std::experimental::filesystem::u8path
From cppreference.com
< cpp | experimental | fs | path
Defined in header <experimental/filesystem>
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template< class Source > path u8path( const Source& source ); |
(1) | (filesystem TS) |
template< class InputIt > path u8path( InputIt first, InputIt last ); |
(2) | (filesystem TS) |
Constructs a path p
from a UTF-8 encoded sequence of chars, supplied either as an std::string, or as a null-terminated multibyte string, or as a [first, last) iterator pair.
- If
path::value_type
is char and native encoding is UTF-8, constructs a path directly as if by path(source) or path(first, last). Note: this is the typical situation of a POSIX system that uses Unicode, such as Linux. - Otherwise, if
path::value_type
is wchar_t and native encoding is UTF-16 (this is the situation on Windows), or ifpath::value_type
is char16_t (native encoding guaranteed UTF-16) or char32_t (native encoding guaranteed UTF-32), then first converts the UTF-8 character sequence to a temporary stringtmp
of typepath::string_type
and then the new path is constructed as if by path(tmp) - Otherwise (for non-UTF-8 narrow character encodings and for non-UTF-16 wchar_t), first converts the UTF-8 character sequence to a temporary UTF-32-encoded string
tmp
of type std::u32string, and then the new path is constructed as if by path(tmp) (this path is taken on a POSIX system with a non-Unicode multibyte or single-byte encoded filesystem)
Contents |
[edit] Parameters
source | - | an UTF-8 encoded std::string, pointer to a null-terminated multibyte string, or an input iterator with char value type that points to a null-terminated multibyte string |
first, last | - | pair of InputIterator s that specify a UTF-8 encoded character sequence
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Type requirements | ||
-InputIt must meet the requirements of InputIterator .
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-The value type of InputIt must be char
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[edit] Return value
The path constructed from the input string after conversion from UTF-8 to the filesystem's native character encoding.
[edit] Exceptions
May throw filesystem_error on underlying OS API errors or std::bad_alloc if memory allocation fails.
[edit] Notes
On systems where native path format differs from the generic path format (neither Windows nor POSIX systems are examples of such OSes), if the argument to this function is using generic format, it will be converted to native.
[edit] Example
Run this code
#include <cstdio> #include <clocale> #include <fstream> #include <iostream> #include <experimental/filesystem> namespace fs = std::experimental::filesystem; int main() { std::setlocale(LC_ALL, "en_US.utf8"); std::locale::global(std::locale("en_US.utf8")); fs::path p = fs::u8path(u8"要らない.txt"); // native string representation can be used with OS APIs std::ofstream(p) << "File contents"; // this uses operator string() if(std::FILE* f = std::fopen(p.c_str(), "r")) { int ch; while((ch=fgetc(f))!= EOF) putchar(ch); std::fclose(f); } // multibyte and wide representation can be used for output std::cout.imbue(std::locale()); std::cout << "\nFile name in narrow multibyte encoding: " << p.string() << '\n'; std::wcerr.imbue(std::locale()); std::wcerr << "File name in wide encoding: " << p.wstring() << '\n'; fs::remove(p); }
Output:
File contents File name in narrow multibyte encoding: 要らない.txt File name in wide encoding: 要らない.txt
[edit] See also
represents a path (class) |