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c++ - What is the difference between 'a' and "a"?

I am learning C++ and have got a question that I cannot find the answer to.

What is the difference between a char constant (using single quotes) and a string constant (with double quotes)?

All my search results related to char arrays vs std::string. I am after the difference between 'a' and "a".

Would there be a difference in doing the following:

cout << "a";
cout << 'a';
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'a' is a character literal. It's of type char, with the value 97 on most systems (the ASCII/Latin-1/Unicode encoding for the letter a).

"a" is a string literal. It's of type const char[2], and refers to an array of 2 chars with values 'a' and ''. In most, but not all, contexts, a reference to "a" will be implicitly converted to a pointer to the first character of the string.

Both

cout << 'a';

and

cout << "a";

happen to produce the same output, but for different reasons. The first prints a single character value. The second successively prints all the characters of the string (except for the terminating '') -- which happens to be the single character 'a'.

String literals can be arbitrarily long, such as "abcdefg". Character literals almost always contain just a single character. (You can have multicharacter literals, such as 'ab', but their values are implementation-defined and they're very rarely useful.)

(In C, which you didn't ask about, 'a' is of type int, and "a" is of type char[2] (no const)).


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