Unicode C
Unicode C
Convert String to GSM 03.38
See more HTML-to-XML/Text Examples
Demonstrates how to convert a string to the GSM character set. For more information about the GSM character set, see GSM Character SetNote: This example requires Chilkat v9.5.0.79 or greater. Support for the GSM character set was added in v9.5.0.79.
Chilkat Unicode C Downloads
#include <C_CkBinDataW.h>
void ChilkatSample(void)
{
BOOL success;
const wchar_t *s;
HCkBinDataW bdGsm;
success = FALSE;
// Demonstrates how to convert a string to the GSM character set byte representation.
s = L"support@chilkatsoft.com, {abc}";
// In the above string the a-z letters have the same 1-byte values in the GSM character set.
// The '@' character is the 0x00 byte in GSM.
// The curly brace chars are 2-bytes each in GSM -- each beginning with the 0x1B escape char.
// The '.', ' ', and ',' are the same in GSM as us-ascii.
// Let's convert to GSM.
// bdGsm will contain the GSM bytes.
bdGsm = CkBinDataW_Create();
// Append the string to bdGsm. The 2nd arg "gsm" tells AppendString to
// convert the incoming string to the gsm byte representation.
success = CkBinDataW_AppendString(bdGsm,s,L"gsm");
// Let's examine what we have in hex:
wprintf(L"%s\n",CkBinDataW_getEncoded(bdGsm,L"hex"));
// The result is: 737570706F7274006368696C6B6174736F66742E636F6D2C201B286162631B29
// Save the GSM bytes to a file.
success = CkBinDataW_WriteFile(bdGsm,L"qa_output/gsm.txt");
CkBinDataW_Dispose(bdGsm);
}