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I'm trying to print a unicode star character (0x2605) in a linux terminal using C. I've followed the syntax suggested by other answers on the site, but I'm not getting an output:

#include <stdio.h>
#include <wchar.h>

int main(){

    wchar_t star = 0x2605;
    wprintf(L"%c\n", star);

    return 0;
}

I'd appreciate any suggestions, especially how I can make this work with the ncurses library.

Luke Collins
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2 Answers2

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Two problems: first of all, a wchar_t must be printed with %lc format, not %c. The second one is that unless you call setlocale the character set is not set properly, and you probably get ? instead of your star. The following code seems to work though:

#include <stdio.h>
#include <wchar.h>
#include <locale.h>

int main() {
    setlocale(LC_CTYPE, "");
    wchar_t star = 0x2605;
    wprintf(L"%lc\n", star);
}

And for ncurses, just initialize the locale before the call to initscr.

3

Whether you are using stdio or ncurses, you have to initialize the locale, as noted in the ncurses manual. Otherwise, multibyte encodings such as UTF-8 do not work.

wprintw doesn't necessarily know about wchar_t (though it may use the same underlying printf, this depends on the platform and configuration).

With ncurses, you would display a wchar_t in any of these ways:

  • storing it in an array of wchar_t, and using waddwstr, or
  • storing it in a cchar_t structure (with setcchar), and using wadd_wch with that as a parameter, or
  • converting the wchar_t to a multibyte string, and using waddstr
Thomas Dickey
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  • Thanks for the reply. I keep getting an *implicit declaration* error for the wide-character `ncurses` functions, are there some other libraries I need to be including? – Luke Collins May 07 '17 at 17:45
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    You're missing a `#define`. Generally that should be _XOPEN_SOURCE_EXTENDED`, but most platforms have fubar'd ifdef's: for Linux just use `-D_GNU_SOURCE`. You'll have to link with `-lncursesw`, but that's not *implicit declaration* – Thomas Dickey May 07 '17 at 18:04
  • can you explain a bit more? – Luke Collins May 07 '17 at 18:13
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    It would be defined using `ncursesw5-config --cflags`, or via a ".pc" file, depending on how ncurses is packaged for your system. – Thomas Dickey May 07 '17 at 18:37