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So let's say we have a string that is like this:

‰û]M§Äq¸ºþe Ø·¦ŸßÛµÖ˜eÆÈym™ÎB+KºªXv©+Å+óS—¶ê'å‚4ŒBFJF󒉚Ү}Fó†ŽxöÒ&‹¢ T†^¤( OêIº ò|<)ð

How do I turn it into a human readable string of chars, cuz like it was a wierd output of HTML from a webserver that is text I think cuz half the web page loaded correctly. Do I need to read it with like C or Python or something. That's only a snippet of the string.

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  • You're going to have to explain how you want to map that into a readable string. Jan 14, 2010 at 23:20
  • 6
    function rewriteString(str) { return "Hello, World"; }
    – Bruno Reis
    Jan 14, 2010 at 23:21
  • Looks like binary data to me... unless it's mojibake. It very much resembles what happens when you do cat on a program by mistake on Unix, and it floods the console with sweet binary goodness.
    – Skurmedel
    Jan 14, 2010 at 23:24
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    fyi - these are not binary characters. in fact there's not such a thing called "binary characters". either binary string, a string consisting of 0s and 1s, or binary, numerical representation.
    – mauris
    Jan 14, 2010 at 23:25
  • 2
    Dammit! How did you find my GMail password?!
    – Bruno Reis
    Jan 14, 2010 at 23:26

2 Answers 2

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If that is in fact supposed to be a human-readable string, you'll need to figure out what character encoding it uses and translate. It's also possible that the string is compressed, encrypted, or represents binary data. It would be helpful to know where you got your string from.

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  • <meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=ISO-8859-1" />
    – y2k
    Jan 14, 2010 at 23:22
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I'm guessing your web server isn't sending the correct mime-type. I'd suggest taking a look at the http headers using Firefox's Live Headers plugin. If a web server decides to send you a pdf, but doesn't set the mime-type, you'll just see garbage on your screen. Alternatively, save the page to a file, and then run these commands from Cygwin or a unix shell:

file mypage.htm
strings mypage.htm

The first will tell you if the header bytes follow any recognizable pattern. The second will strip out and display all the human readable text.

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