I was trying to convert a QString to char* type by the following methods, but they don't seem to work.
//QLineEdit *line=new QLineEdit();{just to describe what is line here}
QString temp=line->text();
cha开发者_运维百科r *str=(char *)malloc(10);
QByteArray ba=temp.toLatin1();
strcpy(str,ba.data());
Can you elaborate the possible flaw with this method, or give an alternative method?
Well, the Qt FAQ says:
int main(int argc, char **argv)
{
QApplication app(argc, argv);
QString str1 = "Test";
QByteArray ba = str1.toLocal8Bit();
const char *c_str2 = ba.data();
printf("str2: %s", c_str2);
return app.exec();
}
So perhaps you're having other problems. How exactly doesn't this work?
Maybe
my_qstring.toStdString().c_str();
or safer, as Federico points out:
std::string str = my_qstring.toStdString();
const char* p = str.c_str();
It's far from optimal, but will do the work.
The easiest way to convert a QString to char* is qPrintable(const QString& str),
which is a macro expanding to str.toLocal8Bit().constData()
.
David's answer works fine if you're only using it for outputting to a file or displaying on the screen, but if a function or library requires a char* for parsing, then this method works best:
// copy QString to char*
QString filename = "C:\dev\file.xml";
char* cstr;
string fname = filename.toStdString();
cstr = new char [fname.size()+1];
strcpy( cstr, fname.c_str() );
// function that requires a char* parameter
parseXML(cstr);
EDITED
this way also works
QString str ("Something");
char* ch = str.toStdString().C_str();
Your string may contain non Latin1 characters, which leads to undefined data. It depends of what you mean by "it deosn't seem to work".
If your string contains non-ASCII characters - it's better to do it this way:
s.toUtf8().data()
(or s->toUtf8().data()
)
the Correct Solution Would be like this
QString k;
k = "CRAZYYYQT";
char ab[16];
sprintf(ab,"%s",(const char *)((QByteArray)(k.toLatin1()).data()) );
sprintf(ab,"%s",(const char *)((QByteArray)(k.toStdString()).data()));
sprintf(ab,"%s",(const char *)k.toStdString().c_str() );
qDebug()<<"--->"<<ab<<"<---";
Qt provides the simplest API
const char *qPrintable(const QString &str)
const char *qUtf8Printable(const QString &str)
If you want non-const data pointer use
str.toLocal8Bit().data()
str.toUtf8().data()
It is a viable way to use std::vector as an intermediate container:
QString dataSrc("FooBar");
QString databa = dataSrc.toUtf8();
std::vector<char> data(databa.begin(), databa.end());
char* pDataChar = data.data();
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