At 9:58 AM -0800 8/8/00, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
>Hi, Antoine.
>
>> I can continue to dissert on this subject
Please!
>(all of this should
>> finally be
> > cooked in a FAQ anyway),
I'll help, which means I need as much of your dissertings as possible.
>but I do not want to flood the list
Hi, Antoine.
> I can continue to dissert on this subject (all of this should
> finally be
> cooked in a FAQ anyway), but I do not want to flood the list
> with a marginaly interesting subject.
Merci beaucoup. It was very informative!
Ciao.
Marco
P.S. You should not be so shy:
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
>
> Antoine Leca wrote:
> > char C_thai[] =
> > "\u0E40\u0E02\u0E17\u0E32\u0E49\u0E1B\u0E07\u0E1C\u0E33";
>
> Would the Unicode values be converted to the local SBCS/MBCS character set?
In this case, yes (assuming a normal C compiler).
With wchar_t / L"...", they are
Antoine Leca wrote:
> char C_thai[] =
> "\u0E40\u0E02\u0E17\u0E32\u0E49\u0E1B\u0E07\u0E1C\u0E33";
Would the Unicode values be converted to the local SBCS/MBCS character set?
If yes:
Is the definition of this locale info part of the C99 standard itself, or is
it operating system's locale?
An
Bob Jones wrote:
>
> In a C program, how do you code Unicode string literals on the following
> platforms:
> NT
> Unix (Sun, AIX, HP-UX)
> AS/400
We devised a solution for this problem in the C99 Standard.
The "solution" is named "UCN", for Universal Character Notation, and
is essentially to us
>In a C program, how do you code Unicode string literals on the following
>platforms:
>NT
>Unix (Sun, AIX, HP-UX)
>AS/400
>
could you explain this more specificallly. maybe give an example where you
need this
>Everything I have read says not to use wchar_t for cross platform apps
>because the s
Bob Jones asked:
> In a C program, how do you code Unicode string literals on the following
> platforms:
> NT
> Unix (Sun, AIX, HP-UX)
> AS/400
>
A somewhat cumbersome, but completely reliable crossplatform way to
code occasional Unicode string literals in a C program is:
static unichar thai2[
In a C program, how do you code Unicode string literals on the following
platforms:
NT
Unix (Sun, AIX, HP-UX)
AS/400
Everything I have read says not to use wchar_t for cross platform apps
because the size is not uniform, i.e. NT it is an unsigned short (2 bytes)
while on Unix it is an unsigned in
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