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1/////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
2// Name: unicode.h
3// Purpose: topic overview
4// Author: wxWidgets team
5// RCS-ID: $Id$
6// Licence: wxWindows license
7/////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
8
9/**
10
11@page overview_unicode Unicode Support in wxWidgets
12
13This section briefly describes the state of the Unicode support in wxWidgets.
14Read it if you want to know more about how to write programs able to work with
15characters from languages other than English.
16
17@li @ref overview_unicode_what
18@li @ref overview_unicode_ansi
19@li @ref overview_unicode_supportin
20@li @ref overview_unicode_supportout
21@li @ref overview_unicode_settings
22
23<hr>
24
25
26@section overview_unicode_what What is Unicode?
27
28wxWidgets has support for compiling in Unicode mode on the platforms which
29support it. Unicode is a standard for character encoding which addresses the
30shortcomings of the previous, 8 bit standards, by using at least 16 (and
31possibly 32) bits for encoding each character. This allows to have at least
3265536 characters (what is called the BMP, or basic multilingual plane) and
33possible 2^32 of them instead of the usual 256 and is sufficient to encode all
34of the world languages at once. A different approach is to encode all
35strings in UTF8 which does not require the use of wide characters and
36additionally is backwards compatible with 7-bit ASCII. The solution to
37use UTF8 is prefered under Linux and partially OS X.
38
39More details about Unicode may be found at <http://www.unicode.org/>.
40
41Writing internationalized programs is much easier with Unicode. Moreover
42even a program which uses only standard ASCII can benefit from using Unicode
43for string representation because there will be no need to convert all
44strings the program uses to/from Unicode each time a system call is made.
45
46@section overview_unicode_ansi Unicode and ANSI Modes
47
48Until wxWidgets 3.0 it was possible to compile the library both in
49ANSI (=8-bit) mode as well as in wide char mode (16-bit per character
50on Windows and 32-but on most Unix versions, Linux and OS X). This
51has been changed in wxWidget with the removal of the ANSI mode,
52but much effort has been made so that most of the previous ANSI
53code should still compile and work as before.
54
55@section overview_unicode_supportin Unicode Support in wxWidgets
56
57Since wxWidgets 3.0 Unicode support is always enabled meaning
58that the wxString class always uses Unicode to encode its content.
59Under Windows wxString uses UCS-2 (basically an array of 16-bit
60wchar_t). Under Unix, Linux and OS X however, wxString uses UTF8
61to encode its content.
62
63For the programmer, the biggest change is that iterating over
64a string can be slower than before since wxString has to parse
65the entire string in order to find the n-th character in a
66string, meaning that iterating over a string should no longer
67be done by index but using iterators. Old code will still work
68but might be less efficient.
69
70Old code like this:
71
72@code
73wxString s = wxT("hello");
74size_t i;
75for (i = 0; i < s.Len(); i++)
76{
77 wxChar ch = s[i];
78
79 // do something with it
80}
81@endcode
82
83should be replaced (especially in time critical places) with:
84
85@code
86wxString s = "hello";
87wxString::const_iterator i;
88for (i = s.begin(); i != s.end(); ++i)
89{
90 wxUniChar uni_ch = *i;
91 wxChar ch = uni_ch;
92 // same as: wxChar ch = *i
93
94 // do something with it
95}
96@endcode
97
98If you want to replace individual characters in the string you
99need to get a reference to that character:
100
101@code
102wxString s = "hello";
103wxString::iterator i;
104for (i = s.begin(); i != s.end(); ++i)
105{
106 wxUniCharRef ch = *i;
107 ch = 'a';
108 // same as: *i = 'a';
109}
110@endcode
111
112which will change the content of the wxString s from "hello" to "aaaaa".
113
114String literals are translated to Unicode when they are assigned to
115a wxString object so code can be written like this:
116
117@code
118wxString s = "Hello, world!";
119int len = s.Len();
120@endcode
121
122wxWidgets provides wrappers around most Posix C functions (like printf(..))
123and the syntax has been adapted to support input with wxString, normal
124C-style strings and wchar_t strings:
125
126@code
127wxString s;
128s.Printf( "%s %s %s", "hello1", L"hello2", wxString("hello3") );
129wxPrintf( "Three times hello %s\n", s );
130@endcode
131
132@section overview_unicode_supportout Unicode and the Outside World
133
134We have seen that it was easy to write Unicode programs using wxWidgets types
135and macros, but it has been also mentioned that it isn't quite enough. Although
136everything works fine inside the program, things can get nasty when it tries to
137communicate with the outside world which, sadly, often expects ANSI strings (a
138notable exception is the entire Win32 API which accepts either Unicode or ANSI
139strings and which thus makes it unnecessary to ever perform any conversions in
140the program). GTK 2.0 only accepts UTF-8 strings.
141
142To get an ANSI string from a wxString, you may use the mb_str() function which
143always returns an ANSI string (independently of the mode - while the usual
144c_str() returns a pointer to the internal representation which is either ASCII
145or Unicode). More rarely used, but still useful, is wc_str() function which
146always returns the Unicode string.
147
148Sometimes it is also necessary to go from ANSI strings to wxStrings. In this
149case, you can use the converter-constructor, as follows:
150
151@code
152const char* ascii_str = "Some text";
153wxString str(ascii_str, wxConvUTF8);
154@endcode
155
156For more information about converters and Unicode see the @ref overview_mbconv.
157
158
159@section overview_unicode_settings Unicode Related Compilation Settings
160
161You should define @c wxUSE_UNICODE to 1 to compile your program in Unicode
162mode. Since wxWidgets 3.0 this is always the case. When compiled in UTF8
163mode @c wxUSE_UNICODE_UTF8 is also defined.
164
165*/
166