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Asked: May 10, 20262026-05-10T16:11:36+00:00 2026-05-10T16:11:36+00:00

Which is your favorite way to go with strings in C++? A C-style array

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Which is your favorite way to go with strings in C++? A C-style array of chars? Or wchar_t? CString, std::basic_string, std::string, BSTR or CComBSTR?

Certainly each of these has its own area of application, but anyway, which is your favorite and why?

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  1. 2026-05-10T16:11:36+00:00Added an answer on May 10, 2026 at 4:11 pm

    std::string or std::wstring, depending on your needs. Why?

    • They’re standard
    • They’re portable
    • They can handle I18N
    • They have performance guarantees (as per the standard)
    • Protected against buffer overflows and similar attacks
    • Are easily converted to other types as needed
    • Are nicely templated, giving you a wide variety of options while reducing code bloat and improving performance. Really. Compilers that can’t handle templates are long gone now.

    A C-style array of chars is just asking for trouble. You’ll still need to deal with them on occasion (and that’s what std::string.c_str() is for), but, honestly — one of the biggest dangers in C is programmers doing Bad Things with char* and winding up with buffer overflows. Just don’t do it.

    An array of wchar__t is the same thing, just bigger.

    CString, BSTR, and CComBSTR are not standard and not portable. Avoid them unless absolutely forced. Optimally, just convert a std::string/std::wstring to them when needed, which shouldn’t be very expensive.

    Note that std::string is just a child of std::basic_string, but you’re still better off using std::string unless you have a really good reason not to. Really Good. Let the compiler take care of the optimization in this situation.

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