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Home/ Questions/Q 1057089
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 16, 20262026-05-16T17:48:46+00:00 2026-05-16T17:48:46+00:00

I’m currently developing a cross-platform C++ library which I intend to be Unicode aware.

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I’m currently developing a cross-platform C++ library which I intend to be Unicode aware. I currently have compile-time support for either std::string or std::wstring via typedefs and macros. The disadvantage with this approach is that it forces you to use macros like L("string") and to make heavy use of templates based on character type.

What are the arguments for and against to support std::wstring only?

Would using std::wstring exclusively hinder the GNU/Linux user base, where UTF-8 encoding is preferred?

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-16T17:48:47+00:00Added an answer on May 16, 2026 at 5:48 pm

    A lot of people would want to use unicode with UTF-8 (std::string) and not UCS-2 (std::wstring). UTF-8 is the standard encoding on a lot of linux distributions and databases – so not supporting it would be a huge disadvantage. On Linux every call to a function in your library with a string as argument would require the user to convert a (native) UTF-8 string to std::wstring.

    On gcc/linux each character of a std::wstring will have 4 bytes while it will have 2 bytes on Windows. This can lead to strange effects when reading or writing files (and copying them from/to different platforms). I would rather recomend UTF-8/std::string for a cross platform project.

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