The generated bytes might contain valid multibyte characters.
Take this as example. The string contains only one character, but as byte representation it take three bytes.
String s = "Ω";
System.out.println("length = " + s.length());
System.out.println("bytes = " + Arrays.toString(s.getBytes("UTF-8")));
String.length()
return the length of the string in characters. The character Ω
is one character whereas it's a 3 byte long in UTF-8.
If you change your code like this
Random random = new Random();
byte bytes[] = new byte[16];
random.nextBytes(bytes);
System.out.println("string = " + new String(bytes, "UTF-8").length());
System.out.println("string = " + new String(bytes, "ISO-8859-1").length());
The same bytes are interpreted with a different charset. And following the javadoc from String(byte[] b, String charset)
The length of the new String is a function of the charset, and hence may
not be equal to the length of the byte array.