@DeadMG Then it needs a locale attached to it. Otherwise the only other comparison is binary, which may be useful for programming stuff but isn't an equality of text.
@SSight3 std::string, in a sense, already provide basic unicode support. Where 'basic' means 'I don't care about codepoints', can't get more basic than that.
@LucDanton Well, I mean in terms of what DeadMG is saying. I don't know. How would one implement what DeadMG is seeking in terms of a std::string like class?
@RMartinhoFernandes Because it always goes awry at the last minute. Seriously. I should name a law after it. Like the... last minute law, or something.
"Oh no, I appear to be missing a vital function. And you've had an oversight. And now I'm incompatible with your List class. I appear to be deleting your files."
Folks, and in particular the @cat who isn't here, I was very happy with the ideas you had about using Boost iostreams for handling UTF-16 filenames in Windows.
a string class should be universal. Defining yet another string class jsut means that everyone will spend even more time converting between string classes
if you're going to define a string class, put it in boost, or better still, the standard library. If you can't do that, it most likely isn't worth using in practice
@jalf So maybe a template type array that can perform universal functions? I am assuming, of course, comparing a unicode character with each other would be implemented under the covers by someone else.
@DeadMG Pick UTF-32 + a sane-ish normal form then. Assuming you're talking about combining characters (and you shouldn't use 'character' outside of 'combining character'.
Unicode is not about representing glyphs, hence why there's an 'angstrom' and a 'capital latin A with small circle'. Maybe those do get normalized to a unique codepoint but there might be others.
@DeadMG Unicode doesn't attach glyphs to codepoints (and combining characters).
Why would you want "ABH" (latin letters) compare equal to "ABH" (Greek letters, except not really, I'm not finding the relevant Unicode codepoints they would look just like that)?
Latin 'H' looks like Greek 'H' but they're not the same letter in any way.
@DeadMG You have the right idea. Operating on UTF-32 text with a sane normal form is probably the best way to avoid headaches. (I say probably because this is straining my knowledge of Unicode and I haven't really been in that problem space.) Then store/transmit everything as UTF-8.
@LucDanton you need UTF-16 for Windows programming, in particular in order to handle filenames like [π.recipe]. i'm not sure of best way to proceed about that now that Boost filesystem failed to deliver. in fact there is this comment, "on Windows, except for standard libaries known to have wchar_t overloads for file stream I/O, use path::string() to get a narrow character c_str()" which means it doesn't work BY DESIGN. Ugh.
@LucDanton i don't know sorry for butting in in ongoing discussion. but the filenames can be arriving as command line arguments. they don' t need to be in source code.