I'm hitting my head off a brick wall with a bizarre problem that I know there will be an obvious answer to, but I can't see if for the life of me. It's all to do with encoding. Before the code, a simple description: I want to take in an XML document which is Latin1 (ISO-8859-1) encoded, and then send the thing completely unchanged over an HttpURLConnection. I have a small test class and the raw XML which shows my problem. The XML file contains a Latin1 character 0xa2 (a cent character), which is invalid UTF-8 - I'm deliberately using this as my test case. The XML declaration is ISO-8859-1. I can read it in no bother, but then when I want to convert the org.w3c.dom.Document to a byte[] array to send down the HttpURLConnection, the 0xa2 character gets converted to the UTF-8 encoded cent character (0xc2 0xa2), and the declaration stays as ISO-8859-1. In other words, it's converted to two characters - totally wrong.
The code which does this:
FileInputStream input = new FileInputStream( "input-file" );
DocumentBuilderFactory factory = DocumentBuilderFactory.newInstance();
factory.setNamespaceAware( true );
DocumentBuilder builder = factory.newDocumentBuilder();
Document document = builder.parse( input );
Source source = new DOMSource( document );
ByteArrayOutputStream baos = new ByteArrayOutputStream();
Result result = new StreamResult( baos );
Transformer transformer = TransformerFactory.newInstance().newTransformer();
transformer.transform( source, result );
byte[] bytes = baos.toByteArray();
FileOutputStream fos = new FileOutputStream( "output-file" );
fos.write( bytes );
I'm just writing it to a file at the moment while I figure out what on earth is converting this character. The input-file has 0xa2, the output-file contains 0xc2 0xa2. One way to fix this is to put this line in the 2nd last block:
transformer.setOutputProperty(OutputKeys.ENCODING, "ISO-8859-1");
However, not all XML documents that I'll be dealing with will be Latin1; most, indeed, will be UTF-8 when they come in. I'm assuming I shouldn't have to be working out what the encoding is such that I feed that in to the transformer though? I mean, surely it should be working this out for itself, and I'm just doing something else wrong?
A thought had occurred to me that I could just query the document to find out the encoding and thus the extra line could just do the trick:
transformer.setOutputProperty(OutputKeys.ENCODING, document.getInputEncoding());
However, I then determined that this wasn't the answer, as document.getInputEncoding() returns a different String if I run it in a terminal on the linux box in comparison to when I run it within Eclipse on my Mac.
Any hints would be appreciated. I fully accept I'm missing out on something obvious.