this post was submitted on 25 Jan 2024
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C Programming Language
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uint32_t* goes brrr
That's not utf8 either...
max width of utf8 is 32 bits from my extensive research (1 minute of googling) so it should work, right?
UTF-8 is a variable encoding so none of the fixed sized type would work better for it.
But it would work
It would no longer be UTF-8; it would be UTF-32. UTF-8 is an encoding scheme, meaning that it is a specification for exactly how text is encoded as bits.
You can certainly use UTF-32 to represent all valid unicode, but you can only do that within the bounds of a single program; once you need to read or write data to or from an external source (say, the file system, or over a network), you'd need to use the same encoding that the other software uses, which is usually UTF-8 (and almost never UTF-32).