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Home/ Questions/Q 500319
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 13, 20262026-05-13T06:04:30+00:00 2026-05-13T06:04:30+00:00

I am confused about Windows BSTR’s and WCHAR’s, etc. WCHAR is a 16-bit character

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I am confused about Windows BSTR’s and WCHAR’s, etc. WCHAR is a 16-bit character intended to allow for Unicode characters. What about characters that take more then 16-bits to represent? Some UTF-8 chars require more then that. Is this a limitation of Windows?

Edit: Thanks for all the answers. I think I understand the Unicode aspect. I am still confused on the Windows/WCHAR aspect though. If WCHAR is a 16-bit char, does Windows really use 2 of them to represent code-points bigger than 16-bits or is the data truncated?

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-13T06:04:31+00:00Added an answer on May 13, 2026 at 6:04 am

    UTF-8 is not the encoding used in Windows’ BSTR or WCHAR types. Instead, they use UTF-16, which defines each code point in the Unicode set using either 1 or 2 WCHARs. 2 WCHARs gives exactly the same amount of code points as 4 bytes of UTF-8.

    So there is no limitation in Windows character set handling.

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