See here at How can I convert a QString to char* and vice versa?
In order to convert a QString to a
char*, then you first need to get a
latin1 representation of the string by
calling toLatin1() on it which will
return a QByteArray. Then call data()
on the QByteArray to get a pointer to
the data stored in the byte array. See
the documentation:
https://doc.qt.io/qt-5/qstring.html#toLatin1
https://doc.qt.io/qt-5/qbytearray.html#data
See the following example for a
demonstration:
int main(int argc, char **argv)
{
QApplication app(argc, argv);
QString str1 = "Test";
QByteArray ba = str1.toLatin1();
const char *c_str2 = ba.data();
printf("str2: %s", c_str2);
return app.exec();
}
Note that it is necessary to store the
bytearray before you call data() on
it, a call like the following
const char *c_str2 = str2.toLatin1().data();
will make the application crash as the
QByteArray has not been stored and
hence no longer exists
To convert a char* to a QString you
can use the QString constructor that
takes a QLatin1String, e.g:
QString string = QString(QLatin1String(c_str2)) ;
See the documentation:
https://doc.qt.io/qt-5/qlatin1string.html
Of course, I discovered there is another way from this previous SO answer:
QString qs;
// Either this if you use UTF-8 anywhere
std::string utf8_text = qs.toUtf8().constData();
// or this if you on Windows :-)
std::string current_locale_text = qs.toLocal8Bit().constData();