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1%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
2%% Name: tmbconv.tex
fc2171bd 3%% Purpose: Overview of the wxMBConv classes in wxWidgets
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4%% Author: Ove Kaaven
5%% Modified by:
6%% Created: 25.03.00
7%% RCS-ID: $Id$
8%% Copyright: (c) 2000 Ove Kaaven
8795498c 9%% Licence: wxWindows licence
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10%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
11
12\section{wxMBConv classes overview}\label{mbconvclasses}
13
46c81560 14Classes: \helpref{wxMBConv}{wxmbconv}, wxMBConvLibc,
f6bcfd97 15\helpref{wxMBConvUTF7}{wxmbconvutf7}, \helpref{wxMBConvUTF8}{wxmbconvutf8},
802fa226 16\helpref{wxCSConv}{wxcsconv},
845f4268 17\helpref{wxMBConvUTF16}{wxmbconvutf16}, \helpref{wxMBConvUTF32}{wxmbconvutf32}
f6bcfd97 18
802fa226 19The wxMBConv classes in wxWidgets enable an Unicode-aware application to
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20easily convert between Unicode and the variety of 8-bit encoding systems still
21in use.
22
a203f6c0 23\subsection{Background: The need for conversion}\label{needforconversion}
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24
25As programs are becoming more and more globalized, and users exchange documents
26across country boundaries as never before, applications increasingly need to
27take into account all the different character sets in use around the world. It
28is no longer enough to just depend on the default byte-sized character set that
29computers have traditionally used.
30
31A few years ago, a solution was proposed: the Unicode standard. Able to contain
32the complete set of characters in use in one unified global coding system,
33it would resolve the character set problems once and for all.
34
35But it hasn't happened yet, and the migration towards Unicode has created new
36challenges, resulting in "compatibility encodings" such as UTF-8. A large
37number of systems out there still depends on the old 8-bit encodings, hampered
38by the huge amounts of legacy code still widely deployed. Even sending
39Unicode data from one Unicode-aware system to another may need encoding to an
408-bit multibyte encoding (UTF-7 or UTF-8 is typically used for this purpose), to
41pass unhindered through any traditional transport channels.
42
a203f6c0 43\subsection{Background: The wxString class}\label{conversionandwxstring}
f6bcfd97 44
fc2171bd 45If you have compiled wxWidgets in Unicode mode, the wxChar type will become
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46identical to wchar\_t rather than char, and a wxString stores wxChars. Hence,
47all wxString manipulation in your application will then operate on Unicode
48strings, and almost as easily as working with ordinary char strings (you
49just need to remember to use the wxT() macro to encapsulate any string
50literals).
51
52But often, your environment doesn't want Unicode strings. You could be sending
53data over a network, or processing a text file for some other application. You
54need a way to quickly convert your easily-handled Unicode data to and from a
43e8916f 55traditional 8-bit encoding. And this is what the wxMBConv classes do.
f6bcfd97 56
a203f6c0 57\subsection{wxMBConv classes}\label{wxmbconvclasses}
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58
59The base class for all these conversions is the wxMBConv class (which itself
60implements standard libc locale conversion). Derived classes include
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61wxMBConvLibc, several different wxMBConvUTFxxx classes, and wxCSConv, which
62implement different kinds of conversions. You can also derive your own class
63for your own custom encoding and use it, should you need it. All you need to do
64is override the MB2WC and WC2MB methods.
f6bcfd97 65
a203f6c0 66\subsection{wxMBConv objects}\label{wxmbconvobjects}
f6bcfd97 67
fc2171bd 68Several of the wxWidgets-provided wxMBConv classes have predefined instances
9c3d92c5 69(wxConvLibc, wxConvFileName, wxConvUTF7, wxConvUTF8, wxConvLocal). You can use
845f4268 70these predefined objects directly, or you can instantiate your own objects.
f6bcfd97 71
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72A variable, wxConvCurrent, points to the conversion object that the user
73interface is supposed to use, in the case that the user interface is not
74Unicode-based (like with GTK+ 1.2). By default, it points to wxConvLibc or
75wxConvLocal, depending on which works best on the current platform.
f6bcfd97 76
a203f6c0 77\subsection{wxCSConv}\label{wxcsconvclass}
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78
79The wxCSConv class is special because when it is instantiated, you can tell it
80which character set it should use, which makes it meaningful to keep many
81instances of them around, each with a different character set (or you can
82create a wxCSConv instance on the fly).
83
84The predefined wxCSConv instance, wxConvLocal, is preset to use the
85default user character set, but you should rarely need to use it directly,
86it is better to go through wxConvCurrent.
87
a203f6c0 88\subsection{Converting strings}\label{convertingstrings}
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89
90Once you have chosen which object you want to use to convert your text,
91here is how you would use them with wxString. These examples all assume
fc2171bd 92that you are using a Unicode build of wxWidgets, although they will still
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93compile in a non-Unicode build (they just won't convert anything).
94
95Example 1: Constructing a wxString from input in current encoding.
96
97\begin{verbatim}
98wxString str(input_data, *wxConvCurrent);
99\end{verbatim}
100
101Example 2: Input in UTF-8 encoding.
102
103\begin{verbatim}
104wxString str(input_data, wxConvUTF8);
105\end{verbatim}
106
107Example 3: Input in KOI8-R. Construction of wxCSConv instance on the fly.
108
109\begin{verbatim}
110wxString str(input_data, wxCSConv(wxT("koi8-r")));
111\end{verbatim}
112
113Example 4: Printing a wxString to stdout in UTF-8 encoding.
114
115\begin{verbatim}
116puts(str.mb_str(wxConvUTF8));
117\end{verbatim}
118
119Example 5: Printing a wxString to stdout in custom encoding.
120Using preconstructed wxCSConv instance.
121
122\begin{verbatim}
123wxCSConv cust(user_encoding);
124printf("Data: %s\n", (const char*) str.mb_str(cust));
125\end{verbatim}
126
e7240349 127Note: Since mb\_str() returns a temporary wxCharBuffer to hold the result
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128of the conversion, you need to explicitly cast it to const char* if you use
129it in a vararg context (like with printf).
130
a203f6c0 131\subsection{Converting buffers}\label{convertingbuffers}
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132
133If you have specialized needs, or just don't want to use wxString, you
134can also use the conversion methods of the conversion objects directly.
135This can even be useful if you need to do conversion in a non-Unicode
fc2171bd 136build of wxWidgets; converting a string from UTF-8 to the current
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137encoding should be possible by doing this:
138
139\begin{verbatim}
140wxString str(wxConvUTF8.cMB2WC(input_data), *wxConvCurrent);
141\end{verbatim}
142
143Here, cMB2WC of the UTF8 object returns a wxWCharBuffer containing a Unicode
144string. The wxString constructor then converts it back to an 8-bit character
145set using the passed conversion object, *wxConvCurrent. (In a Unicode build
fc2171bd 146of wxWidgets, the constructor ignores the passed conversion object and
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147retains the Unicode data.)
148
149This could also be done by first making a wxString of the original data:
150
151\begin{verbatim}
152wxString input_str(input_data);
153wxString str(input_str.wc_str(wxConvUTF8), *wxConvCurrent);
154\end{verbatim}
155
156To print a wxChar buffer to a non-Unicode stdout:
157
158\begin{verbatim}
159printf("Data: %s\n", (const char*) wxConvCurrent->cWX2MB(unicode_data));
160\end{verbatim}
161
162If you need to do more complex processing on the converted data, you
163may want to store the temporary buffer in a local variable:
164
165\begin{verbatim}
166const wxWX2MBbuf tmp_buf = wxConvCurrent->cWX2MB(unicode_data);
167const char *tmp_str = (const char*) tmp_buf;
168printf("Data: %s\n", tmp_str);
169process_data(tmp_str);
170\end{verbatim}
171
172If a conversion had taken place in cWX2MB (i.e. in a Unicode build),
e7240349 173the buffer will be deallocated as soon as tmp\_buf goes out of scope.
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174(The macro wxWX2MBbuf reflects the correct return value of cWX2MB
175(either char* or wxCharBuffer), except for the const.)
176