Just found out that all of the following work:
printf( "%ls\n", "123" L"456" );
printf( "%ls\n", L"123" "456" );
printf( "%ls\n", L"123" L"456" );
The output is
123456
123456
123456
Why can I freely mix and match wide and narrow string literals to get a wide string literal as a result? Is that a documented behavior?
Is that a documented behavior?
Yes, this behavior is supported by the standard, from section 6.4.5
String literals paragrph 4 of the C99 draft standard says (emphasis mine):
In translation phase 6, the multibyte character sequences specified by any sequence of adjacent character and wide string literal tokens are concatenated into a single multibyte character sequence. If any of the tokens are wide string literal tokens, the resulting multibyte character sequence is treated as a wide string literal; otherwise, it is treated as a character string literal.