I need to add some non printable chars to a string in java so it can be sent down a tcp pipe. the chars mean something to the protocol I am using (record separator and end of message respectively)
what is the best way to go about doing this?
Ideally I'l like to refer to them as constants so that I can use string concatonation/stringbuilder/string.format to add them where required, without having to type them out.
For the curious the chars I need are ASCIIx1E (Record separator) and ACSIIx03 (End of Text).
public final class ProtocolConstants {
public final char RECORD_SEPARATOR = 0x1e;
public final char END_OF_TEXT = 0x03;
private ProtocolConstants() {}
}
something like that?
If you wish, you can write these as Unicode literals (in chars or Strings):
final String endOfText = "\u0003";
- Unicode charts
- Java Language Specification Lexical Structure chapter
I am assuming that you don't literally want ASCII for a byte-based protocol (the chars are still 16 bits).
You can add any chars to a Java String
. But a String
is probably not what you want if you just want to transmit binary data. Consider using a byte[]
or some other byte-oriented interface.