Unicode is the standard for encoding text in almost all languages spoken in the world. It is nowadays used as the native encoding for text on most modern operating systems. The major exception is Microsoft Windows that still has a dual system supporting code pages and Unicode for applications.
These classes are relevant when working with string data. For information about rendering text, see the Rich Text Processing overview, and if your string data is in XML, see the XML Processing overview.
Array of bytes |
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List of byte arrays |
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Holds a sequence of bytes that can be quickly matched in a byte array |
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16-bit Unicode character |
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Compares strings according to a localized collation algorithm |
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Can be used to speed up string collation |
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8-bit ASCII/Latin-1 character |
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Thin wrapper around an US-ASCII/Latin-1 encoded string literal |
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Converts between numbers and their string representations in various languages |
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Compile-time version of QByteArrayMatcher |
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Unicode character string |
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List of strings |
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Holds a sequence of characters that can be quickly matched in a Unicode string |
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Thin wrapper around QString substrings |
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Unified view on UTF-16 strings with a read-only subset of the QString API |
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Way of finding Unicode text boundaries in a string |
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Convenient interface for reading and writing text |
The Unicode Consortium has a number of documents available, including
In Qt, and in most applications that use Qt, most or all user-visible strings are stored using Unicode. Qt provides:
To fully benefit from Unicode, we recommend using QString for storing all user-visible strings, and performing all text file I/O using QTextStream.
All the function arguments in Qt that may be user-visible strings, QLabel::setText() and a many others, take const QString &
s. QString provides implicit casting from const char *
so that things like
label->setText("Password:");
will work. There is also a function, QObject::tr(), that provides translation support, like this:
label->setText(tr("Password:"));
QObject::tr() maps from const char *
to a Unicode string, and uses installable QTranslator objects to do the mapping.
Qt provides a number of built-in QTextCodec classes, that is, classes that know how to translate between Unicode and legacy encodings to support programs that must talk to other programs or read/write files in legacy file formats.
Conversion to/from const char *
uses a UTF-8. However, applications can easily find codecs for other locales, and set any open file or network connection to use a special codec.
Since US-ASCII and ISO-8859-1 are so common, there are also especially fast functions for mapping to and from them. For example, to open an application's icon one might do this:
QFile file(QString::fromLatin1("appicon.png"));
or
QFile file(QLatin1String("appicon.png"));
Qt supports rendering text in most languages written in the world. The detailed list of supported writing systems depends a bit on operating system support and font availability on the target system.
See also Internationalization with Qt.
© The Qt Company Ltd
Licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License, Version 1.3.
https://doc.qt.io/qt-5.15/unicode.html