With \x, we sometimes had to do the "" trick, as the length is not predefined. With C++11 bringing \u to the specs, which has a preset length, we no longer need the "" trick. We set the strings to u8, to ensure all compilers use UTF-8 encoding for the \u characters. This was triggered by newer CLangs, which start to warn if you use "" in the middle of a string, wondering if that was your intention. It is a good question. And this is our answer :)
34 KiB
34 KiB