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Q: How to correctly skip unicode (UTF-8) characters?

Nurbol AlpysbayevI have written a parser that turns out works incorrectly with UTF-8 texts. The parser is very very simple: while(pos < end) { // find some ASCII char if (text.at(pos) == '@') { // Check some conditions and if the syntax is wrong... if (...) createDiagnostic(pos); } pos++; } So you can s...

What are the types that you are using?
@JVApen you mean text? It's std::string
What is the encoding of the text you're parsing? Something that works for UTF-8 is going to be quite different from something that works for UTF-16.
Have you already tried std::wstring?
All characters are Unicode characters.
07:35
@chris well I guess it's utf-8. I am not sure though.
There are no "unicode strings". There are strings that contain data in a specific encoding such as UTF-8. You need to know which encoding it is.
@JVApen nope, is it a drop in replacement for std::string that supports unicode?
Guys I am sorry, I know it looked dumb but by unicode I meant utf-8.
If wchar_t is 4 times as big, yes. (So not on Windows)
Enlighting read about Unicode joelonsoftware.com/2003/10/08/…
consider this link, it explains it quite well. stackoverflow.com/questions/56604724/… replacing invalid unicode
07:35
@Gian Polo thanks! It seems that I need exactly that, the absolute minimum. Even though it is a surprisingly big read.
you can look at this link here, it explains the steps quite well. stackoverflow.com/questions/56604724/…
For straightforward input, the fact that UTF-8 is backward-compatible with ASCII is very helpful. The first byte of a non-ASCII codepoint tells you how many remaining bytes there are and all remaining bytes start with "10". However, the more real-world the input gets, the more you'll need to consider exactly what you want to count as one character. The same glyph of a letter with an accent can sometimes be one codepoint or two codepoints. There are codepoints used for control that most fonts don't render. You might be after counting grapheme clusters, or maybe you know the input is easy.
Now the question is why do you need this. Why are you counting characters as opposed to bytes? This rarely makes sense. The definition of "character" is very much dependent on what you are trying to do with your text. If you need e.g. to calculate a position in a text display device, then you are potentially up to some surprises.
My previous point there is that depending what you can expect of the input and the cost vs. benefit of making this counting really accurate for a wide range of inputs, you might be able to hand-roll something simple that's good enough for your specific case or you might need to look into a more full-blown approach that has a notion of what exactly it is you need to count. Unfortunately, C++ is pretty lacking in standard tools for the latter, whereas something like Swift's Character type has grapheme clusters built in.
@n.m. I believe I have provided the reason why I need this: the diagnostics I am creating go to VSCode, which is a JS-software and handles utf-8 characters as one character.
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If it is in fact @ that you are looking for then you don't have to worry. The codepoints that take more than one byte to utf-8 encode will never match it. But if it is a non-ascii codepoint to search for then you do worry since matching just one byte is never enough. Googling "strchr for utf8" provides decent hits.
@HansPassant Wow, 800k points... Unbelievable. However, I think you missed the point of the question. While I need to search for ASCII chars like @, I also do need to skip UTF-8 chars as if they are a single character, not 2 or more.
Surely you missed the point made by an 800k user :)
@HansPassant Well, I am sorry then :-) But could you please rephrase it then? I am really missing the point.. How do I skip UTF-8 as single chars? i.e. how do I detect that it's a char that belongs to an UTF-8 char sequence? The answer below works, BTW, I am just not sure if the solution is reliable. P.S. I am learning strchr right now, so I suspect it is what you meant...
"which is a JS-software and handles utf-8 characters as one character." It isn't clear what this means in terms of your code. Generally you pass strings to JS software. At what point you start caring how many characters are there? Do you need to pass an offset within a string?
@n.m. Diagnostics. Please see the question. I currently send diagnostics that contain wrong positions (positions that count a utf-8 char as 2 chars).
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OK, there is no such thing as "utf-8 character". There is such thing as Unicode character, which (according to one definition) is the same as Unicode code point. I believe however that Javascript does not use those as string indices. It uses UTF-16, and counts UTF-16 code units. And it is still not very clear why you need this, given that the accepted answer doesn't handle character positions at all.
@n.m.: re-reading OP's question, I think that OP wants to find the unicode character index from byte position. I expanded my answer a little bit.

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