I am reading a file into byte array, i have inserted some control command into it, which I need to decode in some other class. But how to identify and separate these information from rest of the content of file being read. I need to use some unique character as a delimiter to identify the start and end of this control command in the byte array. Is there any unique character which i can use for this purpose ? That particular character should not be present in any normal binary file of any format.
3 Answers
No, if it's a binary file, then in general, a byte can take on any value between 0 and 255.
One possible solution is to reserve one particular byte value as an "escape" character; let's say that you choose '\'
for that purpose. Then to represent a delimiter, you could insert the sequence "\d"
, for instance. Of course, to represent an actual '\'
, you'll need to delimit that too; "\\"
, for instance.
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@Charlesworth The byte array will be something like this
[<filename>file_1_contents<filename2>file_2_contents.... <file_n_name>file_n_contents]
can i use`\`
as a delimiter ? because even the file contents also can contain`\`
– RakeshSep 5, 2011 at 15:50
No, by definition there is no such a control character. But what you can do is store the array in a format that follows: [length of byte array] [byte array]. All you have to do then is read in an integer <- the length, create a new array of that length and read it fully.
EDIT:
Okay so use the following format:
The file name is null terminated so you know the delimiter there (this works because a file name is ASCII only!). Then you have the length (an integer/long) and then the byte array.
All of the other methods mentioned above are unsafe and if you use a complex delimiter then: it's not perfect and takes up more space then using the a simple length variable...
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I am following kinda same format, but i am not worried about the length of the byte array. Only thing is i need to save the file name in the first field instead of the byte array so that the byte array looks like this
[<filename>file_1_contents<filename2>file_2_contents.... <file_n_name>file_n_contents]
– RakeshSep 5, 2011 at 16:05
you can use come character sequence (or a byte sequence) and when you're decoding, if you find that sequence that it is delimiter.
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but i will have to use some byte sequence which should not appear in the file contents. The file can be a file with any extension viz .exe .txt .dat etc– RakeshSep 5, 2011 at 15:41