I am trying to use a DLL with an ANSI C compiler. One of the DLL functions takes a void pointer. In some sample Windows code that was provided with the DLL, the struct that gets passed to the function is defined as having three CString entities. I have told the author of the DLL that they should not be passing MFC classes through their DLL functions. They have told me just to replace the CString declarations in the struct with char arrays and it should be fine. I'm 99% sure that's wrong, but since I don't have VC++ and don't have any experience with MFC, and since I've seen some posts saying LPTSTR can be used in place of CString (What is `CString`?), I'm starting to wonder if I'm wrong.
Can someone please confirm for me that CString and LPTSTR are not interchangeable as arguments to a function? If you can provide the source for the definition of the CString class, that would be helpful so I can send it to the DLL's author and explain that the memory footprint of a char array is not the same as a CString class, and that you can't pass a pointer to a struct that was defined with char arrays and then treat it as a bunch of CString objects.