Boost.Locale
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All of the examples that come with Boost.Locale are designed for UTF-8 and it is the default encoding used by Boost.Locale.
However, the default narrow encoding under Microsoft Windows is not UTF-8 and the output of the applications would not be displayed correctly in the console.
So in order to use UTF-8 encoding under the Windows console and see the output correctly, do the following:
cmd
windowchcp 65001
Now all of the examples should display UTF-8 characters correctly (if the font supports them).
Note for Visual Studio users: Microsoft Visual Studio assumes that all source files are encoded using an "ANSI" codepage like 1252. However all examples use UTF-8 encoding by default, so wide character examples would not work under MSVC as-is. In order to force it to treat source files as UTF-8 you need to convert the files to UTF-8 with BOM, which can be done easily by re-saving them from Notepad, which adds a BOM to UTF-8 files by default.