@PeterT Could you please show me the related url? I still could not find the related information with the keyword "BSD socket error codes". I only find this(microfocus.com/documentation/enterprise-developer/ed232/ETS/…) ,but it does not contain 0x6c(108)
Is it standards-conformant to do wchar_t s[] = L"" "";, i.e. concatenate a wide string literal with a narrow one? Seems to work but I'm not sure if it will work everywhere.
Mh, I might have found an answer: stackoverflow.com/a/2192903/1007605 So at least for C99 it's legal. I think C++ mostly borrowed C's preprocessor without changes so it's probably ok in C++, too.
I recall having used a WIDEN macro just like the one in the question not too long ago and now I wonder why, when it should have worked without one :/
"If one of the strings has an encoding prefix and the other doesn't, the one that doesn't will be considered to have the same encoding prefix as the other." en.cppreference.com/w/cpp/language/string_literal
const wchar_t text[] = u8"cdf" L"aa"; this errors out though. understandibly