Convert a wide character to a multibyte character
#include <stdlib.h>
int wctomb( char * s,
wchar_t wc );
libc
The wctomb() function determines the number of bytes required to represent the multibyte character corresponding to the code contained in wc. If s isn't NULL, the multibyte character representation is stored in the array it points to. At most MB_CUR_MAX characters are stored.
#include <stdio.h>
#include <stdlib.h>
wchar_t wchar = { 0x0073 };
char mbbuffer[MB_CUR_MAX];
int main( void )
{
int len;
printf( "Character encodings do %shave "
"state-dependent \nencoding.\n",
( wctomb( NULL, 0 ) )
? "" : "not " );
len = wctomb( mbbuffer, wchar );
mbbuffer[len] = '\0';
printf( "%s(%d)\n", mbbuffer, len );
return EXIT_SUCCESS;
}
This produces the output:
Character encodings do not have state-dependent encoding. s(1)
| Safety: | |
|---|---|
| Cancellation point | No |
| Interrupt handler | No |
| Signal handler | Yes |
| Thread | Yes |
"String manipulation functions" and "Wide-character functions" in the summary of functions chapter.