CString::operator LPCTSTR

operatorLPCTSTR()const;

Return Value

A character pointer to the string’s data.

Remarks

This useful casting operator provides an efficient method to access the null-terminated C string contained in a CString object. No characters are copied; only a pointer is returned. Be careful with this operator. If you change a CString object after you have obtained the character pointer, you may cause a reallocation of memory that invalidates the pointer.

Example

The following example demonstrates the use of CString::operator LPCSTR.

// If the prototype of a function is known to the compiler,
// the LPCTSTR cast operator may be invoked implicitly

CString strSports(_T("Hockey is Best!"));
TCHAR sz[1024];

lstrcpy(sz, strSports);

// If the prototype isn't known, or is a va_arg prototype,
// you must invoke the cast operator explicitly. For example,
// the va_arg part of a call to sprintf() needs the cast:

sprintf(sz, "I think that %s!\n", (LPCTSTR) strSports);

// while the format parameter is known to be an LPCTSTR and
// therefore doesn't need the cast:

sprintf(sz, strSports);

// Note that some situations are ambiguous. This line will
// put the address of the strSports object to stdout:

cout << strSports;

// while this line will put the content of the string out:

cout << (LPCTSTR) strSports;

CString OverviewClass MembersHierarchy Chart