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Home/ Questions/Q 706339
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 14, 20262026-05-14T04:09:18+00:00 2026-05-14T04:09:18+00:00

I’m using boost::program_options and it suffers from the same as many other c++ libs,

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I’m using boost::program_options and it suffers from the same as many other c++ libs, even std itself: It still uses C-style null-terminated strings, because nobody really likes the weak std::string.

The method in question is:

options_description_easy_init&
operator()(const char* name,
           const value_semantic* s,
           const char* description);

The typical use case is just fine:

options.add_options()
    ("graphical", bool_switch(&isGraphical)->default_value(false),
     "Show any graphical output during runtime")

However, I need the name of the option to be set dynamically. The reason is that in some cases I nead a custom prefix, which is added to the string by my function std::string key(const std::string& k):

options.add_options()
    (key("graphical"), bool_switch(&isGraphical)->default_value(false),
     "Show any graphical output during runtime")

This fails.

I could now use c_str() on the std::string but that’s evil — I don’t know how long program_options keeps the variable around and if my string is still alive when needed.

I could also reserve memory in a buffer etc. and hand in that. The buffer is never freed and it sucks/is evil.

Is there anything else I can do to circumvent the C-style string mess in this situation?

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-14T04:09:18+00:00Added an answer on May 14, 2026 at 4:09 am

    It’s pretty strong convention to not hold on to const char*’s beyond the life of a function call like this. As long as they’re not bucking this convention, .c_str() is the expected and best way to do what you’re trying to do IMO.

    options.add_options()
        (key("graphical").c_str(), bool_switch(&isGraphical)->default_value(false),
         "Show any graphical output during runtime")
    
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