> "Look, we don't have time for all these foolish ideas," Vince said. "Just have them fax it to us. They can take that hex dump, print it out, and fax it to us. We'll use the interns to type it back in, and then you can load it up in the debugger, and then there's no way we could possibly catch a virus. Call the customer and tell them to do that."
I can type § on my keyboard too, but I need a AltGr modifier.
If I was the Rick from the story, after "You work for morons", I'd probably just tell them to fax me some random hex characters, and give me a link to download the dump.
@RMartinhoFernandes 'Character' is problematic (but 'combining character' is the preferred term, sorry). Point being, two codepoints can result in one displayed glyph.
So in other words std::u32string is good for storing text and passing around, just not manipulating it. Hence why I'm looking for a nice name for a text-oriented type.
u32text!
Which I guess would be a (character type, encoding, locale) triplet or something.
A good way to find out if a distant planet harbors an advanced civilization is to see if its translation period is a multiple of its rotation period. Surely it's easier to fix a planet's orbit than to fix calendars.
@DeadMG (Since C++ doesn't support Unicode and the compiler vendor has no interest in providing an extension for that I'm considering e.g. ICU as part of the equation.)
I have written desktop tools for Windows and Mac that were translated in around 20 languages and I never found unicode to be problematic. I simply used UTF8 encoding (std::string) everywhere. Except when interfacing with the WinAPI, where I did a just-in-time conversion from/to UTF16.
I'm okay with the Standard not saying anything about Unicode manipulation for the time being. I'd rather wait for a Boost library to come out so that we can refine the concept over time.
@DeadMG But why would you need to do any of that if you're just interested in locating a \n? You should be able to just iterate through the string 2 bytes at a time and look for that character
@StackedCrooked Well more to the point I think DeadMG was talking about manipulating wchar_t. You can indeed manipulate UTF-16 at the char level, like anything else. But like binary manipulation of anything else, you have to know what you're doing. I think that '\n' cannot appear in surrogate pairs of UTF-16 but I don't know much about that.