0

I am trying to read a file that has been encoded in Unicode(I used Editplus to find out its encoding.)

I am using the following code:-

InputStream inStream = new FileInputStream(logFile);
InputStreamReader streamReader = new InputStreamReader(inStream, "Unicode");
final BufferedReader reader = new BufferedReader(streamReader);

But it does not read the file correctly. When I tried "UTF-8" it read the file but the output produced contained a space after every character.

I need to read a file and display its contents in a JList. I searched and got to know that

Unicode characters use 2 bytes. With ASCII text every other byte will be a binary 0 which will display as a ? or square with most text editors.

This is similar to what is happening with me. I do not have much knowledge about encoding.

Any help would be really appreciated.

3
  • If my answer doesn't help, please post a short sample of the bytes involved (as shown in a binary file editor) along with the expected meaning as text.
    – Jon Skeet
    Jul 8, 2014 at 17:42
  • It shows a square or a space after each character.. eg: T h i s i s a s a m p l e rather than This is a sample
    – Pooja
    Jul 8, 2014 at 17:56
  • What does? Presumably there's some text you're expecting to get - tell us what that is, along with the binary representation.
    – Jon Skeet
    Jul 8, 2014 at 17:57

1 Answer 1

1

I'm not sure what endianness "Unicode" gives, but you should try "UTF-16BE" and "UTF-LE" - obviously BE is Big Endian, and LE is Little Endian. (Just which byte comes first in each 16-bit code unit.)

(I've just read that "UTF-16" defaults to big endian, so I suspect "Unicode" does too... that would mean "UTF-16LE" is more likely to work.)

2
  • @user3293664: I suspect that's equivalent to "Unicode". So try making the endianness explicit...
    – Jon Skeet
    Jul 8, 2014 at 17:41
  • It is an encoded LOG file. I need to read its contents and show them in a JList. How can I see its binary representation?
    – Pooja
    Jul 8, 2014 at 17:59

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.