Is it possible to convert a string to byte array and then convert it back to the original string in Java or Android?
My objective is to send some strings to a microcontroller (Arduino) and store it into EEPROM (which is only 1 KB). I tried to use an MD5 hash, but it seems it's only a one way encryption. What can I do to deal with this issue?
I would suggest using the members of string, but with an explicit encoding:
byte[] bytes = text.getBytes("UTF-8");
String text = new String(bytes, "UTF-8");
By using an explicit encoding (and one which supports all of Unicode) you avoid the problems of just calling text.getBytes()
etc:
- You're explicitly using a specific encoding, so you know which encoding to use later, rather than relying on the platform default.
- You know it will support all of Unicode (as opposed to, say, ISO-Latin-1).
EDIT: Even though UTF-8 is the default encoding on Android, I'd definitely be explicit about this. For example, this question only says "in Java or Android" - so it's entirely possible that the code will end up being used on other platforms.
Basically given that the normal Java platform can have different default encodings, I think it's best to be absolutely explicit. I've seen way too many people using the default encoding and losing data to take that risk.
EDIT: In my haste I forgot to mention that you don't have to use the encoding's name - you can use a Charset
instead. Using Guava I'd really use:
byte[] bytes = text.getBytes(Charsets.UTF_8);
String text = new String(bytes, Charsets.UTF_8);
You can do it like this.
String to byte array
String stringToConvert = "This String is 76 characters long and will be converted to an array of bytes";
byte[] theByteArray = stringToConvert.getBytes();
http://www.javadb.com/convert-string-to-byte-array
Byte array to String
byte[] byteArray = new byte[] {87, 79, 87, 46, 46, 46};
String value = new String(byteArray);
http://www.javadb.com/convert-byte-array-to-string
Use [String.getBytes()][1]
to convert to bytes and use [String(byte[] data)][2]
constructor to convert back to string.
Check out this, you can use Base85:
Base85 aka ASCII85 java projects
Had the same question.
import java.io.FileInputStream;
import java.io.ByteArrayOutputStream;
public class FileHashStream
{
// write a new method that will provide a new Byte array, and where this generally reads from an input stream
public static byte[] read(InputStream is) throws Exception
{
String path = /* type in the absolute path for the 'commons-codec-1.10-bin.zip' */;
// must need a Byte buffer
byte[] buf = new byte[1024 * 16]
// we will use 16 kilobytes
int len = 0;
// we need a new input stream
FileInputStream is = new FileInputStream(path);
// use the buffer to update our "MessageDigest" instance
while(true)
{
len = is.read(buf);
if(len < 0) break;
md.update(buf, 0, len);
}
// close the input stream
is.close();
// call the "digest" method for obtaining the final hash-result
byte[] ret = md.digest();
System.out.println("Length of Hash: " + ret.length);
for(byte b : ret)
{
System.out.println(b + ", ");
}
String compare = "49276d206b696c6c696e6720796f757220627261696e206c696b65206120706f69736f6e6f7573206d757368726f6f6d";
String verification = Hex.encodeHexString(ret);
System.out.println();
System.out.println("===")
System.out.println(verification);
System.out.println("Equals? " + verification.equals(compare));
}
}