library is quite common.
  4. If you need to deal with all sorts of crazy encodings and want the full-blown alpha-and-omega word as far as encodings go, look at ICU.



回答4:


Unicode is hard.

  1. std::wstring is not a list of codepoints, it's a list of wchar_t, and their width is implementation-defined (commonly 16 bits with VC++ and 32 bits with gcc and clang). Yes, it means it's useless for portable code...
  2. A single character may be encoded on several code points (because of diacritics)
  3. In some language, two different characters together form a "unit" that is not really separable (for example, LL is considered a letter on its own in Spanish).

So... it's a bit hard.

Solving 3) may be costly (it requires specific language/usage annotations); solving 1) and 2) is absolutely necessary... and requires Unicode aware libraries or coding your own (and probably getting it wrong).

  • 1) is trivially solved: writing a routine transforming from UTF-8 to CodePoint is trivial (a CodePoint can be represented with an uint32_t)
  • 2) is more difficult, it requires a list of diacritics and the sub routine must know never to cut prior to a diacritic (they follow the character they qualify)

Otherwise, there is probably what you seek in ICU. I wish you good luck finding it.




回答5:


Let me assume for simplicity that your encoding is UTF-8. In this case we would have some chars occupying more than one byte, as in your case. Then you have std::string, where those UTF-8 encoded characters are stored. And now you want to substr() in terms of chars, not bytes. I'd write a function that will convert character length to byte length. For the utf 8 case it would look like:

#define UTF8_CHAR_LEN( byte ) (( 0xE5000000 >> (( byte >> 3 ) & 0x1e )) & 3 ) + 1

int32 GetByteCountForCharCount(const char* utf8Str, int charCnt)
{
    int ByteCount = 0;
    for (int i = 0; i < charCnt; i++)
    {
        int charlen = UTF8_CHAR_LEN(*utf8Str);
        ByteCount += charlen;
        utf8Str += charlen;
    }
    return ByteCount;
}

So, say you want to substr() the string from 7-th char. No problem:

int32 pos = GetByteCountForCharCount(str.c_str(), 7);
str.substr(pos); 



回答6:


Based on this I've written my utf8 substring function:

void utf8substr(std::string originalString, int SubStrLength, std::string& csSubstring)
{
    int len = 0, byteIndex = 0;
    const char* aStr = originalString.c_str();
    size_t origSize = originalString.size();

    for (byteIndex=0; byteIndex < origSize; byteIndex++)
    {
        if((aStr[byteIndex] & 0xc0) != 0x80)
            len += 1;

        if(len >= SubStrLength)
            break;
    }

    csSubstring = originalString.substr(0, byteIndex);
}


来源:https://stackoverflow.com/questions/10846953/c-substring-multi-byte-characters

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