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I have a dll-project, written in Windows-1251 encoding, and I need my dll's output encoded in UTF-16. I use the following function to do conversion:

ptr = MultiByteToWideChar(CP_ACP, 0, str, -1, wbuff.getBuffer(), len);

Unfortunately, MultiByteToWideChar uses system locale as a source encoding. So for example if my Windows locale is English(USA), it converts Win1252->UTF8, not Win1251->UTF8 as I need.

I tried to set locale manually, but the following code doesn't work either:

enc = setlocale(CL_ALL, "rus_rus.1251");
//this returns Windows-1251 encoding
ptr = MultiByteToWideChar(CP_ACP, 0, str, -1, wbuff.getBuffer(), len);

As I understand, MultiByteToWideChar always uses a system locale, ignoring my setlocale call.

Is there any other ways to do such conversion? Or may be I just don't understand these locale settings properly? Thanks.

P.S. I'm sorry for grammar mistakes.

Roman Dobrovenskii
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2 Answers2

11

setlocale is a CRT function. Obviously Windows API doesn't care what is set via it.

You should set the needed codepage (1251 in your case) instead of CP_ACP (which means system default).

res = MultiByteToWideChar(1251, 0, str, -1, wbuff.getBuffer(), len);
valdo
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0

If you are not forced to use WinAPI, you might want to use ICU's character converter.

Paweł Dyda
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