1.1. Character sets
1.1 Character sets
Source code character set processing in C and related languages is rather complicated. The C standard discusses two character sets, but there are really at least four.
The files input to CPP might be in any character set at all. CPP's very first action, before it even looks for line boundaries, is to convert the file into the character set it uses for internal processing. That set is what the C standard calls the source character set. It must be isomorphic with ISO 10646, also known as Unicode. CPP uses the UTF-8 encoding of Unicode.
The character sets of the input files are specified using the -finput-charset=
option.
All preprocessing work (the subject of the rest of this manual) is carried out in the source character set. If you request textual output from the preprocessor with the -E
option, it will be in UTF-8.
After preprocessing is complete, string and cha