I have to make a two way communication between a legacy system and an android device. The legacy system uses little endian byte ordering. I have successfully implemented the receiving part, however sending not works.
Strange because for me it seems that the ByteBuffer class malfunctions (I can hardly believe that)
ByteBuffer byteBuffer = ByteBuffer.allocate(4);
byteBuffer.order(ByteOrder.LITTLE_ENDIAN);
byteBuffer = ByteBuffer.allocate(4);
byteBuffer.putInt(88);
byte[] result = byteBuffer.array();
Results: [0, 0, 0, 88]
ByteBuffer byteBuffer = ByteBuffer.allocate(4);
byteBuffer.order(ByteOrder.BIG_ENDIAN);
byteBuffer = ByteBuffer.allocate(4);
byteBuffer.putInt(88);
byte[] result = byteBuffer.array();
Also results the same: [0, 0, 0, 88]
However if I'm not mistaken little endian ordering should return: [88, 0, 0, 0]
So what's the point I'm missing?
You are, for some strange reason, reinitializing your byte buffers and throwing away the previous copies where you had changed the endian order. The following code works just fine for me:
Prints [0, 0, 0, 88]
Prints [88, 0, 0, 0]
On a related note:
This code:
Is about 25% faster than this:
Using JDK 1.8.
I am trying to pass unicode points from JAVA to C++ through JNI and the first method is the fastest I found. Curious that it is faster than the second snippet.