
5 Jul
2008
5 Jul
'08
11:33 a.m.
Emil Dotchevski wrote: > On Fri, Jul 4, 2008 at 2:14 PM, Sebastian Redl > <sebastian.redl@getdesigned.at> wrote: >> Emil Dotchevski wrote: >>> What is the rationale for providing path and wpath types instead of >>> using a single path type? >> 1) Narrow encoding paths always existed, because the fstreams took narrow >> strings. >> 2) wpath was added later by request, I believe. Also, because the narrow >> encoding under Windows is never UTF-8 and thus can't ever represent all >> paths, and the NT and CE kernels natively use UTF-16 (wide characters). > > Yes, we need the ability for path objects to store "narrow" and > unicode strings, and the ability to talk to the OS. This can be > achieved by a single path type and a few conversion functions, can it > not? Yes. Peter Dimov made that suggestion several years ago, and I've been thinking about it ever since. There was just recently a brief discussion of it on one of the C++ committee mailing lists. I want to tackle the design in the context of a unicode string that would then be used by path. Peter thinks it would be better to tackle the path problem in isolation. But I won't have time to work on such a design until after the C++0x standard work slacks off. That should happen in the next three to twelve months, depending on when the committee actually decides to declare C++0x feature complete and ship a committee draft (CD) for public comment. --Beman