What does LPCWSTR stand for and how should it be handled with?
First of all, what is it exactly? I guess it is a pointer (LPC means long pointer constant), but what does "W" mean? Is it a specific pointer to a string or a pointer to a specific string? For example I want to close a Window named "TestWindow".
HWND g_hTest;
LPCWSTR a;
*a = ("TestWindow");
g_hTest = FindWindowEx(NULL, NULL, NULL, a);
DestroyWindow(g_hTest);
The code is illegal and it doesn't work since const char[6] cannot be converted to CONST WCHAR.
I don't get it at all.
I want to get a clear understanding of all these LPCWSTR, LPCSTR, LPSTR. I tried to find something , however I got confused even more. At msdn site FindWindowEx
is declared as
HWND FindWindowEx(
HWND hwndParent,
HWND hwndChildAfter,
LPCTSTR lpszClass,
LPCTSTR lpszWindow
);
So the last parameter is LPCSTR, and the compiler demands on LPCWSTR. Please help.
LPCWSTR
stands for "Long Pointer to Constant Wide String". The W stands for Wide and means that the string is stored in a 2 byte character vs. the normal char
. Common for any C/C++ code that has to deal with non-ASCII only strings.=
To get a normal C literal string to assign to a LPCWSTR
, you need to prefix it with L
LPCWSTR a = L"TestWindow";
LPCWSTR
is equivalent to wchar_t const *
. It's a pointer to a wide character string that won't be modified by the function call.
You can assign to LPCWSTR
s by prepending a L to a string literal: LPCWSTR *myStr = L"Hello World";
LPCTSTR and any other T types, take a string type depending on the Unicode settings for your project. If _UNICODE
is defined for your project, the use of T types is the same as the wide character forms, otherwise the Ansi forms. The appropriate function will also be called this way: FindWindowEx
is defined as FindWindowExA
or FindWindowExW
depending on this definition.
It's a long pointer to a constant, wide string (i.e. a string of wide characters).
Since it's a wide string, you want to make your constant look like: L"TestWindow"
. I wouldn't create the intermediate a
either, I'd just pass L"TestWindow"
for the parameter:
ghTest = FindWindowEx(NULL, NULL, NULL, L"TestWindow");
If you want to be pedantically correct, an "LPCTSTR" is a "text" string -- a wide string in a Unicode build and a narrow string in an ANSI build, so you should use the appropriate macro:
ghTest = FindWindow(NULL, NULL, NULL, _T("TestWindow"));
Few people care about producing code that can compile for both Unicode and ANSI character sets though, and if you don't getting it to really work correctly can be quite a bit of extra work for little gain. In this particular case, there's not much extra work, but if you're manipulating strings, there's a whole set of string manipulation macros that resolve to the correct functions.