I'm still learning C++, so bear with me and my sloppy code. The compiler I use is Dev C++. I want to be able to output Unicode characters to the Console using cout. Whenver i try things like:
#include <iostream>
int main()
{
std::cout << "Hello World!\n";
std::cout << "Blah blah blah some gibberish unicode: ĐĄßĞĝ\n";
system("PAUSE");
return 0;
}
It outputs strange characters to the console, like µA■Gg. Why does it do that, and how can I get to to display ĐĄßĞĝ? Or is this not possible with Windows?
In Linux, I can naively do:
and it worked for most of the characters I tried.
I'm not sure Windows XP will fully support what you need. There are three things you have to do to enable Unicode with a command console:
cmd /u
. The/u
says your programs will output Unicode.chcp 65001
to indicate you want to use UTF-8 instead of one of the code pages.Lucida Console Unicode
. My XP box has a subset of that calledLucida Console
. It doesn't have a very extensive repertoire, but it should be sufficient if you're just trying to display some accented characters.What about
std::wcout
?This is the standard wide-characters output stream.
Still, as Adrian pointed out, this doesn't address the fact
cmd
, by default, doesn't handle Unicode outputs. This can be addressed by manually configuring the console, like described in Adrian's answer:cmd
with the/u
argument;chcp 65001
to change the output format;You can also try to use
_setmode(_fileno(stdout), _O_U16TEXT);
, which requirefcntl.h
andio.h
(as described in this answer, and documented in this blog post).You used the ANSI output stream. You need to use
std::wcout << L"Blah blah blah some gibberish unicode: ĐĄßĞĝ\n";
Also, use std::cin.get(), not system("PAUSE")