NSString *foo = @"Foo";
std::string bar = std::string([foo UTF8String]);
Edit: After a few years, let me expand on this answer. As rightfully pointed out, you'll most likely want to use cStringUsingEncoding:
with NSASCIIStringEncoding
if you are going to end up using std::string
. You can use UTF-8 with normal std::strings
, but keep in mind that those operate on bytes and not on characters or even graphemes. For a good "getting started", check out this question and its answer.
Also note, if you have a string that can't be represented as ASCII but you still want it in an std::string
and you don't want non-ASCII characters in there, you can use dataUsingEncoding:allowLossyConversion:
to get an NSData
representation of the string with lossy encoded ASCII content, and then throw that at your std::string
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