And by C++ taking a long time to get the natural string slice type, which it calls `std::string_view`. This type is what you almost always want in APIs that aren't responsible for growing and changing strings - for the names of things, labels, parsing and so on. Because this type was not in C++ 98 or C++ 11 or even C++ 14 people would use `std::string` instead even though they did not need to modify, let alone grow, the text or, since they don't want the overhead of `std::string`, they would use `char *`
It was correct for C++ to seek to do better than C here, but while what they delivered was a lot more powerful it's not clearly better and I think has contributed to widespread misunderstanding.