Question

Just found out that all of the following work:

printf( "%ls\n", "123" L"456" );
printf( "%ls\n", L"123" "456" );
printf( "%ls\n", L"123" L"456" );

The output is

123456
123456
123456

Why can I freely mix and match wide and narrow string literals to get a wide string literal as a result? Is that a documented behavior?

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Solution

Is that a documented behavior?

Yes, this behavior is supported by the standard, from section 6.4.5 String literals paragrph 4 of the C99 draft standard says (emphasis mine):

In translation phase 6, the multibyte character sequences specified by any sequence of adjacent character and wide string literal tokens are concatenated into a single multibyte character sequence. If any of the tokens are wide string literal tokens, the resulting multibyte character sequence is treated as a wide string literal; otherwise, it is treated as a character string literal.

OTHER TIPS

6.4.5 String literals

In translation phase 6, the multibyte character sequences specified by any sequence of adjacent character and wide string literal tokens are concatenated into a single multibyte character sequence. If any of the tokens are wide string literal tokens, the resulting multibyte character sequence is treated as a wide string literal; otherwise, it is treated as a character string literal.

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